Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
5
U.S. EXPORTS TO
C1H GRIN
Remarkable Increase in Trade Is
Cited as Proof of Need
For Reciprocity.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.—The need
of reciprocity with Canada was atrik-
ingply shown in a report issued to
day by the Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce.
This report sets forth that despite
the high tariff wall between the
United Stated and the Dominion thar
territory dtfring the fiscal year just
ended was the world’s largest pur
chaser in the market of the United
States.
The total value of United States ex
ports for 1913 was $415,000,000 against
$216,000,000 in 1910.
"Manufactures.” says the report,
“form about two-thirds of the Ameri
can merchandise exported to Canada,
and were the chief factor in the re
markable gain by which trade has
practically doubled in three years.”
Under the broad reciprocal agree
ment urged by Mr. W. R. Hearst three
years ago, tariffs on the mutual ex
change of the commodities of the
United States and Canada would have
been lessened to such an extent that
the Dominion imports would have far
exceeded the 1913 fiscal year figure.
A Clinching Argument.
Steps were taken to-night to bring
this report to the attention of Con
gress as the most convincing argu
ment yet advanced for the enactment
into law of an agreemet between the
United States and Canada./'
It was pointed out tht^t' inasmuch
as the Hearst reciprocity agreement
adopted in an amended measure by
the Taft administration, called only
for decreased duties on commodities
mutually exchanged, the manufac
tured exports of the United States
would have remained practically the
same, while Canada’s purchases from
the American farmer would have
greatly increased.
Through the drastic reductions in
the present tariff bill, Canada will
virtually get all the advantages pro
posed in the reciprocal agreement,
without making return to the United
States.
She will be able to purchase more
cheaply than ever in the United
States, while the American consumer
will still have to pay Canadian duties
on goods imported from the Dominion.
The report in part follows:
•Passenger and freight cars im-
prted from the United States in
creased in value from $500,000 to
$5,333,000 in the past three years, ar.d
the export of automobiles to the
Dominion nearly tripled, increasing
from $3,333,000 to $9,250,000.
Gains by Millions.
“Other gains were copper pigs,
bar-, etc*., from less than $1,000,000
to more than $6,500,000; steel rails,
from less than $1,000,000 to nearly
$4,000,000; cotton cloths, from $750,000
to $2,500,000; locomotives. from
$250,000 to' more than $1,000,000;
lumber, from $5,000,000 to $13,333,000.
structural iron and steel, from less
than $3,000,000 to more than $9,000,-
000; metal working machinery, from
$333,000 to $2,333,000: agricultural
Implements, from $3,333,000 to practi
cally $7,000,000.
‘The gain in raw materials and
foodstuffs was less pronounced.
"The actual gain in exports from
the United States to Canada in the
fiscal, year. 1013, was $86,000,000; that
in exports to the United Kingdom,
$33,000,000; Germany, $35,000,000;
Netherlands. $22,0*0,000. Belgium,
$15,000,000; Italy, $11,000,000: Europe,
as a whole $138,000,000; to all South
America, $14.^00,000; to all North
America, except Canada, $15,000,000.
"According to Canadian figures the
United States supplied 63 per cent of
the imports of Canada in 1912, against
58,4 per cent in 1902.
"The growth in the import trade
with Canada is less striking, the total
being $95,000,000 in 1910, compared
with only $121,000,000 in 1913.”
Continued from Page 3.
Morgan Is Refused
Seat on Own Road
BOSTON, Aug. 21.—J. P. Morgan
with his valet and handbags the other
day boarded an express train at New
London for New York and demanded
a seat in the parlor car. There was
none left and the conductor was
dreadfully sorry, for Mr. Morgan
practically owned the road.
He was led to an ordinary* coao'i
and his valet stowed away on a seat.
Further developments resulted in the
conductor seizing the baggage mas
ter's private camp chair and exca
vating a place in the parlor car for
Mr. Morgan, who rode to New York
perched on the camp chair and wab
bling rather wrathfully.
45 Factories Sign
For Exhibit Space
The directors of the Chamber of
Commerce Realty Company and the
permanent exhibit committee held a
Joint meeting Wednesday afternoon,
at which it was decided to go ahead
with the Atlanta Manufacturers’Expo
sition, although only three of the four
floors allotted for It have been sold.
Forty-five manufacturers have
signed for space, and the committee
believes others will come In as soon
as they see the exposition Is really
assured.
