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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1913.
Do You Feel Chilly
A
Feverish and Ache all Over £
I Feel worn out—blue and tired ? Don’t let your cold develop
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DR. PIERCE’S
Golden Hfedical Uiseovery
OR
WOMAN AND BABE PASSED THROUGH
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been sold in liquid form by all medicine dealers. It can now also
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doesn't keep it, send 50 one-cent stamps to R.V.Pierce, M.D. Buffalo.
The Common Sense Medical Adviser—a book of
1008 pages—answers all medical questions.
Send37c innru>~r*>n+ afrrrrin** +*% T* V. Ijf. ft.
Train Tumbles Down
High Bank; All Hurt
But Nobody’s Killed
GRAND RAPIDS. Mich., Nov. 13.—
Not one of the twenty-two passengers
of a Pere Marquette passenger train
escaped injury when th * coaches rolled
dewn a fifteen-foot embankment last
night near Holland, Mich., but none
was fatally hurt.
Two coaches caught fire immediately
after the plunge, but those passengers
who w’ere unable to help themselves
were pulled through broken windows
to safety.
NEW YORK MAYOR-ELECT
OFF FOR PANAMA JAUNT
NEW YORK, Nov. 13.—John Purroy
Mitchel, mayor-elect of New York, was
booked to sail for Panama today to
send a three weeks’ vacation.
Mr. Mitchel would have nothing to
say regarding the report that he might
ask Colonel George Goethals to become
police commissioner of New York City.
Mr. Mitchel said he regarded the po
lice commissionership as the most im
portant post he had to fill, but he woutd
not make known any choices or this or
any other appointive offices until after
return from his vacation.
HOW TO SUCCEED
During the last few years, conditions
in all lines of business, even profession
al life, have changed so completely that
every man is waking up to the fact that
in order to win success he must spe
cialize and learn to do some one thing
and do it well.
So it is with any article that is sold
to the people It must have genuine
merit or no amount of advertising will
maintain the demand for the article.
For many years druggists have watch
ed with much interest the remarkable
record maintained by Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, Inver
and Bladder Remedy, From the very
beginning the proprietors had so much
confidence in it that they invited every
one to test it.
It is a physician’s prescription.
They have on file thousands of unso
licited letters received from former suf
ferers who claim they are now’ enjoying
good health as a result of its use.
However, if you wish first to try a
sample bottle, address Dr. Kilmer &
Co., Binghamton, N. Y., enclose ten
cents and mention this paper. They Will
promptly forward you a sample bottle
by Parcels Post.
Regular sizes for sale at all druggists
—fifty-cents and one-dollar.—(Advt. >
The Joy Of
Coming Motherhood
h Wonderful Remedy That Is a Natural
Aid and Relieves the Tension.
Mother’s Friend is the only remedy
known that is able to reach all the different
parts involved It is
a penetrating external
application after the
formula of a noted
family doctor, and lu
bricates every muscle,
nerve, tissue or ten
don involved.
By its daily use
there will be no pain,
no distress, no nausea,
no danger of laceration or other accident,
and the period will be one of supreme com
fort and joyful- anticipation.
Mother's Friend is one of the .greatest
of all helpful influences, for it robs child
birth of all its agonies and dangers, dispels
all the doubt and dread, all sense of fear,
and thus enables the mind and body to
await the greatest event in a woman's life
With untrammeled gladness.
Ton will find it on sale at all drug stores
at $1.00 a bottle, or the druggist will gladly
get it for you. Mother’s Friend is prepared
only by the Bradfield Regulator Co., 237
Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga., who will mail
an instructive book to expectant mothers.
Write for it to-day.
itnnu h
ADDRESSES ANTI LEAGUE
Tennessee Ex-Governor, Once
Liberal Leader, Aids Anti-
Saloon Campaign
(By Associated Press.)
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 13.—Today’s
session of the Anti-Saioon league na
tional convention was to be known as
governors’ day.
Former Governor Malcolm R. Patter
son, of Tennessee, was the principal
speaker at the afternoon session today.
