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How to Treat
A Torpid Liver
The liver is the largest and most
important organ in the body, and
when the liver refuses to act, it
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THE ATLANTA TRI WEEKLY JOURNAL.
STANDARD BEARER
OF REPUBLICANS IS
NEWSPAPER EDITOR
COLISEUM, CHICAGO, June 12
United States Sentor Warren G.
Harding, of Warren, 0., was nomi
nated late this afternoon by the Re
publican convention as Its candidate
for president of the United States.
COLISEMU, Chicago, June 12. —
Governor Lowden released all of his
delegates as they began flocking to
Harding, who left his hotel for the
Coliseum during the ninth ballot.
The ninth ballot showed Harding
far in the lead but resulted in no
nomination.
CHICAGO. June 12. —Senator War
ren G. Harding, of Ohio, was riding
the top yave toward th© presidential
nomination when the liepublican
convention late today took a two
hour recess. During that time the
Wood and other forces were work
ing frantically to check the Harding
compromise movement.
Wood and Lowden managers con
ferred on the question of pooling
their forces to check the drift to
Harding and force a recess in the
balloting until Monday.
At the moment of recessing the
Harding tide was rising fast and
running from all directions. It had
climbed up to a hundred and thirty
three and a half votes. >
The convention was galled to or
der at 4:50 p. m. on the arrival of
Chairman Lodge.
No agreement as to adjournment
over Sunday could be reached at a
conference in which Governor Low
den, Will Hays, chairman of the na
tional committee, Harry Daugherty,
Senator Harding’s manager and
Charles B. Warren, of Michigan, for
mer national committeeman, partir
cipated while the convention was re
assembling.
Members of the Pennsylvania del
egation said they had received a
telegram from Senator Penrose’s
physician saying the senator was
very low and might not live through
the day. For that reason, they were
inclined to question the statement
respecting Senator Harding attrib
uted to the Senator in Philadelphia.
Kentucky went into the Harding
column with all 26. taking them from
Lowden on the ninth ballot.
Kansas went solid for Harding.
Harding got 7 of Wood’s votes
from Florida.
Dn the nnth, Connecticut cast
thirteen for Harding and one for
Johnson. A roar of Harding en
thusiasm swept- the Coliseum.
New York gave Harding 66, tak
ing them from Wood and Lowden.
It was the signal for another demon
stration.
Michigan broke and gave Harding
one.
Missouri went solid for Harding,
all thirty-six.
Czecho-Slovak Troops
And German Prisoners
Are Landed at Norfolk
NORFOLK, Va., June 12.—The
army transport Mount Vernon, with
4,000 Czecho-Slovak troops, 900 Ger
man war prisoners and 250 women
and children, passed in the Viriginia
capes late today and docked at the
army base here. The transport is
taking her passengers from Siberia
back to their native land.
Her last stop before one of her
propellers was disabled off the south
Atlantic coast, was San Francisco.
The loss of one propeller forced her
to abandon her course and head for
Hampton Roads for repairs. She
will be in dry dock probably at the
navy yard for several days.
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NOTABLE FIGURES AT STATE SUNDAY SCHOOL CON
VENTION which begins in Atlanta Tuesday. At top, left, is Pro
fessor M. L. Brittain, state superintendent of schools and presi
dent of the Georgia Sunday School association. At the top, right,
is Hinton Booth, of Statesboro, Ga., chairman of the executive
cmmittee of the Georgia Sunday School association. Below, at
the left, Miss Elizabeth Williams Sudlow, of Rock Island, 111.,
who will be in charge of the children’s division conferences of
the convention. At the right, Miss Mary E. Moxcey, of Cincinnati,
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Only Spontaneous Outburst
Os the Convention W 7 ent to
Herbert Hoover, Says Cobb
Two Women) Unschooled in
Politics or Convention
Practices) Made Best
Speeches Heard in Chicago
BY IRVIN S. COBB
CHICAGO, June 13’.—The shout
ing and the tumult dies, the captains
and the kings depart.” (Kipling
thought of this line first. I mere am
lending it distinc
tion by taking it
for the opening
text of this dis
patch.
Yes, sir, “Rud”
Kipling certainly
said a mouthful
when he said that.
He might have
had a national
convention in mind
when he phrased
it. The captains
and the kings de-
IL JB
part; also the queens, the jacks, the
ten spots, the nine spots and so on
down the suits to the deuces, of whom
there are countless hordes.
