Newspaper Page Text
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T11H ATLA 1 a (i FOR* . I A2s
KWS.
LOS]>AY, MAY 20. 191:'!.
DENTAL TESTS IN J- Wylie Smith's Own Story j| |f |fj
CITT S SCHOOLS Stirring Episodes in Long Flight HAND, BUT CITY
Career in Mexican ArmyThrilling
Conducting Experiments
‘lake Strong Recommen
dation for Examinations.
Dental examinations of all chil-
i.. >*n in Atlanta public schools will be
permanently provided for tinless V.
H. Kriegshaber, of the Chamber of
Commerce, and representatives of the
Atlanta Society of Dental Surgeons
are too optimistic over their forth
coming report.
Monday marked the beginning and
Tuesday he end of dental examina
tions in the Bell Street and Crew
Street Schools by representatives of
the joint committee of the Atlanta
Chambei of Commerce and the At
lanta Society of Dental Surgeons. It
was the third of a series of tests
begun last September at the re
quest of the Chamber of Commerce
and continued in .January, to prove
the beneficial effects of sound leeth
on scholarship and attendance, gen
eral health and moral character.
V. H. Kriegshaber. from the Cham
ber of Commerce, and Dr. H. W. Pos
ter, Dr. C. M. Barnwell,. Dr. DeLoa
Hill and Dr. M. D. Huff, from the
dental society, make up the joint
committee.
Dentists Meet Tuesday Night.
Dr. Hill and Dr. Foster, who made
the actual tests, will meet with the
other dentists Wednesday night and
make up the final report to be sub
mitted to the Chamber of Commerce,
whence it will be sent to the Board of
Education with recommendations.
“Statistics have not been compiled,
but from results already noted we
believe the full data will warrant a
recommendation that dental inspec
tions in the public- schools be made
permanent.’’ said Mr. Kriegshaber.
Following published results of ben
efits of five years’ medical inspection
in the public- schools, the Chamber of
Commerce last September asked the
Board of Education for permission to
make experimental dental tests. The
dentists agreed to inspect two schools
for a year, without fees,- to prove
the ' dicar.V of the system.
At the- first tests pupil? were pro
vided with written notices to parents
"f needed dental treatment. When
these notices resulted in securing
treatment, the operating dentists
tied the slips, which were returned
tu the examiners. Additional signed
shu were collected Monday and
Tne-da> after the final tests. Records
of pupils in attendance, deportment
and scholarship, both those who
.•" led on the suggestions and those
v im did not, will he compared, and
the results, with other figures, will
make up the dentists’ report
Finish Report Tuesday.
"We hope to get this report fin
ished Tuesday night," said Mr. Krieg-
shaber. “We are sure it will war
rant. the recommendation that dental
examinations be made permanent.
Then if the Board of Education ap
proves our recommendation, we want
to submit it to the Finance Com
mittee of the City Council Thursday
morning, if possible, and secure the
necessary appropriation and author
ization for permanent dental inspec
tions in all Atlanta public schools."
In the Crew Street and Bell Street
Schools nearly 500 pupils were ex
amined Dr. Foster and Dr. Hill were
surprised at getting through in two
days, since they expected three would
be required
Another Reason Why
Socialist Vote Grows
GENEVA, N Y.. May 2ft. An ex
tensive obituary notice appeared In
the newspapers here recounting the
virtues of Fido, the pet dog af Henry
A. Zobrist, a eapitalist. Mr. Zobrist
called a specialist from New York
and pall $300 to have the dog treat
ed, hut Fido took a relapse and died
Mr Zobrist had provided $20,000
in his will for Fido. and had offered
an endowment of $3,000 a year to
the Sand Hill Cemetery Corporation
for permission to bury ihe dog in the
graveyard.
Fido lay in state in an expensive
coffin banked with flowers.
LIQUOR DEALERS ORGANIZE
LAW ENFORCEMENT LEAGUE
r-OLUMBCS, CA . .May JO, For ih.
purpose of eliminating ihe blind tip ,
and enforcing the provisions of the
laws regulating the sale of whisky in
Russell Count., Alabama, a law en
forcement league has born organized
in Girard, with Sam Kaufman, a
wholesale liquor dealer, as president.
'Pile wholesale and retail liquor
dealers elaim that ihe blind tiger Is
hurting their legitimate business
Kighieen liquor dealers of the town
are members of the organization.
