Newspaper Page Text
Gives Notice Indirectly That the
State’s Exenditures Must Stay
Within Its Income.
HE STILL URGES REFORMS
Will Not Call Extra Session of
Legislature to Put Them
Through, However.
• Declaring it to be absolutely neces
sary for the State to stay within its
current revenues by curbing appro
priations in order to uphold its good
name, Governor Slaton Saturday gave
notice indirectly that he would wield
the veto power on any measure which
calls for an excess of disbursement
over revenue.
In addition, the Governor declared
his principles of taxation which, he
says, in his opinion, offer the only
possible relief in the long run for the
State’s financial embarrassment. No
extra session of the Legislature, he
added, will be called for this purpose,
however, in case the real financial
condition of the State can not be as
certained by the time of adjournment.
The Governor declared emphatical
ly there was no half-way ground in
the matter of appropriations; that
current disbursements must balance
exactly with the current revenues re
gardless of necessary increased appro
priations. He said further that his
position was not one of antagonism
to the representatives in the House
who passed the bill providing for an
Increase of $280,000; that he realized
the pressure which was brought to
bear, as well as the pressing needs of
the institutions which received in
creased appropriations.
; “Only Honest Way/’
f i “I do not censure,” said he. “I sim-
1 ply say that appropriations must not
exceed revenues, for that is the only
honest way, and besides, it is the only
way we can meet satisfactorily our
financial problems.
“It is simply a common-sense prop
osition. There are many parallel
cases. If I give you $30 and tell you
to buy a suit, is it right for you to
spend $45 for that suit? Or if you
have just 15 cents in your pocket, is
it right for you to go into a restau
rant and order everything from mock
turtle soup to cranberry sauce? I say
no, and I say, too, that it is not right
for the representatives of the people
:o spend more than those people have
contracted to pay. That is the whole
thing in a nutshell. We must spend
just what we collect—no more and no
less.”
The Governor’s plan of relief, as he
outlined it Saturday afternoon, con
sists first of a constitutional amend
ment adding one mill in 1915 to the
present 5-mill rate, and a half mill in
1916. This measure, he says, will
wipe out the present deficit of $851,000
and result in prompt payment of the
school teachers.
“People Should Set Limit.”
In the second place, if this plan is
rejected, the people by constitutional
amendment should limit the appro
priations of the common schools and
pensions which now consume more
than half of the ad valorem tax. This
provision, the Governor thinks, would
put the mark or the figure beyond
which the Legislature could not go.
If neither of these plans is ap
proved, the Governor thinks that the
entire 5-mill limit should be stricken
from the constitution. In such a way,
he thinks, the people will be able to
keep up with their finances, as they
can not do now, for their taxes will be
raised immediately following an in
crease of appropriations.
Governor Slaton is keeping close tab
on the whole financial situation and
further messages in regard to the
matter may be sent to the Legisla
ture. According to figures submitted
by the Comptroller General, the State
now is in arrears approximating
$851,000.
Senators Says “Jokers”
Will Kill Sheppard Bill.
Members of the Senate openly
charge Saturday that the Sheppard
substitute taxing bill providing for
the creation of county boards of
equalizers, which was passed by the
House Friday, contains “jokers”
which render it absolutely useless. In
view of this, an out-and-out substi
tute to the Sheppard bill will be of-
. fered in the Senate when the bill
reaches the upper House.
“I have examined that substitute
bill,” declared Senator Stark, chair
man of the Senate Appropriations
Committe, which pared the House ap
propriations bill to the tune of $280,000
Friday, “and I find it is so amended
and emasculated that, in my opinion,
it will be practical yluseless. The bill,
It appears, contains a ‘joker’ in that
It makes no provision for hearings by
the count' r boards in cases where real
property is involved.”
Senator McNeill, of the Twenty-
second District, also sharply criticised
the bi r and declared that he probably
voula offer an out-and-out substitute
tor it when the mater comes up next
week.
Representative Wheatley, of Sum
ter, who supported the measure in the
House Friday on the ground that It
was better than nothing, admitted
Saturday that there was a serious
doubt as to whether real property as
well as personal was Included in the
provisions of the bill.
The bill will be taken up In the
Senate probably Tuesday.
