Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 22, 1913, Image 3

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xnr, AJ LiAINTA WttUKlilAJN AJND NEWS. FRANK'S AGITATION IS DECLARED NO GROUND FOR SUSPICION Why Don i They Hang Everybody Who Was Nervous? Attorney Demands 2 LAWYERS HAD HE BEEN Continued From Page 2. did not ask for Mary Phagan’s pay. Now one of them is mistaken, but this is not of much importance, so we will pass it on. “How did Frank know that Mary Phagan would come to the factory at all on Saturday. The custom had been that when employees failed to get their envelopes on regular pay days before holidays, that they pass ed over the holiday and waited until the next regular working day to draw their pay. So we see from that that there was absolutely no reason why Frank should have expected her there on Saturday. “Now, what else? They say Frank was nervous. He was, and we admit it. A young boy went there, said he saw Frank, and that he was nervous. Black said he was nervous. Darley said he was nervous. Mr. Montag, his wife, Isaac. Haas, and a number of others, all said he was nervous. Of course, he was nervous, and there were lots of others around there that were nervous. Why don’t they hang Jake Montag? Why don’t they hang old Isaac Haas? They were nervous. Why don’t they hang all those pretty little girls who became nervous and hysterical when they heard of this terrible crime? Wouldn’t the sight of this little girl’s body, dragged in the dirt and crushed into the cinders, have made you nervous too? Only Manhunter Not Moved Bv Child’s Death. “Man is a cruel monster. He is hard-hearted. They say he is a little below the angels, but he has fallen mighty lowo oooino oaogeos opast, if the angels haven’t descended with him. Yet I have never seen a man who when he looked upon a little girl crushed that some of the divinity that shapes his head did not arouse him and cause tears to flow down his cheeks. “I am not chicken-hearted. I could see one of you badly hurt without going into hysterics. But I never hear the cry of a woman or a child but that manhood and tenderness I got from my sainted mother does not arise in rebellion within me, and I pray God if it ever should cease that my end may come. No one but the manhunter with blbod in his heart would want to hang a man because he was nervous from the death of a little child. “Then we come to that telephone call. They say he did not hear it and that that is cause for suspicion. Some people sleep lightly; others are hard to awake. The wife of old man Selig had to arouse him. They called old Uncle Ike Haas and he did not hear. His wife had to awaken him. Why not hang old Uncle Isaac Haas? He did not hear the telephone. Hang him because he slept—a peaceful sleep, evidence of a good conscience. “They have another suspicion. He hired a lawyer. I had known the National Pencil Company, but I don’t know that I ever saw Frank until I met him at the police station. Frank had been down there on Sunday and told them all that he could. I don’t know what was in the minds of the detectives; I don’t know what was in the head of old John Black. God Al mighty only knows. That’s* one rea son I love John so. I can’t tell what’s in his head. “Then on Monday the police did not have the same attitude to Frank.” Hooper Says Rosser Is “Wire-grass” Man, Too. At this point the jury was excused for a breathing spell. Attorney Frank Hooper, of the prosecution, came over to the press table and said that he wanted to make an explanation of where he came from, after Mr. Ros ser’s humorous references to him. “We both came from Randolph County,” Hooper said, “and I guess Mr. Rosser knows about as much about gophers and wire grass as I do.” “The only suspicion against this man is that he employed me and he employed Herbert Haas. I felt a lit tle bad about it because my friend Dorsey didn’t say anything about Rube Arnold. Frank didn’t employ a lawyer Sunday, but on Monday the police employed different tactics. They sent after him with two detec tives. He wasn’t arrested—oh, no. But my friend Black said he was re leased. When I asked him what that meant, if he wasn’t arrested, he had to admit that to all intents and pur poses Frank was under arrest. “Chief Lanford walked about with his accustomed dignity, and Chief Beavers, the beautiful one, scudded around, and they left Frank to soak.”