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IlEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, «A„ SUNDAY, APRIL 20, 1913.
I ncr Will Outbid Detroit
□UlflR
LUuL For Asphalt Expert
VaiUlIilUdlll Ul UUU Led W LLCdJVCIo nMr||U j 1 nULa j
-l-a-r +•+ -!-••'-
LWlUfi
H > i I U| Chairman Smith Says County Must
11 |j| T Have Proctor, No Matter
.nilLI j What the Coat.
Convicts Tell Woes to Moyer JOSEPH MARTIN
ill
IIOEUIED TIE’
•!*•*»• *i* • *1*
v • v
*r • *1*
Wails of Protest Against Policy toj
Let Republicans Serve Out
Postmasterships.
Postmaster General Burleson's an
nouncement, upon ine authority of
the White House, that all Republican
postmasters will be permitted to serve
out their commissions, unless positive
and specific Inefficiency is shown, has
created more or less consternation
throughout Georgia, and long and
loud walls of protest are going up
Irom all points.
It Is estimated that this policy, If
hdhered to, will tie up for from one to
three years something like 200 post-
Siastershlps and 1300,000 annually In
Juicy Federal "pie," the which the
militant Democracy of Georgia thinks
itaelf entitled to Immediately,
Of course the figures run even heav
ier than that, when all classes of post-
masterships are taken Into considera
tion, but those of presidential size
figure comfortably over the quarter-
million-dollar mark
Democrats who have been standing
out In the cold, looking In for sixteen
long, weary, lean years upon Republi
can opulency and feasting on the In
side, are Inclined vigorously to resent
this highly virtuous attitude upon the
part of the administration in Wash
ington, and to say that It was not the
(tort of thing they bargained for ex
actly, when last fall they shouted
themselves hoarse and rolled up a
majority In Georgia of 70,000 for Wil
son and Marshall.
They say the administration te
straining at postmastershlp gnats aft
er having swallowed a large supply of
Cabinet camels, and that If l’reeldent
Wilson thinks Georgia voted ram
pantly for the Democracy last fall,
oaring foe nothing more by way of
change in office than the swapping of
i'hid Magistrates, t'abinet officials
and a few Ambassadors and Ministers,
he labored under a profoundly mis
taken Impression,
Bartlett, of Georgia, Leads Fight.
I'ongreosman Bartlett, of the Sixth
District, is vigorously and vehemently
opposed to the policy announced by
th. Postmaster General. He Is the
dean of the Georgia delegation In
* Congress, and he recalls how, sixteen
years ago, Cleveland appointees were
dumped out unceremoniously when
McKinley succeeded to the Presidency
the first time, and how those few who
were not dumped out were reduced
sharplv In standing In the depart
ments. In order that they might be
replaced by Republicans.
Congressman Bartlett says he
know s of dozens of cases where good
tJemocrats, with from two to three
years yet to serve, were thrown out
1n Georgia upon all sorts* of trumped-
up charges sixteen years ago, and he
thinks it a false and foolish senti
ment that undertakes to bar Demo
cratic retaliation now
Mr. Bartlett feels the Injustice of
the present situation, from his point
of view, so keenly that he proposed a
resolution recently in a meeting of the
Georgia delegation In Congresw pro
testing specifically against the Inno
vation set up by the Postmaster Gen
eral, which resolution was adopted
unanimously.
The Georgia delegation, headed by
the doughty Congressman from the
Sixth, proposes to wait upon the
President and let him know that it
thinks the policy of Republican re
tention In office all wrong and likely
to create lukewarmness and repressed
hostility, If not open revolt. In the
rank and file of the party In Geor-
gl That the Georgia delegation took
this radioal step without being fully
advised of the discontent "back
home" Is inconceivable. As a matter
of fact, hundreds of very frank and
outspoken letters have gone forward
to Washington of late with regard
to this matter, and Congressmen are
mighty quick to respond when they
see symptoms of a disturbance around
and about the homo base. In which
they may become unpleasantly and
perhaps disastrously Involved unless
they get busy and straighten things
out.
Sidestepping Home Complications.
it Is said there are some statesmen
In Washington who are more or less
Indifferent to thd Immediate distribu
tion of Federal patronage because
they see Inwlelay the possible tempo
rary escupe of embarrassment at home.