In the final analysis, a national
convention is largely composed of
deuces, trying to masquerade as face
cards. Likewise, as but just stated,
the shouting and the tumult dies.
It dies suddenly and like the historic
dog named Rover—all over. It dies
with the selection of a presidential
nominee, and its farewell echoes, if
any such there be, are lost in the
thundering tread of many feet hur
rying their owners in a mad race to
get away from here to points else
where.
Real Cheers for Hoover
In the present instance, we, its
listless and jaded survivors, look
ing back next week upon these fa
miliar scenes, will, no doubt, recall,
almost with a shock of reminiscent
surprise, that the only really sponta
neous, unrehearsed, authentic and
genuine outburst recorded as having
marked the proceedings up until the
time of the decisive ballot to choose
the head of the ticket, came not from
the floor of the Coliseum, but from
the galleries above—came not on sig
nal from some king-rooter to his or
ganized and waiting co-rooters, but
without preparation or prior warn
ing—came not from the delegate
body for some candidate who had a
chance ultimately to win, but from
spectators whose sole interest in the
transactions was sentimental; came
not for Wood or Lowden or any as
pirant with a known following, but
came as a popular tribute for a man
whose total of votes might be count
ed on a one-armed man’s fingers, to
wit: One Herbert Hoover. What was
the inner meaning of this? I do not
profess to know.
Two Women Starred
From a mass of confused mem
ories of this convention certain sali
ent incidental details afterwards will
stand out—the fact that two women,
one a New York society woman and
the other an actress—namely, Mrs.
Douglas Robinson, of New York, and
Miss Alexander Carlisle, of Massa
chusetts, both amateurs in politics
and novices in convention habits—
made the two best speeches that
were heard in Chicago; the reflection
that the two most expensive favorite
sons that the world has ever known,
even in this era of the high cost of
candidating, should have gone by the
boards; the unforgettable look of
poignant anguish upon the noble
countenance of General Frank Hitch
cock when it was seriously suggested
that hereafter the convention repre
sentation of certain far southern
states should be cut down to match
the Republican vote cast in those
states at the general election, which
meant that his favorite commodity,
the colored brother, would be pitiably
fewer in number if the hellish design
were carried out. If the tragedy of
Hamlet wtih the character of Ham
let left out were a failure, think of
Othello with no black star to play
the main role, while the general
lurked in the wings holding the
prompt book, counting up the house.
That would be a tragedy. >
Procter’s Descent
As the summer waxes and wanes,
we shall remember how Mr. Procter’s
soap-fat merely greased the skids
for his own painful descent, and we
shall wonder since Procter failed so
utterly whether he would have done
any better with Keith to help him.
But we’ll know at last for what he
named his well-known brand of soap.
He named it for that part of himself
which fits inside of his hat.
We shall think back on the gloom
of disappointment enveloping the
souls of the Pullman porters, prac
tically every one of whom I hear had
a dream of being chief doorkeeper at
the White House and showing
the pestiferous white trash
away from Mistah President Lowden.
Reveling in cool breezes on the sil
very strands, I for one. Shall recall
how the sweltering heat wore me
away, and how the restaurant prices
went up and up and still ever up
ward.
After San Francisco, it will be
four long years before our eyes may
hope again to look upon scenes such
as these. In those four years new
figures will arise on the national
horizon, new issues will come forth,
new slogans be raised to dim tne
ears of the groundlings and through
those four years the great army of
the convention hangers-on, the has
beens, the never-weres and the hope
to-bes will await the bugle call for
their quadrennial resurrection.
Broken Political Vessels
Every national convention brings
them forth. There were hundreds of
them here during the week now
ended. There will be hundreds more
of them, of a different political com
plexion but wearing the same com
mon aspect, at San Francisco when
we go there on the 28th. They are
the shards and the sherds, the pot
sherds and the broken vessels of oth
er political days. This one here, in
an old forgotten day, was actually
a federal judge. That one with him,
the one with the wistful eye and
the white side whiskers, attained the
proud eminence of being a national
committeeman away back yonder in
1884. The one over yonder was min
ister to some banana republic under
Rutherford B. Hayes.