Negress Ends Life
. rt, , ■ ttti ■, "Gentlemen, somei
After Shooting W hlte horror of a crime does
HAZLEHURST, Aug. 21.—John F
Hall, a prominent farmer and turpen
tine operator of Jeff Davis County,
was shot and slightly wounded oy
Phoebe Carr, a negress, at his home
five miles north of this place. Later
she was found dead in the house.
The Coroner’s verdict was suicide
After shooting Hall the negress took
poison.
King and Queen of
Roumania Shot At
Man Who Wrote Those Notes
Killed Mary Phagan, Charge
BUCHAREST. Aug. 21.—An at
tempt to assinate King Charles of
Roumania and the Queen was made
to-day at Sinaia, but both escaped.
Shots were fired at an automobile
in which their majesties were riding.
4 Reported Dead in
Mississippi Wreck
MEMPHIS, TENN, Aug. 21.—Mes
sages from Boguechitte, Miss., this
afternoon said four persons were
killed in the wreck of an Illinois Cen
tral fast passenger train bound from
New' Orleans to Chicago.
BARNESVILLE TAX INCREASE.
BARNESVILLE. — City Assessors
W. M. Howard, E. L. Rogers and Em
met Langford show the total property
returned by whites for the year 1913
to be $1,976,633 and that for negroes
$102,105, making a total of $2,078,982,
a gain of $73,637 over 1912.
FARMER IS BANKRUPT.
M. M. Abernathy, a farmer of
Gwinnett County, Thursday tiled a
voluntary petition in bankruptcy He
admitted liabilities of $1,323, with as
sets of $210.
U. S. FAIR BOARD NAMED.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21.—Presi
dent Wilson to-day named A. C. Mill
er, Assistant Secretary of the In
terior; Dr. W. F. Stratton, Depart
ment of Commerce, and F. Lamson
Scribner, Department of Agriculture,
members of the Government boar!
for the Panama Exposition.
CHAUFFEUR KILLS BOY.
COLUMBUS.—Elbert Ellis, a
twelve-year-old negro boy, is dead
from injuries received when the negro
chauffeur of David Rothschild, a
wholesale dry goods merchant drove
a heavy touring car over his body
and head, crushing the skull,
chauffeur was on a Joy ride.
determine his guilt or his innocence.
The -Jury system came as a result of
a desire to popularise the courts; to
let the people flow' through the courts.
‘‘God Grant We Get
Away From the Street.”
"Inexperienced, as they are, it was
decided that Juries were capable of de
ciding questions of fact. Of course
the judge still decides all legal points.
"My friend Hooper, in reading his
authority just now, used a funny ex
pression. He said your position is no*
different from any man’s w’ho wants
to learn the facts; from any man on
the street.”
Hooper objected. "Your honor.” he
said, ”1 don’t want the speaker to mis
represent my meaning.”
Arnold: "You said street. God
grant that we get away from the
street when we come into court. What
is the use of having any court if we
don’t get away from the street? There
it is the man who has the most friends
who wins. Courts are to protect a
man from the street.
Gentlemen, sometimes the very
a man a grave
injustice. Time rights it all. of course,
but at the present blush of a horror
friends can’t judge fairly.
"The crime in this case is an awfui
crime. It was committed by a fiend—
a brute. But no matter how terrible,
no fair-minded man would refuse to
give a man accused of it a fair trial.
"But well-balanced men don’t say
just because he is charged with the
crime by Detective Starnes and So
licitor Dorsey: ‘We will hang him.
Thinking men weigh the facts.
“Keniey Sample of
Lying Blowhards.”
"I remember a case when Charley
Hill was Solicitor, he asked a pros
pective juror the formal question, and
when he came to that part where the
Solicitor General said: ‘Juror, look on
prisoner; prisoner, l6ok on juror,’ that
old fellow got up and looked him
over and said: ‘Judge, he’s guilty.’
That is the way with public senti
ment in this case.
There has been so much lying and
rascality as I will show you that I
won’t add to it. That fellow Kenley
is a fair example. He is a man that
any honest man ought to be ashamed
to say he knows. His mouth is set
like a catfish. He is the type of lying
blowhards that constitutes the so-
called public sentiment. He is the
man who said they hanged two ne
groes at Decatur because they had to
have somebody, and he Is the man
who said, ‘Hang this Jew for the
murder of that poor little girl whether
he is innocent or guilty.’
i had rather be in Leo Frank’s
shoes to-day than Kenley’s.