These statesmen do not hall from the
South exclusively by any means. They
are pretty well distributed through
out the entire country.
They are not protesting against de
lay, however, because they desire the
Republicans to hold on to the jobs the
Democrats might have, but because
delay gets them out of choosing be
tween friends back home right now,
thereby sidestepping possible compli
cations in the matter of re-election.
Be that as it may. however the
aould-be postmasters of Georgia, thrir
backers, indorsers, well wishers.-not
to'mentlon their sisters, their cousins
and their aunts, are plainly discon
certed, disappointed and little short of
dismayed at the lack of Immediate in
terest In their material welfare appar
ently manifest nowadays in Wash
ington.
Not a few of these kickers are frank
to eomplain that they actually “went
down into their jeans for the long
green" last fall, in order to help "put
Wilson and Marshall over," and this
they stand ready to prove by hand
somely engraved exhibits from the
National Committee, acknowledging
receipt of their mite In contribution to
the cause.
They say these steel engravings ar fc
pretty to look upon and. In certain
circumstances, may be depended upon
to stir the patriotic heart to all sorts
of flutterings and palpitations, but that
as a matter of cold, political fact, they
would rather have the jobs they han
ker for than the aforesaid handsome
engravings, even if they are decorat
ed with a smiling likeness of PrAi-
dent Wilson at onq end and "Little
Tom" at the other.
In short, what the average Geor
gia Democrat nowadays apparently
Is demanding to know is w hy a Demo-
HET&tlc administration should be so
||<! ■ 1 •
now, when the Republicans
j were not solicitous a
»out the Democrats.
Chairman Shelby Smith, of th<
County Roard, said yesterday he had
telegraphed C. A. Proctor, Detroit as
phalt expert, asking what salary he
would accept to supervise the roa-l
work of Fulton County. Mr. Smith
said the county would outbid De
troit for Mr. Proctor’s services If nec
essary.
Smith said that since Proctor had
declined to accept the position of
fered him at a salary of $3,1100 he
had made an extensive Investigation
that developed the fact that Proctor
was one of the five first-class asphalt
experts available in the United States
and that he was doubly determined
Fulton County dnd Atlanta, should
have the best.
“We want Proctor at any cost,"
he said, "We have talked our situa
tion over with him In detail, and
would rather have him than any man
we know of,
"Proctor gets something over 14,-
000 now, and we'll have to come a bit
stronger than that. 1 have no doubt
the city will pay Its share of the
salary when they see what a good
man he Is.”
Always Find a Helping Hand
Warden W. T. Moyer, seated in his.office in the Federal Prison,
ready to listen to the confidences of one of his charges.
Spanish Woman With Him, Says
Detective, Who Reports to
Family and Drops Case.
Board of Trustees Petitioned to
Re-establish Athletics at
Methodist College. .
celved yesterday a number of curou-
lars from the student government as
sociation of the college, who are en
deavoring to Interest others In their
cause. The circular, signed by J. L.
Matlifcws, president, and Cranston G.
Williams, secretary of the student or
ganization, declares that In spite of
many improvements and additions to
the curriculum and equipment of the
college, the enrollment has decreased
from 313 to 200 In three years. The
students blame the lack of intercol-
colleglate athletics for the situation.
They ask for the support of the alum
ni to their petition before the board
of trustees In June.
Graduates, in a meeting, framed
the following petition:
"Resolved. by the undersigned
alumni and former students of Emory
1
Superstition Halts
A Double Wedding
Their Friend*’ “Don’t*” Avert Die-
a»ter and 9care Young Couple*
Into Separate Wedding*.
A double wedding: in the Gross
home, 278 South Pryor Street, will
not take place to-night as planned,
but in its stead there will be the con
ventional affair of a single bride and
groom. A pet superstition thwarted
fm
pap*
: "%y:*:.
. ,,
well laid plans for the double cere
mony.
As planned. Miss Fannie Gross
would have been married to Isaac
Rosenberg, and Isadore Gross was to
wed Miss Sadie Jacobs before a single
altar. The affair would have been
elaborate. But—
“Disaster always accompanies a
double wedding,” friends of the be
trothed told them. And if they told
it once they told it scores of times.
Finally Mr. Gross and Miss Jacobs
yesterday afternoon decided to thwapt
fate and to wed at once. They were
married by Rabbi Levine.