-. Here Rosser turned to Frank. “That’s the only time in this whole thing,” he said, “you didn’t show good sense. known w hat I know' *.*e*\\ y gotten one lawyer, but would have gotten two goods ones, and you wouldn't have been satisfied then. " “But old man Sig Montag w r as a lit tle wiser than Frank. He knew that bunch. He was onto their curves. I am going to be mighty careful, though, about what I say about that police bunch, because if they take 4 notion they would get me for white slavery before to-night. “At any rate, Sig Montag called Herbert Haas and told him to go Luther Rosser’s Tnbute to the Jury We walk the streets carelessly, absorbed in qur own interests. We pass our friends, and do not recognize them. The mind^ wanders in flights of fancy and fits of revelry. We mean no harm to ourselves nor harm to our friends, but we are careless. Men of the jury, you are set aside. You cease to be a part of that revelry of the streets. In old pagan Rome women walked the streets, chatted gaily and carelessly, but a few were set aside—the vestal virgins. They cared not for the gladitorial combats or the strife. “So it is with you set apart. You care not for the chatter or the laughter of the rabble. You are unprejudiced. Yours is the sworn duty to pass on a matter of life and death. You are to decide on the evidence, with no fear, no favor, no affection. ‘Others may take the brave task of stnding up for the weak and oppressed, but it is not for you. You are a still, silent, consecrated band. You are to do your duty without one thought of the past or the future. You are here and now consecrated by justice to do your duty.” And? Not a thins. If Frank had been a guilty man, do you know what he would have done? Gentlemen of the jury, he would have kept quiet. He would have kept his silence to himself. But he was not guilty and he did not do that. But he went home with the thought of this horrible murder in down there and see what is the mat- I h * s m * n<i - He thought of how a beast ter with Leo Frank. Haas could not | had , commltte<1 the crlra «: of how go. I will give a house and lot worth God s la " s had been outraged; of hivv $20,000 to be in the same position',hr there was a stain u P° n the fair name was that day. His wife was pre- ° f thls c ' ty ’ paring to have a baby. Says Frank Wanted aihout A >011 have Not Arrested, Bui Hd To Be “Released.” “Sig took the automobile and went down to Haas’ house and said you must go. They went to the police station, and what happened? That throws a whole flood of light on the matter. “No, Frank was not arrested, but he had to be released. I said to John Black. ‘John, what do you mean by released?’ He stammered and stut tered, and said, ‘Why, I Just mean released.’ r “These men went down to see a man who was not under arrest. He was a free citizen sitting there, and yet they wouldn’t let his friends see him. They wouldn’t let his lawyer Haas see him. “This man Haas is not of my age or of my flesh, or of my experience. He called me up. If there is any crime in that he is the guilty man. My friend Dorsey, with h&> eyes close together, snapping like snake’s, made much of the fact that Frank had hired the lawyer. The charges and insinuations that he has made are the most contemptible that ever have occurred in a Georgia court. The things that he has donejn this trial will never be done in Georgia. I will stake my life on that. Could Not Hire More Devoted Lawyer. “Dorsey’s eyes got as green as beads on a woman’s dress as he hissed his charges against Frank of dirty dog and brutal murderer. You may question Frank In his judgment; he might have hired a better lawyer than I. He might have hired a more decent lawyer, but he couldn’t have hired a more devoted lawyer. I will say that for myself if I drop dead in my tracks. “Under what circumstances • did Frank hire the detectives? He had been to the station house and was asked to make a statement. I went down there, not at Frank’s invitation, for he didn’t know I was coming. Mr. Haas had asked me to go down there, and I wasn’t a welcome visitor at the police station that morning. They don’t like me very well down there. They didn’t take my hat; they didn’t give me a warm welcome. I guess they would have arrested me long ago, but they just don’t want me down there. I can’t blame them for that. And when I reached there I saw Frank for the first time in my life. I walked in and said, ‘What’s the mat ter here, boys?’ You know, I just used plain old common English. 1 don’t put on any fancy frills. “Someone said, ‘They’ve got Mr. Frank under arrest here for murder.’ One of the detectives got up and said, ‘No, we haven’t.’ Yet they talk ed about him not being under arrest at that time. Why Didn’t They Want Me There? “Someone said, ‘They want him to make a statement.’ I said, ‘Let him go ahead and make it.’ Right away Lanford and the others hustled him over to a room. They didn’t want me to go with him. “Now, I have always been a little 1 bit impudent, and when I started in, they said, ‘We don’t want you in here,’ and I said, kind of impudent- like. 'I’m coming in, anyway. I won’t interrupt him, but I’m coming in ’ “And why didn’t they want me in there? I don’t know. Wasn’t I as reputable a citizen as Lanford? Wasn’t I as capable of protecting the law as he was? Gentlemen, while we were there a peculiar thing hap pened. I said a man could not have comiriitted that crime and not have scars upon him. Frank showed them that he had no marks upon himself. “Why didn’t Lanford get upon the stand. Was it because he dreaded to get in converse with me? No, he didn’t want to recall that dark Con ley chapter; that hideous Minola Mc- Knight incident. “And after they had released Frank, what did they do? They went out to his house and looked at his soiled linea, a&d what evidence did they To Find Slayer. “Then he sat down and did what? He telephoned Sig Montag that he wanted to hire detectives; that he wanted to ferret out and punish the murderer o fMary Phagan. ‘I have not had *oo high an esti mate of the detective department. I don t mean they are not good, clever fellows, but no man can spy on folks, come In constant contact with crime and elevate his character. God Al mighty couldn’t do it. "You,” and here Rosser turned again to the detectives, “may not be made worse men, but you won’t be mad? better men. Nor Scott; I am sorry he has gone and will not hear what I have got to any. He crept into this case in the most remarkable sit uation I ever heard of. He got up on, the stand and said, *We worked hand and glove with the city detectives.' Ain’t that a fine gang? Do nothing outside of what the city police do. “Hiring Detective A Courageous Deed.” “Some good man will hire him again. But I don’t care anything about that. I will let it go. The point is that Frank knew' that Scott was going to work w'ith the police. I will give Scott credit for being that' hon est. He told Frank he was going to lock arms w-ith John Black and walk down the disgraceful avenue of this case. “This young Jew', Just down from the North, ignorant of Southern cus toms, hired a Pinkerton detective to ferret out the crime. The detective told him he was going to trail w’ith fhe police. Frank told him, ‘Find the murderer.’ He knew Scott w r as going to trail w r ith the police, even if Frank himself was trailed. “Ah. gentlemen, his race has pre sented many a heroic scene, but nev er one greater than this. Yet they want to hang him because he em ployed a detective. “My friend Hooper charged that he tried to point suspicion on New t Lee. I don’t believe Hooper meant w'hat he said. Frank first said there was no error in the time slips. The next day he said there was. Darley made the same mistake. Why not hang Dar ley? “Then do you r'emember what he said about the time being rubbed off of that slip? Dorsey had to admit that he erased It. I don’t mean that Dorsey meant any harm. Denounces Bloody Shirt Evidence. “Then the bloody shirt. Gentlemen, that is the most unfair thing in this whole case—to charge that that young