“Gentlemen of the jury, there are
people who say that Frank is a re
markable man: that he is a man of
wonderful courage: that he has gone
through this trial in a manner most
remarkable for a man of his physical
build and temperament.
“Gentlemen, he has inherited it
through 2,000 years of persecution.
Behind him there is a long line of an
cestors who for centuries have been
abused, and I hope the day will come
when a man will get justice, will be
accorded fair treatment, be he Jew
or Gentile, or white or black.
"He has endured persecution, and
his family has endured it. The Jews
have been thrifty, and envy ha,s been
the result. If Leo M. Frank had not
been a Jew there would not have been
The
OBITUARY
The funeral of Robert A. Camp, who
died Wednesday afternoon at a local
hospital, will be held at the chapel of
Greenberg & Bond at 1:30 o’clock
Thursday afternoon. He was 56 years
old, and leaves a wife and five chil
dren. Interment at Westvlew.
Mrs. John Carter. 37 years old. died
Wednesday at a sanitarium. She is
survived by her husband and four
children. The funeral announcement
will be made later.
Henry Yarbrough, one of Atlanta’s old
est citizens, died Wednesday at his
home, 201 Kirkwood avenue. He was
77 years old. Surviving him are his
wife, one son. A. M Yarbrough, and
three daughters. Mrs. J. M. Criswell,
Mrs. S P. Winburn and Mrs. C. F>.
Kay. The funeral announcement will
be made later.
Pauline Griffin, 13 years old. died early
Thursday at a sanitarium. She is
survived by her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
W. J. Griffin, two brothers and twe
sisters, all of Fish. Ga., to which
place the body was sent Thursday
for funeral and interment.
Mra. R. E. Turpin, 6S years old. died
Thursday morn’ng at a sanitarium.
The body will he sent to Rex, Ga ■
for fuTveral and interment.
Oscar Thompson, fifty-seven years
old, a bookkeeper for the Western
Union Telegraph Company, died
Thursday morning at his home, 19
Cain street. Funeral services will be
held Friday morning at 7 o’clock, and
at 8 o’clock the body will be sent to
Macon for interment. Mr. Thompson
is survived by his widow, two daugh
ters, Misses Louise and Mabel Thomp
son; and three brothers. L. F. and
C. B. Thompson, of Thomasville, and
A. D. Thompson, of Savannah. He
was a member of the Macon lodge.
No. 36, K. of P.. and of the Second
Baptist church in Atlanta.
John C. Beauchamp, the 19-day-old son
of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Beauchamp. No.
974 Fifth avenue, died Thursday morn
ing at 1 o’clock. The funeral will be
held Thursday afternoon at the Indian
Creek church.
The funeral of Leo Hamby infant son
of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hamby, who died
Wednesday, was held Thursday morn
tng from Bloomfield’s chapel. Inter
ment at Westvlew.
DRINKS ACID BY MISTAKE.
LOUISVILLE, KY., Aug. 21.—Miss
Marie Senning. 18, who was to have
sailed in a few days for Europe to
complete her musical education, died
to-day poisoned by carbolic acid
which she drank by mistake for head
ache medicine.
NEW OFFICIAL IN OFFICE.
BARNESVILLE.—Joel D. Dunn,
who won the race for the unexpired
term as Tax Collector, will at once
make the required bond and assume
his office. Only a few months have
elapsed on the term.
POSTAL CLERK NEEDED.
A civil service examination for the
position of clerk-carrier will be held
at the Atlanta postoffice November 5,
1913. Applications must be made be
fore October 1 to E. H. Jennings, sec
retary of the Civil Service Board.
MEET TO CALL PRIMARIES.
A special meeting of the City Ex
ecutive Committee has been called for
Saturday, August 23, by its chairman,
John Y. Smith, for the purpose of con
sidering and ordering the city pri
mary and other matters.
any prosecution of him on this despic
able charge. The miserable, lying ne
gro. Jim Conley, was brought In to
tell his miserable, lying story, to re
cite, parrot-like, the story in which
he had been so well drilled.
"I am asking my own people and
my own kind of people to do Frank
justice. I am not a Jew’, but I would
rather my throat would be cut than
do one an injustice of this sort.