The other couple will be married
this evening, and the ceremony will
be followed by a reception for both
the couples, an occasion Just as joy
ous as If the scheduled double wed
ding had* taken place.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, April 19.—William J.
Bums, the American detective, de
clared to-night that he had dropped
the case of Joseph Wilberforce Mar
tin, the “missing” cotton broker from
Memphis, Tenn., because he had Lo
cated Martin at a small village near
Vevey, Switzerland, in company witii
the Spanish woman who has been
prominently mentioned in the case.
It was declared here that Martin
will be able to settle any financial ob
ligations which may be outstanding
against his firm.
Burns said he had notified the Mar
tin family In Memphis, who had re
tained him, that the missing man had
been located, and as he held no war
rant for Martin, his connection with
the case should immediately cease.
Burns said to-night that he learned
Martin purchased an entire new out
fit of clothing on the morning of
April 4 and then left for Folkestone
on the 10 o’clock train. From there
he went to Paris via Boulogne, and
thence to Vevey.
Family Refuses To
Credit Reports.
MEMPHIS, TENN., April 19 —
Members of the family and relatives
of Joseph Wilberforce Martin place
no credence in the reports that he
has communicated with friends in
London from a remote part of Switz
erland. Rumors have been rife for
several days that the family was cog
nizant of Martin’s whereabouts and
was concealing the information from
the public. This Is refuted by Fon
taine Martin, brother of the missing
man, by pointing to the fact that if
Martin were alive he would commu
nicate at once with his mother, as
he was known to be her favorite
an.
Mrs. Martin, the mother, lies at the
point of death and has not regained
consciousness since her prostration
Thursday, when sjrie became con
vinced tha? her son would never be
seen alive again.
Bankruptcy Hearing April 28.
(’reditors. it is expected, will agree
on the appointment of a trustee in
bankruptcy at a meeting called for
Monday, April 28, under bankruptcy
acts. The trustee will take charge of
the assets to be turned over by the
receiver, Dan F. Elliotte, who has
announced that he will take legal
steps in the Federal Court to secure
funds to carry on the company’s
plantation work.
It Is authoritatively stated that in
dictments will follow the consideration
of the case by Attorney General New
ton Estes, as county prosecutor. Gen
eral Estes has refused so far to take
up the case, but will at an early date
if no further news of Martin is heard,
say creditors of the bankrupt Mar
tin-Phillips Company.
Opposing «an almost solid front of
college officials and faculty members,
students of Emory College, Oxford,
Ga., have taken up the fight for the
establishment of intercollegiate ath
letics, and yesterday were joined in
their position by more than 100 Emory
alumni in Atlanta.
A committee of former Emory men,
visiting fellow alumni, obtained many
signatures to a petition to the college
board of trustees, asking for othletlc
privileges. No man approached re
fused his endorsement of the position.
Decrease in Enrollment Petition.
The Emory alumni in Atlanta re-
Collegc in meeting assembled that
under present conditions at Emory
College and in the college world at
large, we believe that the best in-
trest of the college would be pro
moted by allowing the students to
engage in intercollegiate athletics
under proper faculty supervision and
control and, therefore, we request the
Board of Trustees at its next meeting
to grant this privilege to the student
body.”
The signers were: George C. Gro
gan, El her ton; George W. Stevens,
Henderson Hallman, Norman C. Mil
ler,, AY. D. Thompson, T. M. Cheat
ham, AV. P. Blood worth. A. D. Thom
son, A. G. Fort. Thomas W. Cgnnallv.
Walter T. Candler, H. Y. McCord.
Jr., G. W. Wight, G. H. Stone, S.
Vernon Stiles.
Grand Opera Visitors!
~STODDARD1ZE
F OLKS who are coming to Atlanta, during Grand Opera Week,
should bring along apparel that needs Dry Cleaning!
STODDARDIZING is a truly wonderful process—it restores
Men's and Women's soiled, stained and out-oNshape clothes to
an appearance of newness!
A Wagon for a Phone Call
pay Charges (one way) on Out-of-Town Orders of $2 or more.
We
Stoddard
t26 Peachtree Street Dixie'8 Greatest Drv
Bell Phone. Ivy 43 , _.
Atlanta Phone 43 Cleaner and Dyer
Warden of Federal Prison Sets Aside Tuesday
to Listen to Troubles of His Charges.