Twice elected governor of Tennessee as
a “wet,” Mr Patterson came to Co
lumbus in a specail car. accompanied
by Governor Ben W. Hooper, who suc
ceeded him as Tennessee’s chief execu
tive, to give his indorsement to a na
tion-wide program that would have for
its aim the entire elimination of the
saloon.
PATTERSON’S ADDRESS.
Former Governor Malcolm R. Patter
son said in part:
“The Anti-Saloon league and I have
not always been friends. The paths we
traveled were wide apart. They seemed
so parallel that it looked incredible they
should ever meet. But they have met.
The path I traveled turned in its course.
It ran into the other and we now find
ourselves in the same road, marching in
the same direction, under the same flag,
actuated by the same desire to destroy
the traffic in liquor and redeem a na
tion from its curse.
“J am aware that to have suddenly
changed the views of mature manhood,
which I once asserted and proclaimed
from one end of Tennessee to the otner,
has excited surprise and provoked com
ment. But this is a world of change.
Stagnation is decay and progress is the
command of the age and the hope of
mortality. I am neither ashamed nor
abashed to stand before this great audi
ence and amend the wrong I did when I
once advocated policies which would
have made legal a trade which I have
come to look upon as having no right
ful place in *the scheme and economy
of Christian civilization.”
“I say to you, fully conscious of the
meaning and responsibility of the
declaration, that if this message has en
couraged lawlessness or ever been
sought as a refuge for violators of the
law, if it had to stand as my last ex
pression on the liquor question, 1 would
consume it in the living fires and erase
it forever from the minds and memories
of men.
“My life has had deep sorrows. My
soul nas been tossed on the waves of
angry seas. My nature has been pro
foundly touched and stirred.
“I have seen the trail of liquor in the
criminal courts where I have prosecuted
crime. I know, and have been a partici-
>ant in its paralyzing and corroding in
fluence in the social and public life of
our national capital. As the governor
>f-Tennessee I have seen it a veritable
and raging center of storm around
which gathered its defenders and as
sailants, and from which sprang divi
sions in parties, disputes in families
tnd dissensions in churches.
“I faVor prohibition in any form that
will either reduce or destroy the liquor
traffic. I favor it personal-wide, town-
vide, state-wide, nation-wide and world
wide.”
WAYCROSS FIRE CHIEF
PROBES ARSON CHARGE
WAYCROSS, Ga., Nov. 12>.—Property
valued at $7,000 was destroyed ana one
fireman, Percy Walker, slightly burned
in a fire which early today destroyed
the Great Western hotel, a store, one
house and damaged three others. All
structures were of wood.
High wind made it look for a time as
if several blocks would be destroyed
Fire Chief Hall today is investigat
ing the report that an occupant of one
of the burned buildings refused to turn
in an alarm and tried to stop a man
vho was running to the box to sum
mon the department. Apparently the fire
j was of incendiary origin. Insurance of
j $3,000 was carried on the buildings.
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■*
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NAME....
Mrs. Cfiarxfco ... ... and her year-old eon, who suffetwu shipwreck
experiences strangrer than the wildest sea tales of Cooper or Stevenson.
(Staff Special.)
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. 13.—Re
lating a story of shipwreck su anger
than fiction, Captain Charles Neilson,
his wife and year-old son, and a crew
of eleven men, of the wrecked barken-
tine Amaranth, arrived here recently
from the South Seas.
For thirteen days the twelve mari
ners and the woman, clinging to ner
baby, braved the storm-swept South
Seas, traveling 1,441 miles in two frail
leaky, twenty-foot open boats, suffer
ing from exposure, starvation and
thirst.
August 30 the Amaranth left Austra
lia for San Francisco with 2,000 tons
of coal and ran aground'' on the coral
reefs of Jarvis island. It was night.
c.ybody toon, to the boats. Battered
and banged by the sea with boats leak
ing, they finally landed on the island,
three hours later.