"They have got their miserable per
jurer. Conley, to come up here and
swear Frank’s life away. They have
had him swear against a man who
never had a word said against him
before.
"Of course, after a crime, you al
ways find persons who say that they
knew the defendant's character was
bad. But you don’t make a murderer
in a single day.
"I am going to compare the wit
nesses that were used by the defense
with those that were used by the pros
ecution. They brought up the dregs
of humanity to testify against this
man. They brought up jailbirds and
convicts to hang this man. They
spouted hot and cold. They hurried
the schedule of a street car. They
slow’ed dow’n the time clock at the
factory. They got the detectives to
say that Frank was nervous. They
got his mother-in-law to say that he
was so soulless he didn’t open his
mouth.
“Built Up Case,
Then Tore It Down. ’ ’
"They got little George Epps to tes
tify that Mary Phagan got into town
at 12:07. Then they began to tear
their own testimony down. I am go
ing to strip the case of some of the
falsities and the warplngs of the evi
dence, if .God Almighty gives me
strength. I don’t know that He will,
for I am nearly worn out.
‘There have been a great many
things brought into this case which
should not have been brought in. The
defendant must be proved guilty of
the murder of Mary Phagan. Every
other reasonable hypothesis must be
eliminated.
"You must liberate Frank, other
wise. The law says you must. If you
think that it is as reasonable to be
lieve that Jim Conley committed the
crime, then you must turn Frank
loose.
"Our friends, the detectives and po
lice, were hard put to find somebody
on whom to place the crime. They
thought at first it was this man
Gantt. Sentell and others said they
saw Mary Phagan on the street at
midnight. Of course, they did not.
But it will illustrate the uncertainty
with which this crime has been
hatched.
"Then they were almost certain that
New’t Lee w r as the man. They found
the notes by the girl’s body, and New;
Lee said in reference to ‘night-witch,’
a phrase occurring in one of the notes,
that ‘night-witch means me, Boss.’
"I do not think that Newt Lee com
mitted the murder, or had anything
to do w’ith the killing of the girl, but
I never w ill get it out of my mind that
Newt Lee knew’ something about tne
writing of those notes.
‘‘Man Who Wrote Note
Killed Mary Phagan.”
“This is one of the profoundest
mysteries that ever confronted a com
munity. It has baffled investigation
at every turn. But one thing has
stood out like a mountain on a plain,
since the very beginning of this case.
The man w’ho wrote those notes killed
Mary Phagan.
"Oh. you remember how’ they
searched for him. The notes w’ere
found beside the dead body. It was
right hard to recite w’hat was in the
dbscure mind that wrote those notes
It looked like one negro trying to ac
cuse another, but the one question
stood out. Who w’rote the notes? Wh.i
wrote the notes?
"Things.developed. Newt Lee was
put through the third degree and the
fourth degree. Just the day or the
day before the Court of Appeals hand
ed down a decision w'hich is especially
applicable to thl$» case. It denounces
such methods. How it does hit Jim
Conley and the authorities that made
him swear. How it does hit Minola
i McKnight!”
He read a new spaper clipping of the
decision.
"Our friend Hooper said there was
nothing to hold Jim Conley in that
chair but the truth. My God! He hao
his life at stake! Before you get
through w’ith this case you will see
that they have got to depend on Jim
Conley. If they can not hobble on
those too rotten crutches they can’t
hobble at all. Before I get through
wdth it I am going to s»how there never
was such a frameup since the world
began.”
Court adjourned at this time.
Recalls Famous
Durant Case.
When court convened for the aft
ernoon session, Arnold resumed his
argument.
"Gentlemen of the jury,” he said,
"my friend Hooper made some re
marks about circumstantial^ evidence
and how powerful it was. He forgot
to mention the fact that the circum
stances had to be substantiated by
reputable witnesses and eliminate
every other reasonable doubt.
“I read a book'once that dealt with
circumstantial evidence and it was
positively sickening the number of
mistakes that have b^en made. The
famous Durant case t^hat has com*
within our memory is a striking illus
tration. Two girls were found mur
dered in the tower of a church. Du
rant was the last man seen with
them. The public said. ‘You are
guilty.' One man swore he saw’ him
wearing a girl’s ring. Another man
swore he had found Durant nervous
and perspiring as though he had come
from recent great exercise. The
women egged him on his way to
court. The Jury found him builty and
a weak Judge the first I have ever
heard of, sentenced him to hang »n
three days. They appealed the case,
but lost out, and they banged him.