Mounts and Towns
Are Named Wilson
Geological Survey Also Finds Many
Counties and Cities Called
Marshall.
WASHINGTON, April 19.—The
United States Geological Survey has
been looking up the question of the
prevalence of the names of Wilson
and Marshall in the geography of the
country.
It finds there are twenty towns and
four counties in the United States
bearing the name of Wilson and a
chain of mountains in Colorado and
Utah having that name.
Eleven .counties are named Mar
shall. They are in Alabama. Illinois,
Indiana. Iowa. Kansas. Kentucky,
Minnesota; Mississippi, South Dakota.
Tennessee and West Virginia. The
majority of these were named far
I John Marshall, Chief Justice of the
‘ United States from 1801 to 18S5. Six
teen cities or towns have the same
name, besides numerous Marshall-
towns.
Convict Succeeds
To Title in England
Noble Prisoner Has Spent Most of
His Time Behind Bars in
United States.
LEAVENWORTH, KANS . April
19.—Fred Grey, serving a sentence for
misuse of the mails, was notified to
day that he has succeeded to a Brit
ish title and a large estate in Eng
land on account of the death of his
older brother. His term will expire
June 16, and he will leave at once for
England.
Since he was nineteen years old.
Grey has spent most of his time in
English and American prisons on
charges of forgery, bigamy and usirv:
the mails to defraud. Promoting sales
of land in Mexico led to Lis 1 cst ar
rest.
\
It is TUVsdav afternoon at the At
lanta Federal Prison. Two score con
victs are waiting on their appoint
ments for interviews with Warden V’.
T. Moyer. They are going to tell
him variously of their hopes*, their
fears, their Joys, tlielr sorrows.
' The number Is there, more or less,
every Tuesday afternoon, becauue
then Warden Moyer is the confidant
and father confessor of the men In his
charge, to whom they go eagerly with
their troubles.
“They talk to me about everything
under the sun,” said the Warden ye> -
terduy, explaining the “man to man”
system which has its application at
the prison. “About business troubles
and family troubles, about life and
death, about themselves and their
consciences. And, some jinl talk.”
It is a part of the “humanity” sys
tem at the Federal Prison that it is
so. Tuesday afternoons have been set
apart as the time when the prisoner
may forget his stripes, may become
a man with Warden Moyer, and may
talk out of his’* heart.
2,000 Have Interviewed Warden.
Since the custom of Tuesday after
noon interviews began, nearly two
years ago. about 2.000 men have
talked thus to the Warden.
Each prisoner has access to request
blanks on which he may frame a
formal application for an audience
with the big, hearty man who is the
prison’s guardian. The application al
ways* is granted, the prisoner is
brought down to the Warden’s office
on Tuesday afternoon, and talks.
And because he is their confidant,
hearing things that men in the free
world seldom entrust to the ears of
others, he Is not inclined to talk much
about what he has heard. Not even
under the veil of anonymity will he
tell you of incidents in the inter
views; he is the confessor *of the
men. and there i>* something sacred
in the position.
Man To Man Talks.
But about the “man to man” scheme
in general he talks. And the story
of the system makes it very plain that
here is work that might very well be
deemed sacred* It deals with 'the
hearts of men. the secret hearts.
'They talk about everything.” the
Warden explained. “They hear for
Instance, that business affairs are
going wrong, and come to me for ad
vice. or for assistance in communi
cating with one man or another. They
want to know what to do. In these
cases it is not hard.
“With others something is wrong
with the prison—their clothes, or their
cells, or something that they want
changed That, too. ij* easy.
“But then there comes another man
with another trouble. This time it
himself or his conscience. That is
mlcr T # he bes thing is just t\. 1L--
n. ami to help »hen l can. Some
times there is nothing to do to help
except to listen. But that seems to
help some, they ray.”
Heart Panqs of Prisoners.
Sometimes, he said, a man tells him
just this: A baby has been born at
hoin<\ and Its coming has brought a
joy and a pain together to the father
In prison. Emotions have come *o
the prisoner-father that swell over
and beyond tin* walls of the peniten
tiary, and somebody must share them.
It is Warden Moyer’s mission.
Sometimes a death has occurred at
home. A long-term convict, maybe
for the time in a mood of revulsion
against the stripes and the barred
doors, hears this news* and must have
sympathy.