The world moved off and left them
stranded long ago. They lost their
prominence, they lost their influence,
many of them almost lost their iden
tities. They are the broken white
chips of the cruel, greedy game call
ed politics.
But once every four years—when
a national convention meets —they
emerge from their several obscurities
like bleached bugs from under a
crumbling log in the woods and they
assemble in the convention city.
Faded, unknown, withered, uncon
sidered figures, they linger about,
trusting that some new leader of a
new generation will “confer” with
them, prdying that some young com
mander of the forces will remember
them and bestow upon them the pre
cious boon of a word or a handshake
or a pat upon the back. And then,
when adjournment comes, they re
turn to their burrows under the
chips in the woods to moulder for
four years more, the while they
await the resurrection call of the
next convention of the party which
so long ago sucked them dry of
their juices and tossed them aside.
They are the living tragedies of na
tional politics and Chicago this week
has fairly crawled with them.
It was a hard week upon them, too,
what with the heat and the jams and
the man-killing Chicago taxicabs and
worst of all, the absence from his
former favorite haunts of old John
Barleycorn. The brass rails upon
which they might have rested their
tired old insteps have vanished and
the cooling scuttle of suds has be
come but a fond, sweet, sad mem
ory. I think I know now why this
convention, as measured by the com
parative standards of its predeces
sors here and elsewhere, seemed,
generally speaking, so listless, so
apathetic and so lacking in the old
bally-hoo stuff. The saloons being
gone, the run of the delegates had
no place wherein to sit down and
rest their faces and hands and their
legs. It was not lack of a belief in
their cause or a lack of hope or
victory in the fall which dispirited
them. It was because their feet hurt
them.
The most consistent example of pa
tient endurance and suffering hero
ism which the convention offered was
not presented on the floor of the
hall, or around the headquarters,
now all dismantled and empty, nor
yet in the hotel lobbies. It was pre
sented just ouside the Coliseum,
where, all day long every day, the
embattled suffragette pickets stood
on the sunny side of the blistering
Wabash avenue holding aloft their
banners, protesting against the po
litical discrimination still practiced
against their sex in certain states.
They maintained their convictions,
did these martyred brave ladies, but
their complexions are a total loss
(Coypright, 1920, Bell Syndicate
Another Slight Clue to
Location of Kidnaped
Baby Keeps Police Busy
CLEVELAND, June 12.—Mrs. Della
Kiingel, rooming house proprietor
here, today notified the police that
a child answering the description of
Blakely Coughlin, thirteen months
old baby kidnaped from Norristown,
Pa., ten days ago, was brought to
her home by a man late Thursday.
She said she could not find room for
them and they departed.
"I am positive it was the kidnaped
child,” she said after seeing a photo
graph of the Couglin baby.
She sent a telegram to the baby’s
mother telling her not to worry, as
the child appeared in good health
and spirits. •.
A ctiy wide hunt was ordered by
Police Chief Smith and police in sur
rounding cities were instructed to
aid in the search.
ORGANIZED l»
WILL ML TO
DEMOCRATIC Pm
MONTREAL, June 13.—Organized
labor today threw down the gauntlet
to the Republican party and now will
appeal to the Democrats for recog
nition of its platform demands.
This decision came when the
American Federation of Labor, in
annual convention here, unanimous
ly condemned the Republican plat
form daopted in Chicago as a docu
ment “defiant in its defense of the
enemies f labor,” and one that “pro
poses an industrial enslavement and
an abrogation of rights as precious
as life Itself.’’
Declaring that the Republican
party had “turned its back upon la
bor,” the convention instructed Sam
uel Gmpers and Matthew Woll, presi
dent and nee president of the Fed
eration to submit in "identical form”
to the Democratic party convention
at the San Francisco the proposals
of labor which were presented by
them to the Republicans in Chicago.
In a lengthy report, bitterly as
sailing and condemning the various
planks of the Republican platform,
President Gompers and Mr. Woll
brought the matter before the dele
gates. The labor leaders indictment
of the party was greeted with en
thusiastic cheers and applause, while
hisses and "boos” interrupted the
reading of several of the Republi
can planks.
Platform Condemned
Without debate the report was ap
proved and the Federation went on
record as condemning the Republican
platform on the grounds that it:
Denies labor the right to strike
against the government. And re
mains silent on the right of wage
earners to organize trade unions and
attain jutice by collective bargain
ing.
