Newspaper Page Text
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HKARST'S «t:\dav ajimiicaa, a i IjA.m a, <<a
SL.NUAY, XSUVJ^iMBmt
j:nd.
‘American Venus’ Wedded to Art
*!• • *!•••!• v • v *!• • *’,* v •
Ray Beveridge Gets Her Divorce
4* ••v* *!*•*!• *!* • *f* *i* • t 4* • *1* *{*• v
Actress’ Husband Excess Baggage
Rav Beveridge, who says she is “wedded to art,’’ has just
won a suit in London for the annulment of her marriage.
Colonel Goethals Reports That if
^ore Occur They Will Neces
sarily Push Date Beyond Jan-1
uary 1, 1915, Scheduled Time,'
WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 No del
nlte date for the official opening: of
the Panama Canal is set in the an
nual report of Colonel George Go-
fcthals, chairman and chl**f engineer of
the Canal Commission, which has Just
been submitted to Secretary of War
Garrison. Neither is there any pre
diction as to when ship# may pass
from ocean to ocean.
The first day of the canal’s actual
operation still depends upon the
treacherous slides of Culebra Cut and
how fast the dredges can work to keep
the channels open.
*‘It has been the general belief that
the effect of the water in the cut
would tend to retard slid:*, and ex
perience below’ the Gatun Ivocks fully
Justified this belief,” said Colonel
Goethals. "On the other hand, thi
geologist is of the opinion that tha
water may to some extent develop
new slides. Again, much ado was
made in 1909 over the seamy character
of rock on the Isthmus, through which
water flows quite rapidly, in conse
quence of which the question was
raised that the lake might leak out
through seams and crevices.
"The Sooner the Better.”
"If these things are liable to occur
the sooner the belter, if the official
Opening Of the 'anal is to occur Jan
uary J. 1915; for if water were not
admitted this fall, but were deferred
until May 1, 1914, the full height could
not he reached until October. 1914.
leaving little time for the determine- j
lion of these questions These con
siderations led to the conclusion that
the water should be turned into the
cut at the earliest date practicable
for getting the dredges to work rn
the slides.
"The present plans, therefore, nre
based upon the blowing up of Gam
boa Dike on October 10, its removal
by dredges Immediately thereafter. |
the transfer of two suction dredges
and a ladder dredge to the Cucaraclta
slide, the smaller dipper dredges io
work on the other slides until the full
width of the channel is attained, and
the passage of vessels through the
carol as soon a channels of full
deptb and of sail, "lent width have
been secured.
Cost $343 505,222 Thus Far.
The financial operations of the ca
nal are told in big figures. The dis
bursing officer has paid out $20,524 -
705 on pay rolls alone. Congress'so
far has appropriated $349,505,222 J »r
< anal construction, of which $10,67G,-
950 went for fortifications.
In great detail Colonel Goethals
tells of the engineers’ work during
the last year, and with particular sat
isfaction it is reported that the mech
anism of the vast locks and dams
was tested with success. The gates at
Gatun w ere-sw ung in one minute am!
51 seconds for each leaf The heavy
iron chains which are depended upon
to prevent an unruly vessel from
crashing into th** locks were raised
and lowered in ample time to meet
any emergency. The locomotives
which will tow the ships through
the locks were tried out, and the elec
tric installation which will invoice
the use of a current of 44.000 volts
Mission Providing Means for Con
verts—Efforts Made to Keep
Names From Print.
Guaranteed to Stop
Itching at Once
Eczema, Rash, Tetter, Dandruff,
Disappear by Using Remark
able ZEMO.
Buy a 25c Bottle To-day and Prove It
That itching that drives you nearly
wild, that keeps you awake in agony
all night long, that scalp itching, will
vanish instantly by using the new
remedy ZEMO, It is guarantt d.
ZEMO will surprise you as it has
thousands of others by its results in
Persistent Wooer Captures Stage Beauty, but
Fails to Holds Her Long.
Special Cable to The American.
hONDON. Nov. 29. Because she in
sists on bring "wedded to her art" and
not to a man, Ray Beveridge, known
as the "American Venus.” a sister of
Kuhne Beveridge, the sculptress, has
obtained an annulment of her marriage
to Madison Seliger, a wealthy merchant
of Madison, Wis.