“It is hard to bear your troubles
alone after a time in prison,” the
Warden comments, “there is some
thing behind the walls that softens a
man’s heart In affliction, and that
brings him to yearn for sympathy
and companionship.”
A Tuesday afternoon interview
seems to mend the trouble. There is
sympathy from the big man in the
office, the sympathy of a man to an
other man. Not the sympathy of a
guard to a convict.
Comfort to Sufferers.
“Some men come to me,” he went
on. explaining the system, “who have
not heard from their homes and rela
tives. They come at times with a
fear in their heart that they hesitate
to express. Something is* wrong at
home.
"The letters that they mailed are
not answered after days and weeks.
Mat-lie there is no reply for months "
The men who have Inin in their
eells, sleepless night after sleepless
night, wondering why they have not.
heard thinking everything, fighting
all the time against the sense of im-
potency, praying, with fists clenched
and with teeth locked, for just a wor.l
front the people at home—these men
turn naturally at last to the Warden
and beg him to find out
They mutt suffer in just suoh a
way. because the Warden says that
sometimes they come to him hi some
thing near to agony.
Some "Just Talk."
•But sometimes,” said the War
den, and h** smiled, "there are men
who come just to talk. They have
no troubles. maVbe. Their lives are
just the placid lives of the prisoner
The world has settled into a routine
for them, a routine workshop and
cell and crowded meal room and quiet
Sundays They hear the same things
see the same fares. They must talk '
It was plain from Warden Mover's
manner in talking sympathetically of
these men that they are not the phi
losophers. these men who want just
io talk. They are uot the men to
whom reading appeals, or who find
. ompuuioii-hip in their uwu thoughts.
Titev are th.- men simpler minds.
who become almost like children in
their simplicity.. They must talk—
about anything, everything—them
selves, the prison, politics in their
crude conception, maybe baseball. And
Warden Moyer listens to them with
as much concern as to the banker
who wants a telegram sent about his
millions.
“Tuesday afternoon is always a
busy time," said the Warden. "11
Is always" taken up with Interviews.
Last Tuesday there were 20. Some
times there are a few less; usually
there have been many more. The rec
ord book shows that on one day there
were 126.”
Two Records Kept.
The Warden keep*' a record of the
interviews granted—not of the sub
jects discussed, but of the men whom
he has seen. The entry Is like this:
"April 15—The Warden interviewed
3.345, 2,809, 1,217, 62. 3,456, etc., in his
office.”
"The real record is In my memory,"
he said.
Or in his heart. Most of the storied
reach hie heart he will tell you.
The prisoners have learned that the
Tuesday afternoons are for their ben
efit. They seek the interviews them
selves.
"I never invite an audience, r.or
ask a confidence." said Warden Moy
er. “X never ask a question. Some
times there are men who, remorse
ful. want to confess. I merely listen
to them. That is best and, in fact,
is all I can do.”
Troubles and Tears.
Most of the men who come tq the
Warden with their troubles, he said,
bring frowns. But frowns with men
are rather wholesome indications, be
tokening brains alive, and business
tangles or other troubles easy to work
out.
But when the man brings tears, tin
Warden says, as many of them do,
the problem is different. The War
den finds then that the man's troubl"
is of the heart or of the conscience,
and that there may be no way to
remedy It except ny sympathy.
The smiles come sometimes, he
says. Then he knows that the busi
ness of running a great prison is not
a failure.
SPECIAL PULLMAN
SLEEPING CAR
ATLANTA TO MACON
*CENTRAL OF
GEORGIA RAILWAY
APRIL 21-22-23-24-25-26
To accommodate those who may
attend the grand opera in Atlanta and
wish to return to Macon after the
performance, the Central of Georgia
Railway will operate a Pullman sleep
ing car from Atlanta to Macon on
train N >. 8, April 21 to 26. inclusive.
Train No. 8. scheduled to le^ve At
lanta at 11:45 p. m.. will, on the above
dates, leave Atlanta Terminal Sta
tion 12:01 a. m. This car will be
open for occupancy at 9 p. m. Berth?
in this car may be reserved in ad
vance at Central of Georgia offices
in Macon or Atlanta.
\V. H. FOGG, D. P. A.
Adv.