A
A
SAFE
SKIN TREATMENT
Yu
never h*
cap
Ther
nng
e to use Ttes-
Kesinol Ointment
*m to injure
'< the tenderett surface. Kesinol i? a
/ doctor’s prescription which proved so
\ successful for eczema, ringworm and
£ other itching, burning, unsightly skin
< eruptions, Chat it has been used by
} other physicians all over the coun-
S try for eighteen years. No other
t treatment for the skin now before
> the public can show such a record of
< professional approval.
i In a single month, two hundred and
< twenty-one doctors wrote us indors-
{ ing the Kesinol preparations. They
< would not have done so if they had
/ not found then) highly valuable in
} their own practice. They prescribe
< Retinol freely, confident that its
\ soothing, healing action is brought
< about by agents so bland and gentle
v «- fo be suited to the most delicate
5 skin—even of a tiny baby.
druggist sells Kesinol
and $1> and Kesinol
ou can try them free
Dept. 23-S, Resino],
Md., for liberal sample of
This is the second installment of
the story of J. Wylie Smith, the
refugee president of the defunct
Commercial Loan and Discount
Company, who, after evading ex
tradition during two years of
service in the msurrecto army of
General Orozco, in Mexico, re
turned to Atlanta to stand trial
because he dying with tuberculo
sis—a phantom of his former self.
By J. WYLIE SMITH.
(Continued from Yesterday.)
1 was given a room over the war
den? office. I had credit at Ihe
commlsffiiry You have to furnish
your own bed clothing and buy any
food you get except etole, a sort of
gruel, bif stik furnished to you raw
—and frijole, beans cooked In pure
water at every meal. Grease and
?al! are unknown.
I remember a hideous tragedy one
day a? a result of the practice of
allowing the prisoners to cook their
own meals In tnelr cells. A peon,
held for murder, was found dead in
bed one morning, his charcoal pot
still giving off its fumes over him.
Soon I was allowed to go down
town without a guard. The discip
line in Mexican prisons Is lax. Once
when the prisoners were working on
the waterworks a number of them
stole away and got drunk. When
they returned the only punishment
that was administered was that they
were not allowed to return to work
but were forced to play. They suf
fered, though. They hated to give
up their wages. I knew' a number
of them who preferred prison life to
freedom.
“Neda en calles menos Americanos
v toras." spoke a Mexican who was
reclining under the shade of a tree
in his yard as I passed down the
street on one of my dally stroll?
from the prison.
His meaning was that nobody ever
come? out on the street between 12
o’clock and 2:80 but Americans and
hulls—a statement which has the
weight of a pro f erb in Mexico. All
business houses are closed between
those hours. Indeed It was a hot
sultry day and I was regretting that
I had come out when suddenly I was
startled out of my laziness by a
sharp piercing bark.
My footsteps had aroused a bull
who was lying In the shade of a
shrub, not a Mexican bull but a Bos
ton hull terrier. He* came towards
me belligerent but I spoke to him
kindly, so glad to see anything so
truly American. And as 1 walked
on that dog followed.
Truly only an American and a bull
were on the streets and later only an
American and a bull wore together
at another place, the presence of the
bull changing the trend of fate from
savage death to the greatest triumph
of my life.
But that was later. However, the
Interesting and Important things
which led up to It began to absorb
my attention. For the first time a
personal Interest was aroused In me
in the revolutionary movement.
I had made the acquaintance of
about 75 revolutionary leaders who
were confined in the penitentiary.
Walking w ith General Rojas, the most
prbminent of them, one day our
conversation grew Intimate.
“1 would think that you revolu
tionists would be shot,” 1 said to him.
“Do you know why 1 am here?”
he asked Before 1 could speak he
answered his own question.
“1 said that General Orozco was
a damned tascal.
“All of us would he shot,” he con
tinued, "but Orozco has plan? of his
own."
Orozco’s Plan.
“He is planning a new revolution.
On March he will resign as com
mander of the Federal forces in Chi-
hua uiu. lie is confining his staff
here so lie '* ‘11 have them ready when
he needs them
“The moment he insurges I will be
freed, and 1 will take you with me."
My interest in the plans of the
revolutionists Immediately became
intense. I was having an easy time
hut things were getting monotonous.