They found Jarvis island a desolate
waste without water. To stay there
meant death. Fanning and Christmas
islands, the nearest habitated land,
were only a few hundred miles away
Contrary winds and currents made it
impossible to reach them. The nearest
other inhabited island was Samoa. It
was thousands of miles away. In leaky
boats it was next to impossible to at
tempt the voyage.
“What’ll we do?” asked First Officer
A. M. Johnson.
“Patch the boats and take a chance/’
replied Captain Neilson.
The crew, braving the sharks, waded
to the ship at low tide and. secured
a scant supply of canned goods and
water. Captain Neilson took his wife
and baby, the cabin boy, the Japanese
cook and a few sailors and started for
Samoa.
At Danger island the skipper expect
ed to replenish his water supply. But
before they got there the water ran
out—except a few pints which the men
refused to touch, leaving it for the
woman and her babe. Finally this was
gone. They were still two days from
Danger island. The tropical sun beat
down with parching intensity. It looked
like the babe would die. Then came
a squall. They caught enough water
to last until they made the island.
A small keg of the brackish stuff
gathered from rock crevices on Danger
island lasted them until they got to
Samoa. On September 15, six hours
after First Mate Johnson and his ex
hausted companions had dragged their
boat onto the beach.
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I The Famous $1,000,000
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est in Existence
MAIL SACK IS LOOTED
OF CASH AND JEWELRY
(By Associated Press.)
CoICAGO, Nov. 13.—Theft of money
and jewelry valued at $10,000 from a
mail sack was disclosed today by J^mes
Stuart, postoffice inspector here. The
crime is alleged by Stuart to have been
committed by Albert Tardy, a mail
wagon driver.
The theft occurred yesterday. Tardy
collected five sacks containing regis
tered packages at the South Water
street, Masonic temple and stock ex
change substations.
j Suspicion was aroused when the
wagon containing four of the sacks was
I found abandoned at the union station,
j These sacks contained $4,000 in money
I and gems, which had not been dis-
iturbed.
POPE BLESSES SAILORS
FROM AMERICAN NAVY
FIRE AND BOMBS USED
BY WOMEN IN ENGLAND
LONDON, Nov. 13.—Militant suffra
gette arson squads and bomb troops
were at work in several parts of the
British Isles early today.
The Cactus house at Alexandra park,
Manchester, containing a collection val
ued at $50,000, was wrecked by a bomb.
Begbrook, a fine mansion near Bristol,
was badly damaged by fire.
The Bowling and Tennis club’s house
at Catford, southeast of London, was
burned.
On the scene of all three outrages,
sucrage literature and petroleum cans
were found, but there was no clue to the
identity of the criminals.
NEW HAVEN BOND ISSUE
ILLEGAL, SAYS OFFICIAL
PROVIDENCE, R. I., Nov. 13.—A
decision that the proposed $67,000,000
bond issue of the New Haven railroad
would not be legal in Rhode Island was
announced today by Bank Commissioner
George H. Newhall.
The issue, he says, will not comply
with the state law, which requires that
1 in such cases the earnings of a corpora
tion shall be twice the interest charges.
; Under this decision trust companies iv
I Rhode Island cannot carry the bonds
as assets and savings banks cannot buy
i them at all.
BANK BANDITS WOUND
CASHIER AND GET AWAY
'By Assorated Pres*.»
SEATTLE, Nov. 13.—Five bandits es
caped with $10,000 from the Union uank,
of New Hazelton, British Columbia,
after a running battle with citizens last
night, according to a dispatch received
here, and early today six men suspected
of being implicated in the robbery were
arrested. The bank cashier, who sur
prised the bandits at their work, was
wounded
(Special Dispatch to ThQ» Journal.)
ROME, Nov. 13.—A large party of
American bluejackets was received this
morning in private .audience by Pope
Pius. The men were conducted to the
Vatican by Captain William J. Maxwell,
of the battleship Florida, and were pre
sented to his holiness by Monsignor
Thomas F. Kennedy, rector of the Amer
ican college in Rome.
