Newspaper Page Text
ASPIRIN
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“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin? is gen
uine Aspirin proved safe by millions
and prescribed by physicians for
over twenty years. Accept only an
unbroken “Bayer package” which
contains proper directions to relieve
Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neu
ralgia, Rheumatism, Colds and Pain.
Handy u?n boxes of 12 tablets cost
few cents. Druggists also seH larg
er “Bayer packages.” Aspirin is
trade mark Bayer Manufacture Mono
acericacidester of Salicylicacid.
• (Advt.)
Hl
yiL r a J
vVhat a sight my
skin was until!
R cleared it with
esinol
Even if the pimples, redness or roughs
ness are severe and have resisted ordi
nary treatment, a little use of Resinol
Ointment and Resinol Soap will usually
bring out the skin’s real beauty.
Resinol Ointment and Resinol i
Soap contain only the purest ingre- ,
dients and gentlest medication,which l
HW physicians prescribe widely in the I
MH treatment of the skin. Sold by all |
druggists.
ARE YOU SICK?
If you are suffering from Blood or
Nerve Disorders, Rheumatic Symp
toms, Stomach or Bowel Trouble,
Skin broken out or rough and sore,
Sore Mouth or Tongue, Giddy-Head
ed, Weak, Nervous, Doss of Appetite
or a General Run-down condition of
Health—you should write at once for
the most valuable and reliable In
formation that has yet been pub
lished about the strange disease—
PELLAGRA
Many people have this disease and
do not know it until it is too late.
Do not wait. You cannot afford to
take chances. You may/ not have
PEDDAGRA, but if your health is
run down, or you suffer from one or
more of the above troubles—you
should protect yourself against this
vile disease. Get rid of these trou
bles NOW —do not wait until the sys
tem is entirely undermined by dis
ease.
No matter what doctors or others
have told you—no matter what you
have tried—no matter if you have
had these symptoms but a few weeks
or several years—all we ask is just
a chance to show you what the AR
GADDEP TREATMENT will do. It
has convinced thousands of others—
now here is your opportunity. It
costs you nothing for this FREE
PROOF. We will send to you pre
paid and with no obligation on your
part
FULL SIZED $2.00
TREATMENT FREE
Thousands of sufferers—bankers,
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—rich and poor of all classes—have
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should read the joyful letters of
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about the ARGADDEP TREAT
MENT. Many had suffered for years
and had tried dozens of remedies—
others had spent hundreds of dollars
for doctor bills—some had been told
they could not live but a short time
—yet these same sufferers write us
that their health was quickly' and
completely restored under the AR
GADDEP TREATMENT.
We will send you some qf these
remarkable letters —and also the
most sensible and reliable informa
tion that has ever been published
about PELLAGRA disease. How
to treat it —how to get well and en
joy permanent good health. It will
all be sent FREE in plain sealed
wrapper. Everything confidential.
If you have just contracted any
of the above troubles do not waste
your time and money in experiment
ing and doctoring. Send for the
FREE $2.00 ARGADDEP TREAT
MENT and prove for yourself that
the ARGADDEP method is the most
simple, pleasantest, safe and sane
method of permanent recovery. Re
member this FREE PROOF costs
you nothing, and does not obligate
you in any way. Send your name
and address—NO MONEY.
The full-sized $2.00 ARGADDEP
TREATMENT, with full directions,
and the valuable and important In
formation about PEDDAGRA will be
sent in plain wrapper—ADD FREE.
Write for It today—NOW.
ARGALLEP COMPANY
Dept. 702 Carbon Hill, Ala.
(Advt.)
Rupture Kills
7,000 Annually
Seven thouinnd persons each year are laid
away—the burial certificate being marked
“Rupture.” Why? Because the unfortunate
ones Lad neglected themselves or had been
merely taking care of the sign (swelling) of
the affliftion and paying no attention to
the cause. What are you doing? Are you
neglecting yourself by wearing a truss, ap
pliance, or whatever name you choose to call
it? At best,,the truss is only a makeshift,
a false prop against a collapsing wall—and
cannot be expected to act as more than a
mere mechanical support. The binding pres
sure retards blood circulation, thus robbing
the weakened muscles of that which they
need most—nourishment.