BANKER RUN DOWN AND
INJURED BY A BICYCLIST
MACON, Aug. 2.—Just as he was
leaving a church, after attending a fu
neral. Jesse B. Hart, Macon bank
president and also president of an
embalming firm, was run into and
knocked down by a negro bicycle,
sustaining a fracture of his right arm
and a so'•■re injury to his right leg.
Nicholas
Longfeather,
the Atlanta
Apache Indian,
is shown
nursing a
diseased
plant, to
which work
he is
devoting his
life, as it
makes him
forget the
lure of
savage state.
Tift Youth Stabs Himself and
Strikes Forehead With an
Ax—Will Live.
TIFTON, Aug. 2.—Upon being told
that his father was devd, Edward
Yaun, a young white f/mner living
three miles east of Tifton, made two
unsuccessful attempt, to end his life.
His father, Jesse Yaun. was taken ill
Wednesday, and when told yesterday
that there was no hope of recovery,
Edward said that if his father died he
would go with him.
As soon as Edward was told of his
AT ITT1 IF
145-FBOT WELL
Report From Pass-a-Grille Says
Forgotten Spanish Galleon
Has Been Located.
JACKSONVILLE. Auk. 2.—Fortuno
hunters art flocking to Pass-a-Grille
looking for gold. No Death Valley
mines have been found, but it is re
ported that an old forgotten Span
ish galleon has been located. Pass-a-
Grille is a wee bit of a town located
on one of the numerous keys just off
the West Coast of Florida near the
city of St. Petersburg.
A well is being dug to supply the
town with water, and it was while this
work was being done that the excite
ment started. The drill had sunk into
the earth with regular thuds for a
distance of 145 feet. Suddenly a pe
culiar substance was hit and the work
was stopped. Upon resuming opera
tions the drillers found that pieces
of wood were being pumped out of
the new well. This was kept up un
til twelve or fourteen inches had been
added to the depth of the well. These
pieces of wood were collected. They
filled a p^ck measure. The grain was
so filled with fine sand that it was
Impossible to determine the kind of
wood the drill had been cutting, but
scientists who have examined the
small pieces declare that the log or
beam from which they were cut by
the drill is well preserved.
People there are puzzled to figure
out how a piece of well preserved
timber could be located 145 feet be
low the surface. However, it is point
ed out that no hard pan had been en-
I countered when the wood was struck.
This would indicate that the timber
| was covered by the sand that had been
drifting into the cove at the end of
the island for 200 to 600 years.
The more romantic believe that the
wood was drilled from the timbers of
a lost Spanish treasure ship or from
some pirate’s boat. Already plans have
been sugges ed for the formation'of a
company to dig a deep open well by
the side of the one now being drilled
to discover what is at the bottom.
Several soldiers of fortune are already
on the ground who are willing to take
a chance.
Two Hurricanes Meet and Shake
Hands Directly Over Train on
Which He Is Passenger.
Frank Taylor, assistant manager of
the Piedmont Hotel, is back In At
lanta, after a month’s tour of the
Eastern pleasure resorts. He brought
with him a weird tale of a storm he
encountered en route home, which he
declares struck fear and panic Into
his soul for the first time in his life.
"It was at Humlet, N. C.,“ Mr. Tay
lor tells. “The train was running
ahead of a wicked looked cloud and
a wickeder storm, when we suddenly
stopped. I asked the conductor the
whyness of the stoppage, and he said
we had caught up with another storm.
Then the two storms joined hands
and I never saw a stormier storm in
my life.
"I’ve always thought myself a
brave man. but that was one time 1
really was scared. The water ran
three and four feet deep over the
tracks, and such thunder and such
lightning I never saw or heard before.
Our train had stopped almost direct
ly under one of those cross-country
power transmission lines, and I sat
and shivered in my berth and saw
the lightning strike five of the wires
one after another and bring them
twisting and squirming to the ground.
We were stalled there for four hours
—and it felt like four years.”
Adam With 3 ‘Eves’
Gets 4-Year Term
Nicholas Longfeather, Born in Cave in Savage
State, Devotes His Life to Agriculture.
Nicholas Longfeather, a young
Apache Indian who is a citizen of
Atlanta, finds In his unique profession
a means of fighting against the call
of the wild. Longfeather Is a tree
doctor, curing diseases of trees and
plants, working always under the
open sky and against the breezes.