1 did not know how long 1 would be
held a prisoner nor how much chance
1 had of escaping extradition. My
fighting blood was up. Added to my
fear of being taken back to Atlanta
and being tried was the ire aroused
by the treachery of my pursuers, like
Franke I was determined to outwit
them Then there is nothing in the
world like Anglo-Saxon freedom.
Then the strangest and most ro
mantic event in my whole experience
took place. 1 was the only Amer
ican in prison and something of a
•uriositv. Prople often came to
look at* me, and l desired to avoid
them as much as possible. But the
warden came to me one day and
said that two American women were
in his office to see me.
Puzzled but greatly interested 1
hurried down. 1 gated at them, un-
I ab’e to recognize either, but 1 care
fully noted that they were hand-
souiely drevsed. They said they were
interested in my case because 1 was
an American and they wanted to help
I me. When I told them 1 had no law-
| ver they said they would look after
• that. My clothes were washed in the
j prison, but not starched. One of the
women arranged to have them
starched and laundered out in town.
They they left without giving any
j information about themselves.
A few days *ater January 26. 191?
my extradition papers arrived anu
it locked like the jig was up. 1 was
absolutely ignorant of Mexican law
j I and 1 hardlx expected any of my
) { nev friends* to come to my aid w ith
j suffl< i *nt funds to hire a compt i nt
( attorney.
Help at Last—From a Woman.
c* As mysteriously as she had first
; j come to me one of ihe beautiful
J woman returned. With her were two
) I fine iooking Mexicans of th» cientifleo
j (aristocratic) elas>\ They were iaw-
> > ers.
u Francisco rardero was an ex-jus-
>1 tic** of the Supreme Court and a >up-
(J porter of Madero. Geillermo Por-
>|ras was e\-Lieutenant Governor and
jja Diaz enthusiast. I learned later
> that they were among ihe highest
< I legal authorities in the State.
>| Porras took active charge of m\
sjease and looked over th** extradition
(j papers. He said thex were fuii of
I asked her why she nad taken such
an interest in mv cane.
"You are an American; so am i.
she said. “You have a wife and child
to b» saved (for I had told her of
my family): I have no one In the
world to care for.”
I found that she was a somewhat
notorious woman in Chihuahua and 1
also learned from other sources than
herself that she had paid each of those
lawyers $400 In gold to defend m .
Her name was Vivian Sinclair.
They won the case through unseen
forces, at least to me.
On the night of January 30 the
people of Jaurez went to sleep under
the seemingly peaceful rule of Made
ro. They awoke the next morning
at daybreak—Mexicans always begin
lighting at daybreak—to find a band
of revolutionists In possession of
everything. They looted the post-
office and the customs house, burning
all the papers in a bonfire in the
streets.
My extradition papers* were among
t hem.
I have often thought that Porras
knew what was going to happen and
1 was Just as grateful to him as
though he had won the case in court.
I heard Just before I left Mexico
that he had been executed by Madero
Constitutionalists near Porral, Chi
hu ihua. I have written for verlflca
tion.
Only 83 strong the new insurrectos
started toward Chihuahua to storm
the Jail. They arrived on February
2 and at daybreak the next morning
began storming the jail.
Such grit i have never seen, before
or since. Those Mexicans are slow
starting and they always stop at dark
they have absorbed the superstition
from the Yaqui Indian that the soul
leaves the body after dark. It
hard to get them out of their houses
at night.
The Fight Begins.
Clinging to the tops }f houses and
hiding behind fences they began
most vicious and effective attack.
They picked off every guard who
showed himself on that wall. I was
where I could get a good vie^v and
every now and then I would see ;
Federal plug an insurrecto who wa
lying flat on a house roof like stick
ing a sharp stick in the back of ;
toad. One after another were wrig
gling to death after such shots. There
were 700 men defending the jail and
defeat for the insurrectos was Immi
nent when a guard had his head split
by a bullet that came through a loop
hole. The soldier rolled dow n a flight
of step.” and landed some twenty
feet away at the feet of the Warden,
his ghastly face turned upward.
“Stop the fighting,” shrieked the
Warden, and he turned to General
Rojas for help.
"They want me," replied General
Rojas “Free me and the firing will
stop in five minutes.”
The Warden would not consent, but
the fighting continued so fierce he
consented to allow Rojas to see the
Governor with a guard of five men.