But science has found away, and every
truss sufferer in the land is invited to make
a FREE test right in the privacy of their
own Lome. The PLAPAO method is un
questionably the most scientific, logical and
successful self-treatment for rupture the
world has ever known.
The PLAPAO Pad, when adhering closely
to the body, cannot possibly slip or shift
out of place, therefore cannot chafe or
pinch. Soft as velvet—easy to apply—lnex
(jtystve. To be used whilst you work and
whilst you sleep. No straps, buckles or
springs attached.
learn how to close the hernial opening as
nature intended, so the rupture CAN’T come
down. Send your name today to PLAPAO
CO., Block 101, St. Louis, Mo., for FREE
trial Plapao and the information necessary.
(Advt.)
Saws 25 Cords a Day
(The OitA»« Leg »»w doea the work of ten met.
I wood sawing easy and profitable. When not sawing wood
use for pumping, feed grinding, ate. Simple eeoootmcal
durable Tbouoande in use Fully guaranteed. « days
trial. Cash or Easy Paytnoata. Write for Low Price.
OTTAWA MFG. CO 851 Wood St.. Ottawa. Kaa
.r . .2 r.ACE CERTAINS given for
selling 8 boxes of Prof. Smith’s
Headache and Neuralgia Tab-
Ibßmßlmm ' e,s a * 25 cents a box. Cata-
IslSilfaUuJ togue of other premiums sent
with goods. SMITH DRUG CO., Dept. 87,
Woodboro, Md.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
1 BAPTISTS ARE
PROTESTING ON
CENTRALIZATION
BY BEV. ALEX W. SEALER
Special Correspondent The Journal.
WASHINGTON, D. C., May 15.
The 1920 gathering of southern Bap
tists will go down in history as “the
curbstone convention.” There have
been more delegates hobnobbing on
the sidewalks outside the place of
meeting than were gathered on the
inside. The comment they are mak
ing is to protest against the grow- 1
ing tendency of the body to drift
away from democratic practices and :
fall into the centralization of the
Republicans.
It is more apparent at this meet- '
in than ever before. I do not know ,
whether or not it is caused by the .
atmosphere that flows out from the
Republican majority in congress, but
it exists and is being commentei
upon unfavorably by many of the
delegates, among them the leading
men of the body. One of them, a
very conservative man, said to me
today that the tendency of the con-i
vention was to fall into the hands
of the state mission secretaries.
They are being appointed on most of
the important committees, and are
being looked upon as the men who
announce the policy of the state thev
represent toward the business of th*
convention.
Secretaries In Control
There has been a growing tenden
cy to let the secretaries of the con
vention be In control of its business.
No longer are there any open discus
sions on important questions. Coin- j
mittee reports are directed by the
secretaries and they select the men
who are to speak upon them. Al
ways there are several speakers se- I
lec.ted by the secretaries to make
cut-and-dried speeches upon cut-and
dried reports. A small amount of
time is sometimes given for free dis
cussion at the close of the order on
any subject, but only the boldest
spirits, unless there is a principle
involved, have the nerve to butt into
the cut-and-dried program. There is
a widespread clamor for a return to
the democratic practices of the past,
although some are saying that this
will, never come back since the body
has grown so large. The idea has
taken firm hold of the brethren that
the whole convention should not be
run in the Interests of any boards
or Institutions. k
Then for the last year or two the
west has climbed into the saddle and
has ridden over the rights of the
other sections.
The president of the convention is
a western man and the chairman of
the $75,000,000 commission Is a west
ern man. The director general of
the campaign was a western man and
the superintendent of publicity is a
western man and it is interesting to
note that all of these are frotn Texas.
At the Saturday morning session of
the body the committee on the next
place of meeting recommendd Chatta
nooga. It looked as if It, might take
that direction but Dr. W. D. Pickard,
formerly of Georgia, made an elo
quent speech to let the south have
something now and then. A place
where the delegates were not con
tinually dodging the clubs of police
men as has been the case in Wash
ington. Following this speech, the
body voted unanimously to go to
Chattanooga.