There was not a cemetary in ’Frisco
that would bury that man. They took
him out to a little country church
yard and buried him. Time went on
and people forgot about it. The
preacher in that little church con
tinued to address his congregation.
After a number of years the preacher
was confined to his death bed. He
I
Could Not Rest Day or Night. Sores
ltch»d So Would Scratch Herself
to Pieces. Cuticura Soap and
Ointment Cured in Two Weeks.
Glean* F. O.. Va. — “ My baby • trouble
began witk an itching and then a little
bump would come and ahe eould not rest
day or night. The trouble
affected her whole body. The
bump* festered and came to
a head and the corruption
looked like thick matter, kind
of a yellow eolor. The sore*
Itched *o badly until it
i seemed to me she would
scratch herself to pieces and
then a sore would form and
her clothee would stick to her body and
pu'l off the little eeab. Tn some places she
would scratch and irritate the sores until
they seemed to be large. She was affected
about a year.
“ First I employed a medicine which did
very little good; nest I used and
that did harm. So I wrote for a
sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I
bathed her body in warm water and Cuti-
cura Soap and then I applied the Cuticura
Ointment and they afforded relief after
twice using. I bought some more Cu,tlcum
Soap and Ointment and inside of two weeks
she was cured.” fSigned) Mr*. J. R.
Greggs. Nov. 21. 1912.
For more than a generation Cuticura Soap
and Ointment, have afforded the most eco
nomical treatment for affections of the aids
and scalp that torture, itch. burn, scale, and
destroy sleep. Sold everywhere. Sample of
each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad
Areas post-card “Cuticura, Dept. T. Boston.’.
*ff*Mei» who shave and shampoo with Cu
ticura Soap will find it best for skin and scalp
called a number of his friends around
him and confessed to the murder of
those two girls, and explained the cir
cumstances in such a way, that it left
no room for doubt that hff was telling
the truth.
Cites Infamous
Dreyfus Case.
"I remember another case—the
Hampton case in England. It is a
historic case. A country gentleman
by the name of Hampton disappeared.
He had lived with an old woman and
her two son«. It was supposed that
he had been killed. One son made
Incriminating admissions. They tried
the old lady and her two sons and
hanged them all. In a year Hampton
appeared in life.
"I recall another case, the most
dreadful of all—the Dreyfus case. He
was a lieutenant in the French army.
Someone had been telling the plans of
the French fortifications. Dreyfus
was suspected. They got evidence
against him; he was court-martialed
and sent to Devils Island. The men
who sent him away thought they were
safe, but the people became calmer
and began reconsidering their action.
In time a most infamous conspiracy
was revealed. One man confessed and
before the end practically every man
in the prosecution committed auW
cide. Dreyfus was a. Jew. He wag
friendless. He was an easy mark,
and they got him.
"I have never seen so much venom
as there is in this trial. The murder
ous beastiallty that robbed little
Mary Phagan of her life is scarcely
worse than the spirit that would de
prive this man of justice. No wolf
in the forest, no beast, in his ca&e is
so savage as these people who would
hang this man on the flimsiest sort
ofevidence.
Postmaster French,
Of Memphis, Is Dead
MEMPHIS, Aug. 21.—Major J. C.
French, Memphis postmaster, ap
pointed after a bitter fight several
weeks ago, died unexpectedly of apo
plexy to-day. He was more than 70
years of age.
L. W. Dutro, whom Major French
succeeded, was recently drowned in
the Mississippi River.
Chamberlin = Johnson = DuBose Co.
ATLANTA
NEW YORK
PARIS
69'
KILLS MAN OVER DEBT.
CHATTANOOGA, Aug. 21.—Sam
McReynolds. a restaurant keeper, was
shot to death last night by Minor Da
vis a railroad car inspector, in Mc
Reynolds’ restaurant, following a
quarrel over a debt. Davis is in jail.
$20.95 BALTIMORE
AND RETURN VIA
SEABOARD.
On sale August 22, 23 and 24
Correspondingly low rates from
other points. Through steel
trains.
Funeral Designs and Flowers
FOR ALL'OCCASIONS.
Atlanta Floral Cunutanv
455 EAST FAIR STREET.
Here’s News That Will Make
Interesting Reading For Women
Nainsook Gowns That Were
Until Now $1, $1.50 & $1.75, Are
Prepare to buy them in twos and threes and half doz
ens. You will, once you see how fine they are—(it does not
take a woman’s eye long to catch the real value that lies in
such an offering as thig).