The young woman met Seliger when
she was appearing on the stage in New
courted her
my art.
she i
I do
^*rk. When he
him;
"I am wedded to
want a husband
But Seliger was persistent. Mis
Beveridge came to Lonuon. He fol
lowed her here and convinced her that
she could be "wedded to ner art” and
likewise to him. * So they were mar
ried on April 20 1912, ut the Savoy
Hotel.
Seliger’s argument did not hold good
however, he says. His wife* devoted all
of her time to appearing in public, and,
finally, it is said, she told Seliger st>.
did not care to have a husband. Then
she brought suit for an annulment, but
the Chancery Court threw the case
out.
Another action was brought in the
Divorce Court, which granted the ap-
The young woman is a grand
daughter of former Governor Bever
idge, of Illinois.
NEW YORK, Nov. 29.—Six former
members of the Roman Catholic
priesthood, two of whom were also
members of monastic orders, are being
cared for now by Christ’s Mission and
Reformed Catholic, an independent
evangelical mission for the conversion
of Roman Catholic clergymen here.
The mission is providing means for
the necessary training required for
entry of the six into the Protestant
ministry and mission field.
The expenses of one of the monks
John Hadj, who was a member of the
Maronite’s monastery, at Mount Deb-
anon, Syria, were paid by the mission
to bring him here last July, at the
request of Miss Caroline Holmes, head
of the Jebail Mission at Beirut. He
Is being trained for church and mis
sion work in Syria, where he will be
sent after he becomes a naturalized
citizen of this country.
Another of the priests is said to be
from a parish in the Middle West.
Three others came here direct from
Italy, one from a monastery there. He
is Giovanni Ongaro, who i9 studying
and doing mission work among the
Italians here.
"We make It a rule here not to an
nounce the names or history of the
work of the Catholic priests who
come to us,” said the Rev. Dr. W.
Russell Collins, an Episcopalian cler
gyman and secretary of the mission,
of which Dr. Manuel Ferrando is the
head.
"While we carry on work here for
laymen, our chief effort is directed
toward the aid of Catholic clergymen
who wish to Join the Protestant min
istry. But we have no connection, the
converts being free to choose for
themselves the church they prefer.”
Must Repeat Wedding
Date cr Go to Jail
MILWAUKEE, Nov. 29.—"June 14,
1887.” Philip Lebroski will have to
repeat ten times a day for sixty days
in order to keep out of the House of
Correction, by sentence pronounced
upon him by District Court Judge
Eisner.
Lebroski, who Is a well-to-do real
estate owner, was arrested when a
patrolman found him shaking his fis
and swearing at his wife, perched on
the highest gable on their residence.
During the trial Lebroski old the
court he was trying to forget he was
married.
The court wild no man had a right
to forget such a date, and then or
dered the man to recite the date of
the wedding ten times daily or he
would have to go to jail.
Never Rode in Train,
Street Car or Auto
-WABASH,~TNt).7l5ov. Wabaih
County has at least one resilient who
has never ridden on a railroad train,
street car or automobile, and whose
fastest rate of travel is limited to
the speed of his horse.
Tills man Is Jonathan Beal, who
has lived In New Holland for sixty
years.
Mr. Beal travels little and his jour
neys during the last threescore
years have been confined almost
wholly to trips to Wabash, the coun
ty seat, eleven miles from his homo.
In making the trip he always uses his
horse and has refused many invita
tions to ride in a machine.
Dog Is First in Will
Of Wealthy Owner
Beloved Pet Without Pedigree Be
queathed to Master’s Friend,
With Details as to Care.
LA CROSSE, WIS., Nov. 29.—A little
dog with no pedigree, but known as tt •
best friend of his own^r, the late John
Hanson, of Hamilton, is mentioned as
the principal bequest in Hanson’s will,
filed here for probate
Hanson left considerable property, in
cluding fine farms and several mort
gages. but before disposing of anything
else he bequeathed the dog to his friend,
Lars FJedstad, with much detail as to
the way he should be treated. And tie
dog is all that FJedstad gets of the
estate, which Is distributed among nu
merous relatives In Wisconsin and Nor
way.