The call of the wild comes often, he
admitted yesterday, as naturally It
would to a man still young, who was
born In a cave, who never saw a
white man until he was 12 years old,
whose parents were savage Apaches.
Very often the freedom and the aban
don of the old life lures him, and he
rebels against beds and ceilings and
stiff collars, and all that.
“Then I need my friends and my
work,” he said. “And I need my wife.”
He married a white girl who was
his classmate at Syracuse and who is
with him in Atlanta.
Graduate of Carlisle.
Longfeather is a graduate of Car
lisle and Syraouse Universities. He
probably Is the only Indian to whom
patents have been granted by the
Federal Government, he having pat
ented preparations for the treatment
of trees. He has been recommended
in his work by the Federal Department
of Forestry. And yet he is not all
scientist.
“As far back as I can remember,”
he said, “when they called me Kua-
nana, and I lived in a cave, I would
run away and for days at a time
would live out with the trees and the
plants, feeding myself on roots and
berries. When I told little lies, when
I was bad in other ways, my mother
would punish me, after the way of
Indians, by burning my lips with the
heated shell of an egg. Whenever I
was punished I would run away to
my friends, the trees. Often I would
lie awake all night, or rise early in
the morning, to watch some of the
plants near my home, whose blossoms
unfolded with*the dawn. I was al
ways sorely disappointed because the
plants seemed never to move, and yet
they always opened before my eyes.
But I could never detect their mo
tion. All these were adventures of
my early life.”
First S©©s White Man.
Longfeather was named, as most
Indians are, after the first thing his
mother saw when he was bom. Look
ing out of the cave entrance, he re
lates, his mother saw a strange bird,
with a long tail feather. Therefore he
was called Kuanana, which In the
Apache language means “long feath
er.”
‘1 was nearly 12 years old when,
peering over some big boulders at a
strange horseman, I saw my first
white man,” he said. "The sight to
me was terrible, and I ran away until
I was tired. He was a priest, passing
near to our home to visit a sick
miner.
“Later I saw many white men. They
came Into our valley, and soon I was
sent to school In Albuquerque, N. Mex.
I was a wild creature then, and ran
away. Later I was sent to another
school In New Mexico, and ran away
again. To school after school they
sent me, but I refused to learn, and
refused to stay, and each time I fled.
In this way I entered and left nearly
twenty schools, Including Haskell. But
all to no purpose. I was a great boy,
well in my teens at that time, and did
not know my alphabet.
“At this time an Indian lawyer,
in whose family I was living, de
cided to send me to Carlisle. I went
there, unwillingly, a wild, uncultured
boy, with my hair down my back.
There I received my first impulse to
attain an education. I had always
made friends, everywhere, for some
unaccountable reason. White men
were good to me, and took me into
their homes, but the impression of
culture did not remain with me until
I went to Carlisle, and when I began
to realize that I was in a way of re
turning to the wild life of my fathers.
There I saw Indians who had acquired
culture and polish, who were not out
of place at the parties to which they
were invited. I decided to be like
them, and for the first time In my
life stuck to a school. It w’as hard
at first, but I finished my course and
was graduated.
Worked on Archbold Estate.
“After working at various things,
particularly studying to become a
preacher, thinking to return to mv
people to teach them, I heard of a
call for men who knew something of I
trees, to work on the estate of John j
D. Archbold, the capitalist. It struck
me at once that here was work that
I should like. I answered the call.”
Mrs. Archbold, he said, was the
reason for his discovery of himself.
"I must have been a curious figure j
to her. I worked with the trees on
her place, in company with a little
bunch of college foresters. I would
always wear a fillet of beads about I
my head to keep the hair from my
eyes”—he wears them yet when he
works—“and moccasins. Mrs. Arch-
bold’s maid saw me working in a
tree one day, and told her mistress
of the odd sight.
“Mrs. Archbold thus became Inter
ested in me, and she and her hus
band sent me to Syracuse University,
with which Mr. Archbold is connected.
And there I studied horticulture,
forestry, and plant pathology, learn
ing scientific rules of work that I
had never known before. with all my
love and practical knowledge of nat
ural things. There I really found
myself, and there I met my wife.”
Always Worked His Best.
Although the young Indian told it
only incidentally, really hesitating to
speak of it, he attracted the atten
tion of his millionaire benefactor by
his faithful work. Longfeather un
consciously laid down a lesson for
young men, whether Indian or Cau
casian.