The visit to the Governor was a
mere formality. He refused the par
don. Rut on the return to the jail
Rojas, walking a few paces in front
of hi.« guard, turned a corner ahead
of them at the corner of Calle Liber-
•stad and Calle Tercera and took to
his heels.
"Halt.” shouted the guard, and they
raised their guns.
Hut they were covered by a band
of insurrectos before they could shoot
M.v heart Jumped with joy when
the news reached the prison. I felt
that 1 soon would be able to Join him.
Rut my blood was chilled the next
day by that most horrible of all
features of warfare—the shooting of
a traitor.
General Orozco came down from
Jaurez next day. He wanted Rojas
free, but to make a show of enforcing
authority he ordered the five guards
shot as traitors, the finding of the
court martial being that they had pur
posely allowed Rojas to escape. No
one knows what cruelty a Mexican
can resort to.
Rojas was as good as his word. The
firing stopped before his guard re
turned to the Jail. Eagerly did 1 ob
serve and seek information as to the
skirmishes and maneuvers around
Chihuahua. The stony of Rojas’ first
victory was typically Mexican.
Captain Mendoza had led the at
tack on the Jail. He was the most
unusual looking man I have ever seen
and as we were closely associated to
gether thereafter 1 became very much
interested in his odd personality Ho
was six feet four inches in height
hut lie lo.”t two inches of his size
in a stoop in his shoulders. His hair
and eye lashes were raven black and
his eyes were a greenish gray that
shined with an uncanniness. But the
oddest thing about him was his
muMtaehe. which was n brilliant red.
He was as active as a cat and the
most wicked man I have ever seen
When Rojas escaped his plan was
to attack the jail and free us al'
Hut Mendoza had retreated out from
the city. The reason Mexican revolu
tions last so long is that an army
never will follow up a victory
Out from Chihuahua Mendoza, with
about . men. was captured bv Col
onel Sevrin, of Modem’s forces When
Rojas heard of it h* declared that
Mendoza bar] freed him and that he
was going to the rescue.
With only 260 nu n. while Sevrin
ha.l ,00. Rojas began a ruse. Ap.
proavhing Sevrln after it was too
(lark for him to tell the number of the
revolutionists. Rojas went into camp
In plain view. It is the custom to
bate a camp fire for everv ten men.
Rojas built about 201 fires He had
his men blow bugles over a long
line.
The strategy was successful. Under
a tiag of truce Rojas sent an ulti
matum to Sevrln at daybreak next
morning that he must surrender .Men
doza or be annihilated. Sevrln sur
rendered Mendoza. And Mendoza be
came a colonel under Rojas, the two
marching toward Jaurez gathering
men as they went. It real'-, was liKe
Napoleon’s return from Elba.
(Continued in Tomorrow's Georgian )
MRS. WILSON NOT TO TALK
TO WOMEN CIVIC WORKERS
WASHINGTON. Mav 20. M
Wilson, wife of ihe President, w
Knee Breeches? Why
Not for U. S. Envoy?
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON. May 20.—Th© Daily Cit-
I izen, the official labor organ, says in
an editorial:
"It is possible to admire tremen
dously the Republican simplicity of!
America without understanding the j
objection of the new Ambassador to i
wearing knee breeches What is there
I in them offensive to Democratic sen- j
fiment? After all John Burns wears
Projects Overrun June! ,h(,m on occasion and with George!
* ! Washington they were the habitual j
garment.
“Of course it is not everybody who!
can boast a leg and If is just possi- I
hie that Mr. Page’s repugnance to
knee breeches may be founded on
better reasons than th© world can
wot of.” j
Council’s
Revenue—Mayor’s “White
wash Veto” Rejected.
(’hairman W. O. Humphrey, of,the
(’ouncil Finance Committee, said
Tuesday that the maximum amount
of new money to be apportioned in
June would be $120,000. This in
cludes all Increases in revenue, he
explained.'
Tiie adoption of the Whitehall
Street regrading plan and other proj
ects that developed at the meeting
of Council Monday would require an
expenditure of more than twice that
amount. Council’s action in calling
on the Finance Committee to provide
$30,000 for the Whitehall Street work
practically assures the beginning of
that project this year, but advocates
of other much needed improvements
will suffer bitter disappointment.