man had that shirt planted. Black and Scott w'ent out and found that shirt in the bottom cf an old barrel at Newt Lee’s house. They found it Tuesday morning, brought it In and Newt said it was his shirt.” Dorsey jumped to his feet at this moment and exclaimed that such was not the testimony. Rosser said: “Newt Lee did. I got It out of one of those boys on the stand.” “No, he didn’t.” replied Dorsey, 'Y^ee said it looked like a shirt of his.” “Well, we’ll admit it then,” Rosser- continued; “we will just put it that* way. We will suppose they went out and got a bloody shirt just like the one old Newt Lee wore and hid it in that barrel. “Frank didn’t even know where old man Lee lived. He certainly didn't know he had a shirt that looked like that one. I never heard of going to such extremities to try to hang an innocent man. An eloquent four-and-a-half ad dress by Reuben Arnold for the de fense marke dthe first day of the arguments in the Frank trial. Only two addresses were made to the Jury, that by Arnold and the opening argu ment of the State by Attorney Frank A. Hooper, who has been associated with Solicitor Dorsey in the prosecu tion of the- case. Hooper spoke in the forenoon from 9 o’clock until 11:30. Arnold began his remarkable speech at 11:60 and was interrupted by recess at 12:30 o’clock. He resumed at 2 and con tinued until 5:50 in the evening. Arnold’s speech was remarkable for the minute detail with which it cov ered practically every important phase of the great murder mystery, for its satire, for its flashes of humor and sarcasm, for its impassioned ap peal for the life and liberty of a ma.i who was described as the innocent victim of one of the most nefarious plots ever hatched against a man’s character. The lawyer in bitter words charged that if it had not been for Frank’s race he - never would have been on trial for his life. He charged that the State had been compelled to bring its witnesses from the dregs of human ity, from the jails and from the con vict camps, to perfect the terrible conspiracy against Frank. He asserted that the Solicitor had been forced to warp and stretch the probabilities to the breaking point in order to bring about a suppositious situation in which it would have been possible for Frank to have commit ted the crime and gone through the disposal of Mary Phagan’s body as described by Jim Conley. They built up a structure of testimony against Frank by their own witnesses, he charged, and then proceeded to de molish it because it would not fit in w'ith their theories or with the prob abilities of the case. Laughs at State's Chain of Circumstances. He held up to ridicule the theory of the State that the attack could have been premeditated on the part of Frank. He laughed at the chain of antecedent circumstances which the Solicitor and Attorney Hooper had endeavored to link together to show that Frank on Friday was contem plating the attack Saturday on the little factory girl. He did not believe that Frank on Friday at 3 o’clock asked Jim Con ley to come back the.next morning to work at the factory. But if he did, said Arnold, how was he to know that Mary Phagan was not going to come after her pay envelope Friday night at 5:30 or 6, along with the rest of the employees? He did not believe that Helen Fer guson asked Frank for the pay en velope of Mary Phagan and was re fused. Of course, the Ferguson girl testified on the stand that she did, but but other testimony developed that Schiff was the man who paid off and not Frank at all. And Magnolia Kennedy, in whose word Arnold was inclined to place as much credence as in that of the State’s witness, swore that she was standing by Helen Fer guson at the pay window and that the Ferguson girl got her envelope and never asked for the Phagan girl’s pay. But even granting that this was so, argued Arnold, what reason had Frank to believe, accepting the State’s theory that he knew all about Mary Phagan not coming for her pay Friday, that Mary would not come on Monday, the next work day, for her money, as w'as the general outcome in the pencil factory? Arnold presented it as his positive conviction that the man who wrote