The reception took place in the papal
apartments. The pope was robed in white
and was accompanied by the major domo
of the Vatican and a detachment of
Swiss guards. He spoke with the Ameri
can officers and imparted to them and to
all the men the apostolic benediction.
As the sailors left the hall they gave
three cheers for the pope.
The battleship Wyoming, flagship of
the United States squadron, arrived at
Naples this morning from Malta.
NEGRO SUSPECTS HELD
IN BIRMINGHAM SILENT
(By Associated Press.)
BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Nov. 13.—Ben
Lloyd and John Sperman, two young
negroes have been taken in by the Bir
mingham police as suspects in the hunt
for the negroes who last night robbed
To Prevent Blood Poisoning
apply at once the wonderful, old reliable DR.
PORTER’S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL, a
surgical iressing that relieves pain and heals
at the same time. 25e, 50c, $1.00.
(Advt.)
I JAPANESE EMPEROR
REVIEWS HIS FLEET
LIGHTSHIP AND SIX MEN
LOST IN RECENT STORM
BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 13.—Light
ship No. 82, carrying a crew of six
persons and stationed in Lake Erie off
Point Abino. fifteen miles west of this
city, is reported lost by incoming ves
sels and is believed to have foundered
in the recent storm.
Wreckage of the lightship floated
into Buffalo harbor today.
“The lightship was gone when we
passed her anchorage this morning at
5:20 o’clock,” said Captain F. A. Du-
puio, master of the ore-carrier Champ
lain. “Apparently she was driven from
her anchorage in the gale and went to
the bottom.”
The vessel was a new steel craft 150
feet long with a thirty-foot beam.
Captain Reid, of the tug, believes all
of the thirty or forty members of the
crew of the freighter were drowned.
The wreck not' having been reported un
til yesterday it was difficult to ascertain
when the disaster occurred, and where
it took place. The overturned vessel
probably drifted several miles.
Captain Plough, in charge of the lo
cal life saving station left this morning
with his crew for the wreck.
Searching parties were also organized
to patrol the shore in search of wreck
age.
Captain Reid thinks another vessel
may be on the bottom of Lake Huron,
near where the overturned steamer was
found. He can only account for the
steamer’s turning turtle by a shifting
of her cargo or because of a collision.
(By Associated Press.)
TOKIO, Nov. 13.—Emperor Yoshihito
today reviewed a fleet of fifty-five Jap
anese warships at the naval station at
Yokosuka. The vessels then executed
a series of maneuvers.
The emperor intends to make a per
sonal review of the entire Japanese fleet
every year.
IF US HIT BACK
TOBACCO HABIT My?
I offer a genuine guaranteed remedy
fbr too.iuco or miuR habit. li t- mil-1. pleasant,
aireugibeuing. ForrlUiemex. Ovemmie iliat pe
culiar uervousncN* ami ora* ing torclgarettea,
cigars, pipe, chewing tubacto or •uuff.
T» <a-cois poinunounaad seriously injures the
health in several ways, causing such disorders as
nervous dysnepsia. *leeplc*«ne«'s gas, belching,
giiawliigorotheruncoiuforiablesensationin* tom •
auh; constipation. hrndaeHe. weak eye*.
lo**u of vigor, red spots on akin, throat
l Irritation, eatnrrh, ast?nna. bronchitis,
heart failure, lung trouble. mclancho>v,
neurasthenia, imnaired memory and will nower. Impure <po»s<>ned> blood, heart
burn. t-orpld liver, lots of tsprMt", bad u-mb. foul breath. H«si»udo.
lack of ambition, weakening and falling our of hair and nianv other disorders
Nervous breakdown. wraftoTl-d intellect and IN'^A V TTY are oh-n attributed
to » hobir hv eminen' m-di-it m n n. Vfhr conMi'ie eommWing «"ield*
EDWARD J. WOOOS. S34 Sixth A..,
when you can live areally contented life if you ouiy
get your b«>ily and nerves right? It la unnufe
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habit by suddenly stopping with trill-power—-don't
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i nun enjov
FREE
BLUEJACKETS. ROBBED,
MISSJRIP TO ROME
ROME, Nov. 13.—Blue jackets of the
American battleships Utah. Delaware,
Vermont and Ohio discovered today they
had been robbed of $12,000, which they
entrusted to the care of a musician
named Camerazco, a former bandman
on the Utah. He was to have used the
money in arranging an excursion to
Rome and an audience with the pope.