And so Longfeather came to At
lanta, found wo'rk on the estates of
the leading citizens, and decided to |
stay. He is buying a neat little home
in West End, at 64 Allene Street,
and calls himself a citizen of Atlanta,
with pride.
Longfeather is far from being the
conventional IndiAn in appearance.
His hair is long, and brushed bacK
from his forehead, but otherwise
there is nothing of the unusual in
his appearance. Hp is a well set
up young man of medium height, only
slightly darker than the average Cau
casian, as if he were well burned by
the sun, and possessing features that
are considerably more delicate than
those of the typical Indian physiogno
my.
father's death he walked out of the
room and stabbed himself in the
throat with a pocketknife. The wcund
was an inch too high to prove fatal
the blade ranging upward toward the
mouth instead of going straight into
the throat.
When his first attempt failed, young
Yaun walked over to the woodpile
and. ricking up the ax, struck himself
a violent blow In the center of the
forehead. He was found by members
of the family a short while afterward
lying, unconscious, in the yard. He
will recover.
LEONARD PARKER TAKES
ANNAPOLIS APPOINTMENT
AMERICUS, Aug. 2.—Leonard C.
Parker, the young son of E. C. Park
er, of Americus, has accepted the ap
pointment to the United States Navy
just offered to him by President Wil
son through the request of Congress
man Charles R. Crisp. It is said that
this will be the first presidential ap
pointment of a cadet to Annapolis in
Georgia.
U. S. Marshal Sees
Attack on Bacon
Davis Declares Report That He
Would Name Republican Is Part
of Conspiracy.
MACON, Aug. 2.—Joseph S. Davis,
the new Marshal of the United States
Court for the Southern District of
Georgia, states that the report that
George F. White, the former Marshal,
would be his chief deputy was circu
lated to discredit him.
“Mr. White is a mighty fine man,
and we are good friends,” says Mr.
Davis, “but he has not applied to me
for a deputyship. and I understand
that he desires none. At any rate, he
will not be connected with my admin
istration. The announcement that he
would be chief deputy for me was
done, of course, to discredit me polit
ically. I w*as appointed by Senator
Bacon, and those who are aligned
with another faction n this State
used the name of Mr. White to make
it appear that I w’as hobnobbing with
Republicans and that the office in
this district would remain under Re
publican control, Mr. White being a
Marshal.”
BREWT0N GETS INTO RACE
FOR LOWER HOUSE EARLY
WAYCROSS, Aug. 2— Subject to
the State and county primary of 1914,
S. A. Brewton to-day announced for
Representative. In this section of
Georgia Mr. Brewton takes the rec
ord for early announcements.
Father of Last Wife Prosecutes Man
Who Had Served for Same
Offense Before.
GAINESVILLE. Aug. 2.—Having
had three living wives, John Adaru
wap sentenced in Hall Superior Court
to four years in the penitentiary. He
was arrested two months ago in Co
lumbus on a warrant sworn out by
the father of the last wife, T. D.
Gilleland, of New Holland. This last
wife discovered Adam’s first wife alive
and well with an 8-year-old child in
Cedartown, and this brought about
the prosecution.
Adam was married last August to
Mis* Gilleland and his second wife,
w’ho was Miss Mary Cronic. of De-
Kalb County, died the following No
vember. Thus he had three living
wives at the same time.
Adam, of course, pleaded that he
thought his last wife was his only
living wife, but the evidence showed
that he had visited his first wife and
obtained money from her and that ho
had previously served a term for big
amy.
Father of Triplets
Seeks Federal Aid
Three Children Born to Negro Couple,
Who Are Told They Deserve
Bonus, and Seek It.
WAYCROSS. Aug. 2.—Oscar and
Sallie Thorpe, negroes, are the parents
of three healthy boys, and when a
neighbor, evidently joking with
Thorpe, told him the Government al
ways contributed to the support of
triplets, Thorpe Immediately started
a search in Waycross for some Gov
ernment man w ho could help him.
He went to the postofTice, hut got
little satisfaction there. Oscar thinks
if there Is any way to get help he
should have it, and has asked some
of hts "white” friends to ask the
lawmakers to pass a bill giving him
help.