Candler Anticipates Veto.
Declaring that the form of the
resolution presented by the Streets lory had taken it.
Committee, providing for the White
hall Street work, invited a veto, Al
derman John S. Candler said:
“But I am going to vote for it now
and after it is vetoed.”
The School Board wants $75,000
for an English-Commercial Girls’
High School building. The Grady
Hospital hoard got $25,000 for a
nurses’ dormitory in January and
they declare it will take $25,000 more
to complete the building. Chairman
Orville Hall, of the Streets Com
mittee, insisted that $50,000 was nec
essary for nexv streets. All depart
ments want* additional appropriations.
Not Enough to Go Around.
There simply won’t be enough
money in the June budget to go
around.
In view of this situation Council
adopted Councilman Albert Thom
son's resolution creating a special
committee of ten eouncilmen and five
citizens to investigate the advisa
bility of a bond issue. Mayor Pro
Tern Warren will announce this com
mittee within a few days.
On one matter Council was unani
mous. Every one voted aye over
ruling Mayor Woodward’s scorching
veto of the fire department probe
committee's report vindicating Chief
Cummings of the charges of graft
and corruption. Council Charles W.
Smith made a vigorous speech de
fending the committee against Mayor
Woodward’s attack.
Alderman James R. Nutting en
deavored to settle the Police Board
row over the authority of Chief Beav
ers to promote subordinates by put
ting through an ordinance giving all
heads of departments power to name
their assistants.
Police Deadlock Stands.
Mayor Pro Tern Warren, opposing
the ordinance, declared it was intro
duced for the purpose of politics and
that it would reduce board members
to mere figureheads.
Alderman Nutting replied that
Mayor Pro Tern Warren’s attitude
was the most palpable sort of poli
tics.
The ordinance was referred to th**
Ordinance Committee. The Police
Board’s tangle caused by a tie vote
over the right of the chief to pro
mote subordinates remains unsettled.
A ^surprise to some of the mem
bers was the vote sustaining the veto
of Mayor Woodward of the dog muz
zling ordinance. Mayor Woodward
ridiculed the ordinance as absurd and
Council sustained his*veto by a vote
of 15 to override and 9 against. It
takes a ty/o-thirds vote to set aside
a veto.
Loss of Cat Costs
University $100,000
MIDDLETOWN. May 20.—The
story of how Wesleyan University lost
a bequest of $100,000 or more because
students stole a pet cat for dissect
ing purposes a dozen or more years
ago was revealed when the will of
| Miss Margaret Van Deursen. who died
I a few days ago. was filed. Miss
Van Deursen was a great lover of
« ats. When one to which she was
; attached disappeared one day. she
was grieved. A large reward was
I offered for its recovery, but it was
i learned that students hunting for
specimens for the biological labora-
Troops Mutiny Over
French Military Bill
i^cial Cable to The Atlanta Georgian, j
PARIS, May 20.—Serious mutinous
uprisings, due to the proposed exten
sion of the military term from two
years to three, are occurring in the4
ranks of the French Army.
The war office to-day received dis- I
patches from frontier points which
stated that dangerous consequences
may follow if the Government persists
in putting through the bill.
In several instances barracks have
been burned.
British Carry Coal
for American Navy
WASHINGTON, May 2ft.—Paymas
ter John S. Higgins, U. S. N. f ap
pearing before the Senate Committee
on territories said that practically all
of the 250,00ft tons of coal shipped
annually for Pacific Coast Navy use
was carried in British bottoms.
He said that the opening of the
Alaska coal fields the subject under
consideration by the committee would
establish a Pacific supply.
Wholesome
Coffee—
AGED FLOOD SUFFERERS
FINISHING LONG WALK
WASHINGTON, May 2ft. Theh
money having given out at Harris
burg. Pa., after they had been forced
to leave their home at Steubenville
Ohio, by the floods, Albert Price, aged
67. and Sadie, his wife, aged 59, set
out a-foot for Richmond. Va.. where
they have a brother, and have reached
Washington en route.
Maxwell House
Blend is agreeable
coffee, free of all
waste and foreign
matter. It has no
excess of acid or
harsh after-taste
and combines with
all food stuffs with
out harmful reaction
Srtritd cam at grocmr*
Cheek-Nea! Coffee Co.,
Nanhrtlle, Rouaton, Jacksonville
yt/Mf
1ll
V/; : .9
iPsil
m
Wm
Wm
Swift’s Premium
Sliced Bacon
“Good Food”
Machine sliced to just the
right thickness to make it
crisp nicely. No
shredded ends, no
uneven slices, no
ragged pieces to
throw away.