Camerazco was recommended to the
sailors by Chaplain William H. I.
Reaney, of the Utah, who is in Rome.
About 1,000 blue jackets who wished to
pay a visit to Rome handed over the!* 1
money to Camerazco, with instructions
to engage a special train for them
This he promised to do, but when the
men obtained shore leave and were
ready to start, they found that Camer
azco had absconded.
Bluejackets on Ohio
Visit French Capital
MARSEILLES, Nov. 13.—Three hun
dred bluejackets from the U. S. bat-
telship Ohio, left Marseilles for Paris to
day. When they returned to their ship
an equal number Of the crew of the bat
tleship Vermont made an excursion to
the French capital.
Discuss Louisiana Debt
BATON ROUGE, La., Nov. 13.—The
Louisiana constitutional convention to
day began the actual business of con
sidering waj s and means of meeting
the $11,000,000 bonded indebtedness due
January 1. Four bills for handling the
debt are up for debate. They differ
only in details.
“Pape’s Diapepsin” ends Stom
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If what you just ate is souring on
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YOUR HEART
^=*Does It Flutter. Palpitate
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AMERICAN COMPOUNDING CO.
Box 587- L JASPER. ALA.
Solllgent, Ala., July 21, 1913.
Dp. J. H. Grant,
Corpus Chriati, Texas.
Dear Doctor:—
You are correct; 1 am quite familiar
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can prescribe it with perfect impunity
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Doctor there la on use in dabbling
with this serum treatment nor anv
oth^r doubtful remedy. The Baughii
Pellagara Cure is the only established
and successful treatment of tod •>. No
one here doubts the efficacy of the* cure
at all.
We all know that pellagra is on the
increase and that Its Invasion or foot
hold should be stamped out before we
have a widespread epidemic of It in
this country as once prevailed with all
its deathly horrors in Italy. Austria,
Gascony, Roumanla and Corfu.
As to my opinion of the Baughn’s
remedv will say that I have the most
implicit confidence in it and when you
once try It you will prescribe no other.
Very respectfully.
Your friend.
(Signed; D. D. HOLLIS, M. D.
Ex-Countv Health Officer, Lamar Co.,
Alabama.
and shot Awib Saeid, a Syrian grocer,
and choked the latter’s wife and later
robbed and shot Herman Pollock, a He
brew grocer. Both Saied and Pollock will
die. The negroes will not talk. A
pistol was taken from one of them.
HOW I CURED
MY CATARRH
TOLD IN A SIMPLE WAY
Without Apparatus, Inhalers, Salves,
lotions, Harmful Drugs- Smoke or
Electricity.
HEALS 24 HOURS
It Is a new way. It is something absolutely
different. No lotions, sprays or sickly smelling
fnlveR or creurns. No atomizer, nr any appara*
tus of any kind. Nothing to Rinoke or Inhale.
No steaming or rubbing or Injections. No el»»c«
trlctt.v or vibration or massage. No powder;
no plasters; no keeping in the house. Nothing
of that kind at all. Something new and dir-
Gerni-Demopa of Catarrh Scattered
by Every Sneeze 1
ferent, eomething delightful and healthful,
soaxjthing instantly successful. You do uoi
have to wait, and linger and pay out a lot
of money. You can stop it <*vor night—and I
will gladly tell you how—FRFE. I am not a
doctor and this !r not a so-called doctor’s pre
scription—but I am curd and my friends are
cured, nnd you can be cured. Your suffering
will stop at once like magic.
1 Am Free—You fan Be Free
*™AIy cutarrii was filthy ainT"Iloathsome. It
made me ill. It dulled my mind. It under
mined my health and was weakening my will.