FREIGHT CLERK ACCllSED
OF STEALING KEG OF BEER
GAINESVILLE, Aug. 2.—Charges
of larceny and violating the prohibi
tion law were entered against Roy
Patterson, an employee In the South
ern Railway freight offices, when he
took from a freight car a keg of beer
being shipped from Kentucky to
South Carolina and sold it here. The
defendant was fined for selling in
toxicants. and In the other case gave
a $500 bond to the United States
Court. Relatives in North Carolina
put up the money and Patterson left.
ANNUAL MOUNTAIN EXCURSION
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
PREMIER CARRIER OF THE SOUTH
SATURDAY, AUGU GT16,1913
Low Round-Trip Fares as Indicated in Following Table:
From
To
Ashe
ville, N. C
Bristol,
Tenn.
Hender
sonville,
N. C.
Hot
Springs,
N. C.
Lake
Toxaway,
N. C.
Tate
Springs,
Tenn.
ATLANTA. GA
$8.00
$6.50
$6.00
$6 00
$6.00
$6.00
AUSTELL, GA.
6.00
6.00
6.00
6.00
FAYETTEVILLE, GA
7.20
7.20
7.20
7.20
...
FLO VILLA, GA
7.50
S.00
7.50
7.50
7.60
7.50
FT. VALLEY, GA
7.50
8.00
7.50
7.60
7.60
7.50
GRIFFIN, GA
7.50
....
7.50
7.50
7.60
• • •.
JACKSON. GA
7.50
7.50
7.50
7.50
....
McDonough, ga
7.40
7.40
7.40
7.40
ROCKMART, GA
6.00
6.00
6.00
$.00
e.oo
6.00
FINAL LIMI —Tickets will be limited to return on any train and dats up to midnight of
September 1, 1913
THREE SPECIAL TRAINS FROM ATLANTA
MORNING.
Lv Atlanta 8:00 a.m.
Ar. Hendersonville 6:15 p. m.
Ar. Asheville 6:30 p.m.
Ar Brevard 7:41 p. m.
NOON.
Lv. Atlanta 11:15 a.m.
Ar. Hendersonville 8:17 p. m
Ar. Asheville 9:25 p. m
Ar Brevard
NIGHT.
Lv. Atlanta 9:30 p.m.
Ar. Hendersonville 6:30 a. m.
Ar. Asheville 7:40 a. m
Ar Brevard
Ar. Lake Toxaway 8:45 p. m.
Ar. Hot Springs 8:15 p. m
Ar l^ake Toxaway
Ar Hot Springs 11:00 p. m.
Ar. I,ake Toxaway
Ar. Hot Springs 8:30 p. m.
win iiiiuuj;ii panur uars ami cuaunus.
carry Pullman sleeping cars and through coaches
V.
Fop further Information and sleeping car reservation, address R. L. Baylor, Division Passenger Agent, City
Ticket Office, No. 1 Peachtree St., Atlanta. Ga. Phones. Main 142-143, Atlanta 142.
H. F. CARY, J NO. L. MEEK, R. L BAYLOR,
General Passenger Agent. Asst. Gen. Passenger Agent. Division Passenger Agent.
Dalton Attorney’s Argument Re
sults in Acquittal, Though Fite
Instructed Verdict of Guilty.
DALTON. Aug. 2.—Attorney M. H
Stone, although having practiced law
for less than a year, pulled a trick In
Superior Court which brought on the
envy of his fellow attorneys when, n
the face of Judge Fite’s warning fiat
he was going to charge the jury to
return a verdict of guilty, he argued
his case, heard Judge Fite charge as
he had said, and then heard the jury
return a verdict of “not guilty."
The case was that againet Bird Mil
ler, indicted on two counts' for se dug
whisky and furnishing whisky to a
minor. The evidence failed to snow
the sale of the whisky; out it v is
overwhelmingly strong that he had
furnished whisky to a youth
So clear cut was the case that Judge
Fite told Attorney Stone he could
argue the case if he wanted to, but
he Intended to instruct tne jury :o
find a verdict of guilty in the second
count.
At that point any oth*r local attor
ney would have quit, but Mr. Stone
proceeded with his argument. Judge
Fite’s charge was brief and to the
point. He said:
“Gentlemen, in the count of furnish
ing whisky to a minor, if you b;lieve
the contentions of the State, ne de
fendant is guilty; If you believe the
contentions of the defense, he is guilty;
in either event the defendant is
guilty. So retire and make your ver
dict.”