I. realize that I will be soundly
criticized for this story but it is
written at the request of a number of
leading men and it expresses the sen
timent of a large number of Bap
tists all over the country. It is writ
ten in no unkind spirit, but with a
desire to stop a dangerous tendency
on the part of the convention. The
committee appointed to consider all
matters pertaining tb the convention
meetings will consider this matter,
but will hardly report upon it utttl
the next session.
The business of the body has been
practically concluded today. Many
Georgians will preach in Washington
pulpits tomorrow and then on Mon
day the odds and ends will be dis
posed and then the meeting will ad+'
journ by noon.
There is a probability that the
headquarters of the Woman’s Mis
sionary union will be moved from
Baltimore to Atlanta. At the conven
tion of the women, a committee re
ported recommending that the head
quarters be moved either to Atlanta,
Birmingham or Nashville, on account
of the distance of Baltimore from the
territory in which the women are at
work. It was decided to let the dif
ferent states vote on the question
and come to a final decision next
year.
The committee on the next place of
meeting today decided on Chattanoo
ga, and this will be ratified by the
convention on Saturday.
I mentioned Thursday that a great
southern Baptist daily paper would
doubtless be started in the near fu
ture. Friday, a leading monied
man in the convention offered to put
$50,000 in a southern Baptist weekly
to be published in Atlanta, a paper
free from the control of denomina
tional agencies. This man is ready
to put his money into a daily with
the same purpose in view, and others
arq ready to join him. It will prob
ably cost a half million dollars to
start such a paper. The sentiment is
that it should be started, and it will
probably be done within the near
future.
French Evacuation of
Ruhr Region to Begin
Soon, Announcement
PARIS, May 15.—(8y the Associa
ted Press.) —Official announcement
was made tonight that evacuation by
t-he French troops of the Ruhr region
would “begin shortly.” This de
cision, the announcement says, was
taken because verification has been
received of the reduction of Ger
man troops in the Ruhr to the num
ber allowed by the protocol of Au
gust, 1919,
THE TRUTH ABOUT GALL STONES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E.
Paddock, Box 201-N, Kansas City,
Mo., tells of an improved method of
treating the Catarrhal inflammation
of the Gall Bladder and Bile Ducts
associated with Gall Stones from
, which remarkable results are being
reported. Write for booklet and free
: trial plan.—(Advt.)
Will Present Petition
For Political Prisoners
WASHINGTON, May 15.—A peti
tion for general amnesty for political
prisoners, including Eugene V. Debs,
recently nominated by the 'Socialist
party as its candidate for president,
was to be presented at {he White
House today by a committee ap
pointed by the Socialist convention
at New York.
Secretary Tumulty was to receive
the committee late in the day and
present the petition to the president.
Yesterday the committee, of which
, Seymour Stedman, candidate for vice
i president, is chairman, called on At
torney General Palmer and Monday
another committee will present a pe
tition to Secretary Baker.
Rabun Man Kills
Demorest Citizen
MOUNT AIRY, Ga., May 15.
Charlie Putman, of Rabun, Ga., shot
and fatally wounded Ben Douder
milk, of Demorest, Ga., yesterday
afternoon near Mt. Airy, Doudermilk
dying soon after. The cause of the
shooting is not known.
Election Agent of
De Valera Slain
i DIMERICK, Ireland, May 16—(Sun
day)— Joseph Dalton, prominent
; member of the Sinn Fein and DeVa
lera’s election agent, was killed while
leaving a saloon last night. Nine
masked and heavily armed men fired
two volleys at him. No arrests have
been made.
Foreign Envoys Are
Received by Wilson
WASHINGTON, May 15.—The Jap
anese ambassador and Polish minis
ter were received by President Wil
son today.
CORN-BORER ARMY INVADES
FOOD-PRODUCING FARMS
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Spraying “corn-borers” with kerosene
A worm is assuming a menacing
attitude toward America’s corn crop.
Secreted in a cargo of broom corn,
imported from Austria, the unbidden
guest has invaded 1,750 square miles
in four states —Massachusetts, New
York, New Hampshire, and one coun
ty in Pennsylvania.