Offers no remedy for the high
cost of living and denies the im
portance of profiteering.
Repudiates labor’s demand for re •
peal of compulsory arbitration sec
tions of Esch-Cummins transporta
tion act.
Denies lawful right of workers to
cease working in the plank on peace
ful arbitration of wage disputes.
Aims to undermine sovereignty of
the Mexican people and “fulfill the
hopes and aims of those whose sole
object is the exploitation of the
people and boundless resources of
Mexico.”
Fails to urge congressional legis
lation to prevent federal courts from
usurpation of authority in declaring
unconstitutional acts passed by
congress.
Fails to favor federal compensa
tion law and election of federal
judges by the people for six year
terms.
Threatens the right of the people
to bring about “a change in the ad
ministration and laws of the govern
ment by peaceful means as is guar
anteed by ( the constitution.”
Has Abandoned Heritage
The heritage left to the Republi
can party by Abraham Lincoln, de
clared the report, “is abandoned in
the platform which embraces every
opportunity to strengthen the con
cept of repression and coercion of
th© working people.”
Before adjourning until Monday,
the convention accepted the invita
tion of Secretary of Labor Wilson
to recommend a representative to
represent the federation at the com
ing meeting- of the international la
bor commission which was jstablish
ed under the League of Nations.
An attempt to place the federation
on record in support of strikes by
union school teachers failed.
Condemnation of the Republican
party by the federation’s convention
was declared tonight in a statement
issued by William Hutchison, presi
dent of the Carpenters and Joiners
Union of America, to be an attempt
by Samuel Gompers to play organ
ized labor into the hands of the
Democratic party.
Mr. Hutcheson, in his statement,
asked Mr. Gompers if the federa
tion’s non-partisan political program
has been abandoned. He charged
that the convention’s action was not
in accordance with its policy.
“I believe the committee should
have made its report to the conven
tion without criticsm,” he added.
“Labor’s demands should have been
presented to all parties, including
the Socialists, before any criticism
should have been made. If the Dem
ocrats turn down labor, how are we
going to condemn them? To the un
biased observer, it would appear
that Mr. Gompers is trying to
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Offer Made to Further
THIS GREAT MAIL ORDER
ILEONARD-MORTON & CO, Dept.67o3 Chicago
ize how we can save money Send the Sicilian Mohair Skirt No. 8X1477S and the free white voile
for you. That’s why we make waist. When they arrive, I will pay $4.98 for the skirt; nothing for the
this unbelievable offer of the white voile waist. If not satisfied after examination, will return both ana
bargain price on the season’s you will refund my money.
most beautiful skirt and the Skirt f C010r...........
wlStVouto'knowmore'about Waistin. Lengthin. Hipin.
us and our unparalleled Free Waist f
bargains. Measurement ( Gj ve bust only
Send no money, not
FW Ww a penny. Just the
coupon ana we will send the smart Name
stylish skirt and the free voile
Address
ITCH-ECZEMA ffi
(Also called Totter, Salt Rheum, Pruritus, Milk-Crust, Weeping Skin, etc.)
ECZEMA CAN BE CURED TO STAY, and when I say eared, I mean just what I say—OU-R-E-D, and not
merely patched up for awhile, to return worse then before. Now, Ido not eare what all you bare used nor how
many doctors have told you that yr»u eould not be cured-all 1 aak la just a chsnee to show you that 1 know what
lam talking about. If you Will write me TODAY, I will send you • FREE TRIAL o’ my mild, soothing, juaran*
teed cure that will convince you more in a day than I or anyone e’se eould in a month’s time. If you are dfaguated
and diaconraged. I dare you to give me a chance to prove mv claims. By writing me today yon will enjoy more real
I comfort than you had ever thought this world holds for you. Just (ry it, and you will tee lam telling you the truth.
DR. J. E. CANNADAY
1164 Park Square SEDALIA, MO.
Vedail* 1 Cecld yoa do a bettor f rend thta oottco to mm
TUBERCULOSIS
' TUS "ben physicians sal J
ARkWeRP' !t " as impossible for J. M.