The hawking, coughing, spitting made me ob-
uoxloua to all, and my fuuKbreotb and disgust
ing habits made even my loved ones avoid mo
secretly. My delight In life was dulled and
:uy faculties impaired. 1 knew tnat in tlraa
It would bring me to nn untimely grave, be
cause every moment of the day and night It
was slowly .vet surely sapping my vitality.
Hut I found a cure, and I am ready to tell
you about It FREE Write me promptly.
RISK JUST ONE CENT*
Send no money. Just your name ami address
on a postal card. Say: “Dear Sam Katz,
i'lease tell me how you cured your catarrh, and
bow I can cure min**.” That’s all you need
say. ! will understand, nnd 1 will write tfl
you wi*b complete Information, FREE, at onc*\
Do not delay. Send postal card or write me
a letter today. Don’t think of turning this
page unul you have asked for tnls wonderful,
treatment that can do for you what It baa
done for me.
SAM KATZ, Suita D, 171,
1325 Mlchlg-an Ave., Chicago, Ill.
HAYNER
BOTTLED
For Only SO Cents—Express Charges Paid By Ua.
This is a special introductory offer we are making to NEW customers only—
and if YOU have never tried Hayner Whiskey—we want you to try it NOW.
We Want To Show You * Take U» Up .
We want to place some of our fine old whiskey On this offer—order this whiskey try it—use,
before you so you may know how rich, pure all you want—and if you don’t find it all we
and delicious it really is—and here’s the great- claim—the finest you ever tasted and the
est offer you ever heard of— greatest value you ever saw—we will return
Send U* 80 Cents—That’* All your money without a word.
And we will send you a full quart bottle of You Take No Chances—
HAYNER PRIVATE STOCK Our guarantee is fair and square—it means
what it says—we must send you a quality that
will please you in every way—and we will do it.
Now, Rush Your Order
Cut out this coupon—fill it in—and mail it to us
with CO cents in stamps, coin or money order—
and the full quart of fine old BOTTLED-IN
BOND whiskey will go forward by first express.
BOTTLED-IN-BOND WHISKEY—in a strong,
sealed case—and we will pay express charges.
Remember—It’s Bottled-in-Bond
And every bottle sealed with the Govern
ment’s official Green Stamp over the cork—
your assurance that it is fully aged, full 100JS
proof and full measure—as good and pure as
it is possible to produce.
A Wonderful Offer
No one else offers a BOTTLED-IN-BOND
whiskey at our price of 80 cents a quart-
no one else would pay the express charges
on a one quart shipment as we are doing.
We Stand The Loss /
Shipping one quart, express paid, means a loss
to us—but we want your trade—and we know
when you have tried this whiskey, you will be Address
so pleased with it, that you will send us your i |t miiimMi.miii.,ii
future orders for four quarts or more. . ,ron ; Vy°- coio.. Mont. »na an stntec we»»
»nereof must call lot (1.00 for on® Quart—express paid. 14-fl
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO, DipartmentRTis
AOur n«?*<%*» am. c. * T u. — ' 4 —
THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY
Enclosed find 80 cents for which send me ONE full quart
bottle of Hayner Private Ktock Bottle-in-Bond Whiskey—
express paid—as per your offer. It is understood that if this
whiskey is not found as represented and pleasing ti me in
every way—my 80 cents la to be promptly refunded. This
Is my first order. _ . _
iv*ZQ
Name
tUASANTECQ UNGER TKC KOO AMS 9XJ6t A
JUNE 30IIAO® SERIAL NO. WOi.
HAYNER
1 priwesimk'’
WHISKEY
BOTTLED IN BOND
hayner distilling cghrm*
NiTllURY N&l IU MSTRICT.TW.C*
DtlttUMt
at Troy, Ohio I
Address Our
Nearest Office
Dayton, Ohio
Toledo, Ohio
SI. louts. ||o.
Kansas City. *
Boston. Hass.
St. Pant, Minn.
New Orleans, la.
Jacksonville, Ha.
1 S50Q,0oS!tS) t §v»n Pnlrt