The so-called corn borer, named
by reason of its tunneling operations
through the stalks and ears of corn,
is the worst of pests, destroying
from one-fourth to one-half of the
infested crops of corn, millet, hops
and hemp in its native lands of Eu
rope and Asia. Its depredations in
the cornfields of this country have
been such as to deprive the worm ot
none of its unsavory reputation as
FARMER CARRIES
CORN TO MILLER
IN AN AIRPLANE
“Uncle Ray” Camp, of Campton, in
Walton county, now has “been to the
mill” in everything there is, carry
ing the good Walton county corn to
be ground at the old, old place—at
Reeves’ Mill, where he used to car
ry the grain three score and ten
years ago, as a barefoot boy with
cheek of tan, and —probably—a
stone-bruise or two, to make the go
ing difficult.
“Uncle Ray” is 79 years old, and
adventurous. He was a daring sol
dier of the Confederacy, and the
passing years have not dulled the
keen edge of his spirit.
This week there was an aviator
at Monroe, carrying passengers.
“Uncle Ray” sent the young man
word he’d like to see him at Camp
ton. The flier came over, with his
plane.
“I’ve been to mill every other
way,” said “Uncle Ray.” “Now I
want to go to mill in an aeroplane.
Are you game to take me and a half
bushel of mighty good corn to
Reeves’ Mill?”
The airman was game. The filght
was made with great success, “Uncle
Ray” taking to the air like a duck
to water. Flying low over Reeves’
MHI, he dropped the sack of corn
in the general direction of the mill
er—who ducked just in time. Then
the return trip was made and a good
landing. Then “Uncle Ray” slowly
unbuckled the safety belt, and
clambered out of the plane, and set
his two feet solidly on the solid
earth, and spake:
“Man and boy, I have carried corn
to Reeves’ Mill for 70 years,” he
said. "I have carried sacks of corn
on my shoulders. I have shoved the
grain in a push-cart. I have prod
ded oxen along the road at the dizzy
speed of two miles an hour, and
pulled the bell-cord over mules and
horses hitched to wagons and bug
gies. I have carried corn to the
mill in automobiles. And now—”
“Uncle Ray” paused for consid
eration.
“But this sky-rldlng beats ’em
all,” he said, finally. "Good roads,
up yonder. And a. man can get more
exhilaration out of a half-bushel of
corn, in the sack, flying in one of
these things than he could get out
the same noble agricultural product
liquefied after the manner of a'by
gone day—on the ground.”
Mr. Camp is a wealthy and very
prominent citizen of Walton county,
who has just added this little stunt
to a long and useful career, replete
with incidents of historical Inter
est.
“I don’t want to miss anything, as
long as I’m here,” says “Uncle
Ray.” >
Atlanta Shows Third
Largest Increase in
High Cost of Living
WASHINGTON? May 15.—Rich
mond, Va., showed the least increase
in the cost of living of thirteen in
dustrial centers of the country for
which statistics covering the- two
years from December, 1917, to De
cember, 1919, were announced today
by the department of labor. Rich
mond’s increase was 32.02 per cent
in the two years, while Denver show
ed the largest increase with 38.19
per cent. The other industrial cen
ters and their increase in living
costs are: Kansas City, Mo., 38.16;
Atlanta, 37.89; Scranton, Pa., 37.10;
Indianapolis, 36.53; Pittsburg, 36.17;
Cincinnati, 35.24; Memphis, 35.23;
Birmingham, 34.32; St. Douis, 34.24;
New Orleans, 33.88, and Minneapolis,
32.71.
Increase in costs in Atlanta in
the two yea#s were: Food, 27.94 per
cent; clothing. 66.86; men’s clothing,
88.04; women’s, 56.68; housing, 32.58:
fuel and light, 30.81; furniture and
furnishings, 49.87; miscellaneous,
31.70.
Birmingham’s increased costs were:
Food, 26.48; colthing, 57.57; men’s,
70.59; women's, 49.18; housing, 34.88:
fuel and light, 39.78; furniture and
furnishings, 45.13; miscellaneous,
26.84.
Costs at Memphis increased as fol
lows: Food. 28.43; clothing, 66.16;
men’s, 64.62; women’s, 66.90; hous
ing, 23.14; fuel and light, 34.14; fur
niture and furnishings, 53.15; mis
cellaneous, 28.31.