Here—
They are, every one of them, taken from our own stocks,
which means they had to be worth their former prices
before they could enter. The nainsook is smoothly woven
and light and free from all filling.
The laces, Valenciennes, Cluny and shadow, are those
neat and dainty patterns that women of good taste instinct
ively prefer, and so with the Swiss embroideries that form
yokes, that are oddly placed in sleeves, slip-over style. Em
pire style, both variously charming. We warrant you
haven’t known such gowns before ai fi9c.
A Big Sale
Remnants White and Col
ored Wash Goods
12 l-2c to 35c Qualities
SALE BEGINS PROMPTLY AT 8:30 o’clock Friday morn
ing. White Piques, Repps, Bedfords, Dimities, Lawns, Nain
sooks, Batistes, Swisses, Voiles, Crepes, Madras and Poplins.
Values up to 35c yard. Colored Ginghams, Poplins, Voiles,
Madras, Piques, Foulards, Serpentine Crepes, Batistes,
Chambrays, Percales, etc.; up to 35c yard.
9'
Y
A
R
D
Be amongst the first comers at this sale; the assort
ment is the greatest we’ve ever put into a Remnant Sale.
Waist Sale
Values to $2.50
77
A clean sweep sale of all voile, lingerie
and linen waists of our great special pur
chase, also a big lot of slightly soiled fine
waists from our regular stock. Sale be
gins at 8:30 sharp, Friday morning.
While they last 77c each.
White Skirts $1
Values to $2.50 *
.00
We have put into one lot all white Bed
ford, Ratine, Pique and Crash Skirts
formerly priced $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50.
We intend to close them out in one half
day. Therefore the price is cut regard
less of cost to $1.00 each.
- Women’s -
Undermuslins 25 c
New, Fresh Fall Goods
100 dozen pairs of women’s fine
cambric drawers, the best we’ve
ever bought under 36c,
per pair
50 dozen neat pretty new nain
sook Corset Covers, six lovely
styles, trimmed with embroid
ery, lace, beading and draw rib
bons. Special price, Friday and
Saturday, '*) ET n
half-day ***J\~.
Men’s
$1 and $1.25 Shirts
To Go in One Lot
79
The most stylish patterns in plaited and
plain-front shirts, all sizes, imported per
cales and madras, made by the best people
in the business—in our August Reduction
Sale, 79c each.
All 60c Silk Neck
wear, except Con-
35c
tract
Goods
25c and 50c
Wash and Silk
Neck
wear
20 c
Men’s Summer Underwear, 1-4 OFF.
Men’s 50c Black Silk Sox, 25c PAIR.
Kimonos 39 c
50c and 75c Values
All our summer stock of short
lawn kimonos, in white and col
ors; also black and white effects
—while they last, 39c each.
Just In!
BIG STOCK OF NEW FALL
CREPE KIMONOS — perfect
beauties; new styles, new pat
terns, and worth one-third more
than our prices.
$1.50 to $1.98
Women’s Vests JAc
To Close W
100 dozen women’s fine Maco Cotton
Vests, low neck, no sleeves. Friday
and Saturday, while they last, at 10c
each.
Rummage Sale—Notions
4 bars Armour's Bath Soap for 25c.
15c box Marine Bond Stationery 8c
box.
Cable Cord, all sizes, white or black, 12
yards for 10c.
High’s Poplin Lawn Paper, 15c pound.
Western Electric Hair Curlers, curl
the hair in a few minutes, without
heat, 2 on card, 10c card.
Best Quality Clincher Dress Fasteners,
12 on card, 5c card.
4 Papers American Dress Pins for 5c.
15c Tooth Brushes 10c.
Treasure Nickel-plated Safety Pins, all
sizes, 5c card.
Washable Net Collar Forms, 5c.
25c and 35c Scissors, 19c.
500 Yards Spool King’s or Pennant
Basting Cotton, 5c Spool or 50c
Dozen.
Blue Bird Rings, 25c.
10c Collar Bands, 5c.
15c Inside Belting, white or black, 10c
yard.
Ribbon Remnants, 1-4 off marked prices.
4 Palm Leaf Fans for 5c.
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Chamberlin - Johnson - DuBose Co. mum