the notes found by the body of Mary Phagan was her murderer. He brand ed Jim Conley as a miserable, lying scoundrel w'ho was busily engaged in concocting stories, with the help of the detectives, with w'hich he might save his own black neck from the hangman’s noose. The crime, he said, was the work of a savage negro. The eloquent lawyer paid his com pliments to “Christopher Columbus” Barrett, the “discoverer” of the al leged blood spots and of the strands of hair on the lathing machine. He charged that Barrett was only after the reward money, and called to the attention of the jury that Chief of Detectives Lanford and his sleuths \yent over the same place on the fac tory floor Sunday where Barrett dis covered the spots on Monday morn ing. He further called their attention to the fact that four chips were taken up by the detectives in the place where the supposed blood spots were found and that on only one of them were any blood corpuscles found—and then only three or four, w’hen one drop of blood contains thousands of the corpuscles. He referred to the testimony and showed that the chips were covered with grime and dirt and that there was nothing to show that the few blood corpuscles had not been A SHAMPOO— Ana how much better you feel. Our process is different. Try It, Maxes you feel like new. “The Little White Shop Around the Corner“ IOc LESLIE’S PLACE, Alabama there months or years. The spots, inasmuch as they failed to respond to the blood test, he maintained, must have resulted from aniline dyes, exactly as the defense had contedned from the very’ first. C. B. Dalton, who was one of the spectators in the room, along with “Christopher Columbus” Barrett, heard himself described by the attor ney as a “common liar” and heard again his chaingang and ^ourt record. Says Detectives Coached Negro. Arnold then turned his attention to the negro Conley’s story, as told in his various affidavits and on the stand. He took it from the first and pointed out what ho deemed the inconsisten cies and the impossibilities. He pictured the detectives helping the negro in his story. He exhibited a chart and pointed ou^ the time dis crepancies in the State’s case from the viewpoint of the defense. He concluded with an appeal to the Jury not to be swayed by prejudice or by any slander that had been uttered against the prisoner. Attorney Hooper made a vigorous assault on Frank’s morals in the opening argument of the trial. He charged that Frank, respected among the people of influence of the city, might very easily carry on his acts of immorality in the factory without its becoming a matter of general knowl edge. He accused the young factory su perintendent of having Dalton as one of his associates in the gay parties that the State charges were held in Frank’s office and in which several women participated. Hooper said that his trio—Frank, Darley and Schiff—practically had the moral Uve-s of the factory girls in their hands. He charged that as a result the factory had been the scene of many grossly improper Incidents, and that Frahk had started an ac quaintance with the Phagan girl which later culminated in the tragedy of April 26. —He charged premeditation. He said that the pay of Mary Phagan delib erately was withheld from Helen Fer guson on Friday so that the Phagan girl would come for her envelope Saturday. He was convinced that Conley was told on Friday to come to the factory Saturday so tha/t he might watch against unwelcome interrup tions while the Phagan girl was on the second floor. Attorney Outlines Plot Against Girl. The State’s attorney outlined a horrible plot against the innocence of the pretty little factory girl, on whom he said Frank's lustful eyes had been for weeks. He stopped Just short of charging premeditated mur- der. “I do not have any idea,” he said, “that Frank had murder in his heart when he w r ent back to the metal room with the little girl on Saturday.” Hooper believed in the negro. He expressed his opinion that Conley finally had arrived at the truth and would stick there under the severest pressure. He showed how his story dove-tailed in w’ith the other circum stances of the