JLJ
worn -
not address the meeting of the
| an'- branch of the National Clvlcl
Federation to-morrow morning. Mrs.
Archibald Hopkins, chairman of the
I association, said:
Mrs \\ >l«*on Is great lx interest! ’
It is the best
bacon to buy
and the best
way to buy it.
The sealed
glass jars keep it
fresh, sweet, and
clean until used.
Buy It and Try It
Swift & Company
U. S. A.
1 flaws but tint he did not think Min oi.r work, but we don't expect her
I < ould ge$>justice in Chihuahua on ax - J to address our meetings."
• ount ofy he opposition to hi' polities, j
So he had the case transfers
Jan tvs and went there to prosecute i
1 The woman cam© lu me again ami
i. . . - - - -—- j, ■ ■ i ■ ■ ■ i in i - —— •■ ■ ■ m —■ ■ ■ '■ ■
, White City Park Now Open j “Smoked in Atlanta”
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co,
tu
All Aboard for East Lake
With a Pretty Suit and Cap
Swimming time is here—so are
the suits and caps. Many have been
bought already.
We have various pretty styles to
show you, in the Bathing- Suit Sec
tion, fourth floor. And it is inter
esting to see how the fashions in
dress affect them. The skirts are as
straight as is compatible with use-
fulness, and the trimmings are ap
plied in various effective ways to
give the touch of fashion and be-
comingness.
Prices range from $2.50, for prac
tical mohairs, up to $10 for pretty
silks.
Caps arc priced 50c to $1.50.
How Dressmaking Can Be
Made Easy
A/ ()l T simply cannot fit yourself or others suecess-
fully without a suitable Dress Form. You may
he able to get along somehow or other without one, as
you may dispense with the use of a sewing machine
or other labor-saving device, but why deny yourself
the immense assistance and pleasure which one of
these forms afford, when it may be had at a nominal
price? You owe yourself a
Hall-Borchert Adjustable
Dress Form
Which Will Duplicate Your Exact Figure and Will
Last a Lifetime
r FHE ease with which a dress can he made with a
-I- dress form of proper size and shape to aid you,
will be a delight to those who have never before had
such help. The form is always ready, will stand with
out tiring, and will enable you to get the very best
results with the least effort.
Having once possessed one, nothing could induce
you to return to the old way and try to make a dress
without it.
Mail Orders Promptly Filled.
Catalogues Sent on Request.
Prices range from $1.00 to $18.
The Problem
The Solution.
IK
$3.75
Wc are
Atlanta Agents for these Forms.
$15.00
Copyrighted by Gage Dowds Co., Makers of G-D Justrite Corsets. Chicago
Summer Gloves
That Wash
Kayser's Ifi-button silk G-loves,
pond, heavy quality, black and
white; $1.25 per pair.
16-button doeskin, washable
Oloves, very popular; $3 and
$3.50 pair.
2-clasp, washable doeskin
M Gloves at $1.00 and $1.50 pair.
16-button white suede lisle,
vashable Gloves, at $1.25 pair.
The New Models
The latest models in G-D Justrite corsets are here and
ready for your inspection.
G-D Justrite corsets are as perfect fitting as human skill and long
years of experience, in corset designing, can make them. Without
artificial bands, straps, flaps or harness-like arrangements, G-D
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In selecting your corset choose the one best adapted to your type
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You should have a new G-D Justrite before you fit your new dress.
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Gr D Corsets are priced $1 to $10.
Cool Knit Under
wear That Means
Summer Comfort
Sheer lisle Vests, plain or
mercerized finish, round neck
style; 25c each.
Imported gauze lisle Vests
with hand-crocheted yoke; 50c
and 75c each.
Cool, sheer knitted combina
tions. with cuff or loose knee;
choice of these three celebrated
makes: Kayser’s, Forrest Mills
or Essex.
Italian Silk Combinations;
$3.50 and $4.
Children's and misses’ low
neck Vests; 10c and 15c.
Misses' Lisle Vests;
sleeveless; 25c each.
low neck,