W «< , lyl"* Miller, Ohio Druggist, to sur-
WES&I, fijlES-, rive the ravages of Tubereu
Ivsis. he began experimenting
. sa-X x J* ’ I ” n himself, and discovered the
taS 11,11
z ADDILINE. Anyone with
SO Pounds iBB Pounds Latest Photo coughs or Influenza showing
tubercular tendency or Tuber
culosis, may use it under plain directions. Send your name and address to
ADDILINB h * 194 Arcade Building. k « a Columbus, Ohio
POLICE WITHOUT
IMPORTANT CLUE
IN ELWELL CASE
NEW YORK, June 12. —Twenty-
four hours after the murder of
Joseph B. Elwell, wealthy sports
man and authority on whist, the po
lice admitted today that they were
virtually without an important clue
as to who shot him in his home in
this city.
Examination of scores of friends
and acquaintances served the pur
pose. however, of convincing the po
lice that there was nothing to sub
stantiate a slight suspicion that he
might have ended his own life. No
weapon was found in the house.
Detectives attached some impor
tance to the story told by Elwell’s
chauffeur, Edward B. Rhodes, that
he knew a number of women friends
had keys to Mr. Elwell’s hopie. These
women were wont to come and go at
will, Rhodes told the police.
Mrs. Elwell, who had been legally
separated from her husband since
1911, was questioned by the police
last night. The police declined to
make public anything regarding the
nature of this interview.
No revolver was found, but de
tectives picked a bullet from the
wall and discovered the empty shell
lying on the floor. Elwell’s money,
jewelry and many r valuable trophies
were untouched. On a table near
the chair in which Elwell was found
lay several unopened letters and one
which had been opened and which
bore bloodstains. It was signed
“Lloyd.” <
Elwell was a wealthy broker and
a prominent business man in addi
tion, and an authority on bridge.
He owned racing stables with fif
teen or more thoroughbreds. The
bloodstained letter signed “Lloyd,”
which was found near him, was from
Lloyd Gentry, the trainer of his
horses, which now are on the Ken
tucky tracks. It was sent from La
tonia.
The housekeeper, going to work
today in the Elwell residence in a
fashionable Riverside drive section,
found her employer sitting in a chair
clad in his pajamas and bleeding
from the head. There was a blood
smear on the wall three feet from
the chair.
Elwell shared his residence with
friends, but they have been out of
the city recently. He went to a
theater party last night and about
midnight returned home alone in a
taxicab. His evening clothes were
found near his bed, but the bed
clotlies had not been disturbed, the
presumption being that after dis
robing he sat down to read about
his horses.
While concluding that robbery was
not the motive for the murder be
cause money and other valuables in
the house were not disturbed, the
investigators recalled that three bur
glars were caught trying to rob the
residence about a year ago.
Boys and Girls Join -
in 801 l Weevil Hunt
AMERICUS, Ga.,J une 12.—Two
thousand five hundred boll weevils
were found upon Sumter county
farms and destroyed yesterday by
boys and girls engaged nn the boll
weevil drive which is being staged
here this week. Whites and negroes,
working in separate squads, are both
engaged in the hunt. Os the wee
vils destroyed yesterday, 1,032 were
credited to the whites and 1,468 to
the negroes.
Americus business men have of
fered prizes aggregating S3OO to
boys and girls who capture the larg
est number of boll weevils during the
drive. '
How to Heal Leg Sores
A WONDERFUL treafnient that
heals leg sores or Varicose Ulcers
without pain or knife is described in
a new book which readers may
get free by writing a card or letter
to Dr. H. J. Whittier, Suite 229, 1100
Mcgee, Kansas City, Mo. —(Advt.)
play organized labor into the hands
of the Democratic party.”
Mr. Hutcheson, a former member
of the Republican party advisory
committee, is president of the sec
ond largest organization in the fed
eration. When informed of Mr.
Hutcheson’s statement, executive of
ficers of the federation pointed out
that the action of the convention
was unanimous and that one delegate
took the floor opposing the report
presented by President Gompers and
Mr. Woll condemning the Republican
platform.
'i’LULL’AY, JIi.JU lu, TT—r.
fa ci jUsKHSsssw o“ p o t VA—
I
08 MT
mi”
J St
I
—when “delicious and re
freshing” mean the most.
W//// g thec ta^. c c o a. mpany
ONLY Brings You
Thiß a
Wonderful
B a n j o
A Marvelous Offer!
j- °, nly o ne ar down brings you this won
derful Mando-Banjo! Plays like a mandolin yet
has the snap and pep of a real banjo. A full-sized,
v easy-to-play-on instrument. Light in weight, durably
made and compact in form. We offer the Mando-Banjo as
the most startling real musical instrument* bargain ever
conceived. One Dollar Today and E 54.85 to the express- I
man when he puts it in your hands.