Rogers’ Customers Do Not Worry
About the High Cost of Living
For nearly a quarter of a century the Rogers
Stores have been the means of saving thousands and
thousands of dollars to the Atlanta housewives. And
the everyday out prices, together with the special two-
day sales each week, are still and will continue to be
the reducers of the'High Cost of Living.
Note the many specials for
Monday and Tuesday
Fancy Yellow Yams, 24c Peck
For Iced Tea Use
Ridgways Tea
When you want to have’ iced tea. you must
choose your tea. Some teas are all right for
Icing, but others would be bitter. Good teas alone
produce an entrancing cup when iced. The bet
ter quality teas, like Ridgways. havff no such
acrid, herby taste as the inferior sort, and icing
only serves to bring out their fine flavor.
Capitol Household Blend, 1 J?
Quarter-pound IOC
Five O’clock Blend,
Quarter-pound
Her Majesty's Blend,
Quarter-pound
18c
25c
Delicious Fresh Roasted
Rogers’ Coffe es
A cup of Rogers’ Coffee will help to make your
breakfast one of the pleasantest memories of the
day. Those who drink these coffees cannot fall
to appreciate them on account of their fine flavor
and delightful aroma.
The latest improved Hobart Electric Mills,
which grind your coffee to any degree of fineness,
or pulverizes it, as desired. Is part of the equip
ment of all our stores.
35c Santos Blend 25c
40c Java Blend 30c
46c Regal Blend 35c
50c Royal Blend 40c
Special Pure Food Combination
Monday and Tuesday a special
combination of National Biscuit
Company’s Crackers and Rogers'
Better-Bread. Select your own com
bination, either three of a kind, or
one each of three kinds, or anyway
you desire. They are specially
priced.
Better-Bread
Uneeda Biscuit
Uneeda Lunch Biscuit
Zu Zu Ginger Snap
Best Granulated Sugar
24 Pounds $1.00
Evidently everyone has not taken advantage of our spe
cial sugar offer. We have several hundred dollar packages
still undelivered. Did you get yours? If you did not, then do
so immediately, for by Tuesday night we are sure there will not
be a lot left.
U I q Smaller quantities in the same proportion,
l aC&agC OC 12 pounds 50c 6 pounds 25c
Extra Specials in Everyday Items
Dr. Price’s
Fruity Dessert
Makes the most deli
cious desserts, beautiful to
look at, still better to eat.
Nine flavors — Lemon,
Orange, Chocolate, Mint,
Strawberry, Raspberry,
Cherry and Pistachio.
Zatek Chocolate Icing, package 15c
Borden’s Milk Chocolate, 8c and 4c
Piedmont Hotel Vermicelli, package. ... 9c
Anger’s Egg Noodles, package 9c
Green Split Peas, package 9c
Hasty Lunch Chocolate, can 20c
Wommack’s String Beans, can 9c
American Beauty String Beans, can 9c
Red Snapper Sauce, bottle.. 21c
Spencer’s Horse Radish and Mustard. ... 9c
Stagg Amber Marmalade, 25c and 15c
Franco-American Spaghetti, can 10c
Franco-American Spaghetti, large can... 15c
Smoked Herring in Olive Oil, can 12y 2 c
Marinated Mackerel, can 12V2C
Family Brand Kippered Herring 6c
Pure Vermont Maple Sugar, cake 5c
Clear Lake Brand
Early June Peas
Regular Price 15c
Monday and Tuesday
3 Cans 25c
Franco-American Potted Beef, can 10c
Rose Queen Sardines, can 8 l-3c
Boned Chicken, can, 55c and ,.. 35c
Underwood’s Deviled Ham, can, 30c, 20c, 10c
Nutlet Peanut Butter,
Large size jar 23c
Medium size jar 14c
Small size jar 9c
Mammoth Queen Olives, $1.00 bottle... 60c
30c Large Queen Olives, bottle 19c
Robin Hood Brand Olives, quart jar.... 30c
Sticky Fly Paper, 25 double sheets 30c
40c Hickmott’s Mammoth White Aspara
gus 24c
35c Hickmott’s White Asparagus Tips. 21c
15c Chesapeake Herring Roe, can 11c
Extra Fine Fancy
Canned Apples
Peeled and Cored
Regular 10c Value
2 Cans 11c
36 Sod STORES