case. “That girl w'as killed on the second floor of the factory,” he declared. “Either Frank did it or he sat su pinely in his office where he could not fail to have heard the scream and the sounds of the struggle, nor could he have failed to see the negro w'hen he sought to dispose of the body. The latter supposition is preposterous and we must return to the belief that Frank was the guilty man.” Hooper said that the incidents Con ley related as taking place in Frank’s office were the most natural things in the world. He declared that Conley could not have manufactured the con versation out of his own knowledge. Frank must have been there and ut tered the words that Conley put into his mouth in his affidavits to the po lice and his story on the stand. Hooper closed his address with an inquiry as to the whereabouts of W. H. Mlncey. who was expected to swear that Conley made a virtual confession to him. 17 New York Mystery Cleared When History of Trappist Monks’ Ward Is Traced. LACHINE, QUE., -Aug. 22.—After being kidnaped by gypsies and escap ing, then being taken up and cared for by Canadian' monks, Frederick Brosseau, of Potsdam, N. Y., has been found. Brosseau was kidnaped seven teen years ago when he was seven years old. After escaping he was given a home by Trappist monks near Oka. The monks reared him. The gypsies made several Ineffectual at tempts to get the boy away. Chief Clark, of Lachine, to-day ap plied to the provincial authorities to send men after certain gypsy leaders in the North and bring them here or to Montreal for trial. The Rev. Father Myron, of Pots dam, while visiting the monastery of the Trappist fathers at Oka, heard the strange story of the man, and, remembering the disappearance of Brosseau at Potsdam, questioned him. Brosseau’s parents went to Oka and identified their son by a birth mark. In the meantime news of the young man’s strange capture got abroad in the newspapers and many persons claimed him as their son. JURY LIST REVISED. COLUMBUS.—The Jury Commis sioners of Muscogee County have completed the work of revising the jury list and have added several hun dred names. There are now 1,500 names In the petit juror box and 345 in the grand jury box. Bring your Prescriptions to Elkin; ask your family physician. ; Branch Store: Grand Theater Bldg. Elkin’s 6 Big Combinations EUn DRUG CO. The Rexall Store Open All Night Same Goods; Same Prices; Same Service at Branch Store Bring your Prescriptions to Elkin; ask your family physician. Rubber Goods Specials BATH SPRAYS, full length, white or red rubber, faucet attachments, formerly sold for $1.26, this sale 89c Extra large BATH SPRAY, regular $1.50 value, this sale $1.23 HOT WATER BOTTLE, red rubber, formerly sold for $1.50, this sale $1.15 2-qt. RAPID FLOW FOUNTAIN SYRINGE, all at tachments, regular.$1.50 value, this sale ..98c Rexall American Beauty FOUNTAIN SYRINGE, red rubber, $2 value .-...$1.50 GLOVES, made of new. live rubber, thin and Just suited to household work. This special sale 89c Old style BULB SYRINGE, white rubber, none better, this sale -99c Buy a box of VIOLET DULCE (Sweet Violet) TALCUM POWDER and get a pretty Japanese fan FREE. Powder With every jar of VIOLET DULCE GREASELESS SKIN CREAM we will give FREE a can of Rexall Violet Talcum Cream Get LIGGETT’S RAZOR, extra concave, and receive FREE a German Hone. Razor worth $2 A good TOOTH BRUSH will be given FREE with each bottle of ELKIN’S BOROTHYMOL TOOTH WASH. The wash costs When you purchase one of our $1.50 Ebony Back HAIR BRUSHES, you FREE a vulcanized rubber comb. We sell the brush for A package of FREE envelopes goes with a pound of LORD BALTI MORE LINEN STATIONERY. The paper costs 25c 50c 97c 25c we'll give 74c 25c Xtra Special No*. 