Bargain Offer—Open to All
men and women—all can quickly play jazz on 1
a Mando-Banjo—just a little, practice or a couple of short lessons I
ana the music comes. Get ycur friends to order with you—Start i
a Jazz Band m Your Spare Time. Why, it’s simply great, Only
a dollar now and $4.85 when expressman delivers—that’s all.
What An Expert Says
Band Master Robert. Burn U. S. Marine Jazz Band, who put New
York on its toes, ssys: “I consider the Mando-Banjo a marvelous i
instrument. Haven’t played a mandolin — —— _ -, •'
I for 15 years, yet your Mando-Banjo was ■ „„„ R
‘jazzing’ for me in a minute. How ! THE n MANDO ‘ B^°., M w S J E ?’.
soon can you deliver one to me?” It 8 Dep .* k “ k A ’*“’
will ‘‘jazz’’ for you quickly and you’ll 8 »
know Rand Mnafpr Burn B Please iend me the Msndo-Banjo.
Know BdM IVI aster Burn was right— . Enclosed find »1.00; 1 npree to pay
the minute you get it. ■ the rw»ii)ing $4.85 when the
I Mando-Bahjo arrives.
NOW—•TODAY * n the coupon, enclose .
nun-11yvAl One Dollar ant) send jt 1Q ■ Aomf
At Once. Make this summer a season of mus.c. _ —————————————————
■ A ddrtw or
The Mando-Banjo Company ■ Bm
Dept. A4ll 180 N.,Wabash A»e. .Chicago, 111. | r,t »
■asiaaaarT ar,- ,rr | s<a.u ~ - . .
CHRONIC DISEASES
ARE JFTEN CAUSED
BY IRON-POOR DLOOD
Indigestion, Rheumatism, Sleeplessness, Nervousness,
and Similar Troubles Have Been Found to
Be Due in Many Cases to Lack
of Iron in the Blood.
THE OBVIOUS REMEDY IS ZIRON
When doctors all agree on a certain treatment, you may be sure that
a positive, scientific fact has been settled.
There is no disagreement among medical authorities as to the medic
inal value of Iron, in certain forms of disease, caused by a lack of Iron in
the blood.
Among these diseases are anaemia (shown by a pale, relaxed condi
tion of the skin), general debility, weakness, nervousness, lack of appe
tite, certain skin troubles, like eczema, scrofula, etc.
But more particularly may be mentioned the chronic troubles, for
which no active cause can be discovered, such as chronic dispepsia, or in
digestion after eating, rheumatic pains in the muscles and joints, inability
to sleep, etc.
These troubles are often due simply to a lack of sufficient iron in
the system, and the best way of treating them is to furnish the blood
with the iron it needs, by taking Ziron iron Tonic.
Ziron is not a secret or patent remedy. The ingredients are printed
on the label. You know what you are taking, and your doctor will advise
you as to the medicinal value of its ingredients for your particular case.
In any event, should you wish to try Ziron, you may do so without
expense, if it turns out not to suit your case, which you cannot
other medicines, or even with a prescription, for your druggist will gladly
sell you a bottle, on the guarantee that the first bottle will bnefit, or
money back.
t Ziron is a mild chalybeate (iron) tonic, containing, with other in
gredients, the hypophosphites of lime and soda, and is recommended for
growing children, as well as adults, who need the strength that iron, com
bined with the hypophosphites, will give.—(Advt.) (Z 8)
DON’T MISS THIS ALL FOR 12 CENTS
<. To start you buying from us, we send this great combination pkg.,
sX)-'V7 postpaid, for only 12 cents. It contains Fancy Gold-plated Ring, 1
Cameo Scarf Pin, 1 pkg. Handso me Silk Remnants, 1 silvered Thim
ble, 2 gilt Collar Buttons, 1 Bird Whistle, 1 Silk Counterpiece, I
Fancy Bead Necklace, 2 gold-plate Beauty Pins, and Home Game,
all sent postpaid for only 12c. 3 loti, 30c. Address Home Circle
• Co., p. o. Box 1152, New York.