Increase in costs at New Orleans
were: Food, 21.13; clothing, 83.16;
men’s, 91.78; women’s, 77.06: hous
ing, 10.79; fuel and light, 24.70; fur
niture and furnishings, 57.65; mis
cellaneous, 35.14.
Richmond’s increased costs were:
Food, 23.12; clothing, 78.57; men’s,
84.96; women’s, 73.65; housing, 9.83;
fuel and light, 18.70; furniture and
furnishings, 55.88; miscellaneous,
23.95.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
in Use for over 30 Years
Always bears _—
the fjr* Z 7 -
Signature of
the arch enemy of plant life yet in
troduced into the United States.
Fighting the pest by fire, steam,
and annihilation by crushing, are the
methods of warfare. The federal
government has equipped a forty
horsepower automobile truck as a
source of fuel in fighting the worm
with fire. A portable pressure tank,
operated by one man, has been de
vised whereby kerosene oil is sprayed
over the cornstalks and stubbles to
be burned. Another method of de
stroying the corn borer, so prolific as
to multiply its kind by 1,000,000 to
the acre of ground, is by using a
crushing machine through which the
infested material is passed. Still an
other way of control is a steaming
process.
By the latter mathed, all the corn
stalks and stubbles in the infested
fields are assembled in huge piles.
Covered with canvas cloth, steam is
applied for a period of 5 to 15 min
utes, the material beiijg thoroughly
sterilized and all living things killed.
The hot steam is generated by a
po rt’able boiler or traction engine.
W^^'-. ,,, . w , ——«
I will Jun©3o W
A 1920 OVERLAND
A1920 FORD
WWV STARTING AND
ucigmtG system. ' '•
Fre&hl and
War tax. Waid
• IW’
g| I have Already Givea Away
|| 17 Motor Cars—Here’s2 More
11
A / Ford, roll up to your door and driver get out and say, “This is yours!’’ That is exactly what is going to
W V happen to two lucky people on June 30, for I am going to give these cars away ont hat day, free of all cost,
I I even freight and war tax paid. If you want to be considered, you should send me your name and address | |
|. today—'tomorrow may be too late. Two people who send their address now and,are prompt and energetic in fol-
| lowing Instructions will get this $945.00 Overland Car and this $600.00 Ford Car. |
Thousands of Dollars in Grand Prizes and Cash Rewards I
I In additisa to these two splendid motor cars as First and Second Williams, Missouri. The minute your name and address, plainly
•» Grand Prize J I'wiilateogiveaway in this contest thousands of dollars written on this coupo# below with correct picture solution are re-
iaCatfo «swards,and Special Prizes and Minor Grand Prizes. These ceived by me, you will be entered as a full fledged contestant with
win iadfode several s§ox» Bicycles, Genuine Diamond Rings, 14 a fair and equal opportunity to get one of these cars—FREE. But I
GcM Watches, Phonographs, Silverware, Clocks, Musical you must be prompt. Quick action counts for a lot in this contest, |
r.-i wtilg > .M<Hiey Rewards, etc.,etc. Just your name and address and the ones who will win are wide-awake. |
L on the coupon below start the whole ,
1' thing. one ivSl be well paid in cash rewards and commissions Mail the Coupon 1 Oday
j-ii .i partin tfafe contest, whether or not he succeeds in . . , . ~ ... . x . ~
or the $600.00 Ford Car or other Grand Get yourentry to mejust as quick as the mails will carry it—that s
-tfrittl dsrAkateri in case of a tie.) the ftrst and most important thing for you to do now and you must
. • nr -’*7 rT hurry—Act Quick! Clip put the picture anu send in you. solution,
4 '1 I (liven Manv AutomobileS with your name and address, right away. If your solution is correct,
• 1 Aarven many AuromoDiies T enter at once j n thig contestt wit £ a cr g dit of , ]000 votes
havegaven away47Automobiles. Inmy as explained below. I will also send you full particulars and every-
contcst which closed October 31, the Ford Car went to Enoch thing necessary for you to go right ahead. B
D. W. BEACH, Manager, FARM LIFE Dept. SPENCER, INDIANA
I; - OUT ALONG THIS LINE g
i„ ■ 1
Can You Find Five Faces? | |
Get 1000 Votes ||
! Www fen
3 a I n picture are a number of hidden faces. See how many you can
,'i T S S find. Some are looking at you—some show sides of faces—you 11 find them
B » ' u '’* upside down and every way. Mark each face you find with a pencil, Write
IT 1 V \ a your name and address plainly on the lines below, clip out this coupon and
j mail to me now. If you find as many as five of the hidden faces I will enter
p!| VT** 1 you in this contest with 1,000 votes. Do this now. Mark al! the faces
p I *L/‘if X° u can fi nd » write your name and address below, clip out along dotted
0 "Weß d. twi line and mail today.