The Jury was out only a short time
and returned with the verdict:
"We. the Jury, find the defendant
not guilty."
It was a victory which comes to few
lawyers, and Mr. Stone is being
warmly congratulated.
CHICKENS TO BUY PIANO
FOR WAYCROSS Y. M, C. A.
■WAYCROSS. Aug. 2.—Chickens—
fries, hens and roosters—are going to
help the city Y. M. C. A. pay for a
piano. A big old-time chicken supper
is going to buy a piano for the use of
the association next week. Women
and girls of the city will help by act
ing as cooks and waitresses, and
every hungry man in Waycross to
day is thinking serious thoughts of
that chicken supper. Cows have aid
ed missionary societies here in the
past, but this is the first time the
chickens have come to the front.
SEASHORE
EXCURSION
AUGUST 7.
J acksonville, Brunswick,
St. Simon, Cumberland, At
lantic Beach, $6.00—Limit
ed 6 days. Tampa, Fla., $8
—Limited 8 days.
TWO SPECIAL TRAINS.
10 p. m. solid Pullman train.
10:15 p. m. Coach train.
Make Reservations Now.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Shocked by Lightning
While Taking a Bath
Flash Blinds Savannah Man for
Time Being, but Not
Permanently.
SAVANNAH, Aug. 2.—While tak
ing a bath, Lawrence A. Snedekef
was shocked by lightning at his home
on Park avenue. One of his eyed
was injured by the bolt. Snedeker
was in the tub when the squall broke
over the city. Suddenly he was
blinded by a vivid flash of lightning,
experiencing a sensation similar to
being struck a heavy blow in the
eye. He was momentarily dazed.
With his eye paining him, he Jumped
f»^rn the water and dressed, and later
summoned a physician.
An examination disclosed the fact
that there Is no cause for alarm. The
eye is inflamed and the patient is
suffering, but there will be no im
pairment of the sight.
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EGGS 15c DOZEN
Best Granulated SUGAR
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NUXCARA CURED APPENDICITIS
Chronic indigestion causes severe cases
of irritable appendix, for which operations
are advised. Correct the stomach trouble
and the appendix will soon become nor
mal.
TAKE
NUXCARA
t TIMES A DAY
one-half hour before each meal.
Read Mr. S. B Baldwin’s experience:
Mr. 8. B. Baldwin, 411 Rawaon
8L, Atlanta, aayai
My wife Buffered for a long
time with stomach and intes
tinal Indignation, which finally
set up a catarrhal condition of
the entire digestive tract re
sulting in chronic appendicitis.
We thought thla could be re
lieved only by an operation. But
through the advice of friend• I
gave her Nuxcara, the adentlfle
remedy for indlgeatlon, dyspep
sia and all stomach and bowel
disorders. The first bottle re
moved all distressing symptoms
and after taking four more bot
tles she completely recovered
and now enjoys perfect health.
My wife’s mother was so pleased
with the result in this case that
■he, too, decided to try Nuxcara.
Where an operation had failed
to relieve her Nuxcara gave her
Immediate relief. To-day she Is
In bettor health than she has
been for years. Nuxcara is the
best medicine I know of for
stomach and bowel disorders,
and I heartily recommend it as
a positive remedy.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST
$1.00 a Bottle—3 tor $2.50-6 tor $5.00
[Write fer free boeklet eo stomach troubles]
LAMAR-RANKIN DRUG CO.
DISTRIBUTORS
EDMONDSON DRUG CO., Special Atlanta Agents
106 N. Pryor St. 11 N. Broad St.
Manufactuied by the NUXCARA CO.. Atlanta. Ga.
FREE FILM DEVELOPING AND
8-HOUR FINISHING SERVICE
For efficient, quick and quality 8-hour service, mail your film rolls or packs to me to get the best results you ever saw in developing and printing. All rolls and packs developed free. All orders
completed in 8 hours after receipt. Square deal print prices. Send roll for trial. Don’t Send any money. Pay if O. K. My “Co-op” Coupon System gives you more for your money—$1.10 for every $L
Particulars on request Write SHELLEY IVEY, Manager The College “Co-oj,” 119 and 121 Peachtree Street, Candler Building (I have moved to larger ^tores), Atlanta, Ga. >