1 Bargain in TURKISH WASH CLOTHS. We are overstocked. While they last; 3 for 10c; 8 for 25c Xtra Special No. 2 Rexall FOUNTAIN PEN. Worth $1.50. Gold point. Guaran teed to give satisfac tion or money back. This sale 98c Xtra Special No. 3 Burham SAFETY RA ZOR complete outfit; 3 blades, shaving brush and stick in handsome box, all , for Give Your Hair a Chance! ’ W Don’t lie bald. Don’t let your hair fall out. You can *** Wr save it if you will. Get a bottle of REXALL HAIR TONIC. It Is guaranteed to give satisfaction. It gives life and luster to your hair. It gives vitality to the scalp, making the hair grow. It is worth its weight in gold to any man or woman who Is troubled | vitli falling hair. It puts an end to dandruff. It is l l genuine hair tonic. Get a bottle k\ 50C and $1 Follow the Crowds To Elkin’* Famous Soda Fount. Our fount 1* patronized by thouaandH dally. It has stood the test of years, and Is more popular than ever. Why? Be- $ cause we serve only the best of everything, and the service la I perfect. We sold more Coca-Cola last year and the year be fore than any soda fount in th« entire world. Come here for refreshing soft drinks. We sell fifty gallons of LACTONE t BUTTERMILK dally. Customers are getting fat on it. Why I not you? BIG SATURDAY SPECIAL. Our aperial for Haiurday is “CARAMEL SUNDAE”—and it Is delirious. Made of generous portion of ice cream, smothered with marshmallow and chopped nuta and topped with H hlg slice of ripe pineapple. Really worth 25c. 1 /\p but Saturday you may have It for J.V/L Free Perfume W'e have a few sample bottles of "Mary Garden" and ’’Tretlnl” perfumes which we are going to give FREE to our customers Saturday. The supply Is limited, so first come, first served. Well Known Toilet Articles At Cut Prices With every 26c purchase of goods ff r 1 P in our Toilet Goods department " Saturday and Sunday, we will give absolutely FREE choice of twelve EMERY BOARDS or six ORANGE STICKS. Hinds’ Honey and Almond Cream 39c Colgate’s Tooth Paste 20c Pebeco Tooth Paste - 38c Euthemol Tooth Paste 21c Sozodont, paste or powder 21c Lyon’s Tooth Powder 19o Cuticura Soap 19c Packer’s Tar Soap 18c Pears’ Scented Soap 18c Pears’ Unscented Soap : 12c Fiver’s Azurea Vegetal Water 85c Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Soap 18c Cashmere Bouquet Soap 24c Palm Olive Soap 3 for 25c Resinol Soap 19c Poslam Soap 19c Pompeian Massage Cream 43c and 63c Danderine 19c, 39c and 79c D. & R. Cold Cream 10c, 20c and 32c Squibb’s Talcum Powder 19c Pinaud’s Lilac Vegetal 67o Specials In “Patents/’ etc. PRPi 11 Every purchaser of 50c worth of ■ bCkL* "Patents” or Drugs in either of • our stores Saturday and Sunday will be given FREE a handsome SILVER SPOON (choice of sugar, orange or teaspoon). Sal Hepatica 19c and 48c Baby Brand Milk 2tc Eagle Brand Milk 17c Gude’s Peptomangan 93c Wampole’s Cod Liver Oil 78c Mentholatum 19c and 38c Dodson’s Liver Tone 39c Syrup of Figs 39c Plnkham’s Compound 88c Hostetter’s Bitters 88c 'aJdwell’s Syrup of Pepsin 42c and 83o Clover’s Mange Cure 45c Wine of Cardul .* 78c Castoria 28c Bromo Seltzer 19c and 37c Sloan’s Liniment 19c and 39c Bromo laxative Tablets 21c Carter’s Pills 18c Malted Milk 40c, 80c and $3.20 Simmons’ Liver Regulator (powder form) 20c Rexall Mucutone for Catarrh 50c and $1 Rexall Kidney Remedy .... 39c and 79c Rexall Beef, Iron and W r lne. 75c Miscellaneous Specials Nail Brushes, good quality, big value, 10c, 3 for 25c Special Fiber Nail Brushes, extra good value.. 19c $1 Bath Brushes, excellent bristles, detachable handles 79c Complexion Brushes, variety of sizes, good hair, 35c values 25c T) -i P I A — L X Ten Great Coupon Specials—None Sold Without Coupon COUPON No. 1 I LB. 20-MULE BORAX. 12c TEAM None sold coupon. without this COUPON No. 6 1 LB. CASTILE SOAP, 10c None sold without this coupon. COUPON No. 2 LB. EPSOM SALTS. 3c None sold coupon. without this COUPON No. 7 60c BOX STATIONERY. 21c None sold without this coupon. COUPON No. 3 BOX OF 12 HAND-MADE SEIDLITZ POWDERS. 15c None sold coupon. without this COUPON No. 8 25c BOX SOAP (3 cakes), 10c None sold without this coupon. COUPON No. 4 1 LB. TALCUM POWDER COUPON No. 5 50c SHAVING BRUSH, 10c None coupon. sold without this COUPON No. 9 l PT. BOTTLE PEROX IDE OF HYDROGEN, 20c sold without this COUPON No. 10 PT. BOTTLE WITCH HAZEL, 15c None sold without this coupon None sold without this coupon. Bring your Prescriptions to Elkin; ask your family physician. ° ml x | 3 j 0) o) L x I 5 * L i *<* I ■O zr y u I o’ I Bring your Prescriptions to Elkin; ask your family physician.