I D. W. BEACH | |
1' FARM LIFE, Dept. 665 Spencer, Indiana.
B Gentlemen: —Here is my solution of the puzzle. If correct, enter me In
S your Grand Prize subscription contest with a credit of 1,000 votes. I want
1 one of these cars—send me full particulars.
1 Name - ~-
i.«wimwn> li i'iwiwvihiujib iiiwagasaßß—aa— —Mwaaa— mms— i—a
FIFTEEN STILLS
WITH LIQUOR AND
PRISONERS TAKEN
Fifteen illicit stills, thousands of
gallons of beer, three automobiles,
about 200 gallons of "moonshine”
whisky and six prisoners resulted
from a wholesale raiding expedition,
personally headed by Prohibition
Supervisor D. J. Gantt Wednesday
and Thursday in Dumpkin, Dawson
and Forsyth couhties.
Nearly twenty-five prohibition
agents, operating in five crews, and
accompanied by two moving picture
cameramen and a newspaper photog
rapher, constituted the flying squad
ron that seemed destined to smash
all records until heavy rains made
the mountain roads impassably.
Two automobiles conveying Su
pervisor Gantt and two crews left
Atlanta at break Wednesday
morning, while the other officers
started at the same time from vari
ous towns in north Georgia. The
first day saw fourteen outfits, some
of them big ones, located and “cut
clown.” The largest distillery boasted
fifty-tvzo fermentors and 7,000 gal
lons of beer were ready for use.
After heading back toward Atlan
ta, the trail of a suspicious car was
picked up in Forsyth county and a
twenty-five-mile chase ended in the
capture of the machine, two young
Atlantians and 128 gallons of liquor.
The “blockade runnerfe” were over
hauled when their car stalled in a
flooded creek. They gave the names
of Fred Sullivan and E. Mason and
were placed in the county jail at
Cummings under state federal
charges.
The accidental wounding of an al
leged “moonshiner” who was struck
in the side by a bullet from the re
volver of an officer pursuing him
figured as the only casualty of the
trip. The officer tripped and fell dur
ing the chase and inadvertehtly
pu’led the trigger of his weapon.
Most of the raiding party returned
to Atlanta Friday morning.
Large Quantity of
Liquor Disappears
CHICAGO, May 15. —A large part of
$600,000 worth of liquor seized as
evidence by government agents has
disappeared from the government’s
bonded warehouse, Harry Mager, col
lector of internal revenue, said to
day. A force of auditors was sent to
the warehouse to check accounts in
an effort to trace the liquor. The
amount of the thefts could not be de
termined, Mr. Mager said, until an
inventory had been made.
Bomb Thrower Fails
To Injure Erzberger
BERDIN, May 15.—An unsuccess
ful attempt on the life of Mathias
Erzberger,, former vice chancellor and
minister ot finance, was made at Es
lingen, near Stuttgart, today.
An unknown man threw a bomb in
the assembly hall where Erzberger
was speaking. Erzberger was not in
jured.
TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1920.
| I
I I
I 1
V liL f 8
I X?
I Rc® s ’ I
I . l
I !lh\ —when “delicious and re- g
I 1 *' W freshing” mean the most. ■
<The Coca-Cola Company
ATLANTA. GA.
■ 221 |
k THESE
This Victory Red Persian Ivory
Pendant and Neck Chain, 30 inches /
’kif# long;' these 4 Gold plated Rings f W
and this lovely Gold plated Laval- 9
Here and Neck Chain will ALL be
Given FREE by us to anyone sell- z/'///.•/»uiUv\\\
ing only 12 pieces of Jewelry at 10 cents each. Victory Red is all the rage.
B. D, MEAD MFG. CO .. Providence. R. I.
3