IIS CAR Fit
Mean' Man Kills
Flowers With Salt
CHICAGO, Nov. 29.—The meanest of
policemen travels a beat in South Chi
cago. But he may not travel long, for
Dr. Julius Gottlieb, nature lover, is after
his scalp and so is Captain Collins.
Dr. Gottlieb is the South Chicago
ambulance surgeon, who transformed a
tin-can alley into a garden.
The alley was adjacent to the police
station.
When cold weather arrived Dr. Gott
lieb transplanted all his plants. The
more beautiful ones he placed in pots
and with them decorated the rooms of
the police station.
Last, week he noticed that the plants
were dying He discovered that some
body h$d put salt in every plant Jar.
Commercial Cooks in
College Serve 550
MADISON, WIS., Nov. 29.—With
550 men and women being f* d by the
university kitchen, with tables lined
along the hallways of Barnard, La-
thro-p and Chad'borne, and the univer
sity carpenters busy constructing
more tables to accommodate a long
waiting list in the hands of the stew
ard, co-operative cooking starts out
this winter with colors flying.
Never before has the university
handled so -iany students; never be
fore ha9 it been possible for men
students at the university to obtain
an abundance of suitnble food, well
preitered, at cost price.
"3 a. m. Not a Wink of Sleep Yet. If I
Only Had ZEMO for that Terrible
Itching.”
fiery eczema, sores rash, tetter,
blotches, inflamed or irritated skin,
pimples, rawness after shaving, all
a
Inching scalp. It cures dandruff com
pletely, since dandruff is nothing but
eczema of the scalp.
ZEMO is wonderfully refreshing to
»he skin. It is a clean, antiseptic *>o-
iution. not a taste, cream or ointment.
The first application gives blessed re
lief. ZEMO has been imitated, but
positively never equalled.
"It is impossible for me to do jut-
tice in recommending ZEMO. be. a us*
words can not express its wonderful
achievements.” A. Stierlin, Supt.
Electrotype Dept . Sanders Engraving
Co., St. I^ouis. Mo.
Your druggist will sell you a 25c
sealed bottle of ZEMO, and will guar
antee it, or it will be sent direct o
receipt of price by E. \V. Rose Medi-
i ine Co., St. Louis. '*o.
Sold and guaranteed in Atlanta by
Frank Edmondson & Bro., Oourse\ «v
Munn, Druggists. 29 Marietta street:
E. H. Cone Drug Company, Elkin s
Drug Company. Guntt r & Watkins
Drug Company.—Advl.
Burglar Caught; He
Provides for Sister
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 29 The
luxurious home of William Bastiuu at
No. 1177 Stanyan street has been
deeded to Josephine Bastain, 17 years
old, by her brother. It is worth $12,-
000.
"Josephine can live in the house if
she wants to,” Rastian said to O’Con
nor. "She cap sell it or rent it. any
thing to insure her comfort. 1 want
her to know she is taken care of when
I go behind the bars. That is all the
emort 1 can ask.”
Bastian is a modern Raffles. When
the owner of one i»f the homes he had
looted offered to help him in every
way possible to be a real man the
strange burglar showed tears in his
eyes.
Captain of Detectives Mooney indi
cated the first figure of $100,000 will
not fully cover Bastian's stealings.
No Church Games or
Dice for Cigars Now
Pasadena, cal., Nov. 29 card
playing for prizes, church raffles, dice
shaking for cigars, and all forms of
gambling, must cease when the new
drastic gambling ordinance goes into
effect.
According to the terms of the ordi
nance. there must be no card playing
for prizes, and any form of a wager
or game of chance, no matter what
the prizes are, is a violation of the
ordinance.
Real Love Lasting;
Infatuation Is Not
CINCINNATI. Nov. 29.—The differ
ence between infatuation and real K v *
was told the girls who attended the
municipal supper at Music Hall pre
ceding the weekly municipal dance.
"I am going to advise every girl
^ ho imagines herself to be in love
first -to diagnose her condition as a
physician might do,” said Mrs
Twitchell. "An infatuation is of :
duration, while real love is lasting. ’
'Buried Treasure'
Is Just Three Cents
OLYMPIA, WASH., Nov. 29.—>Tohn
McSorley, an aged bachelor, who lived
alone in a little cabin, died recently.
Although he left about $400 In cash
In a bank and some scattered proper
ty, he »had always been considered a
miser.
Mellton Giles, police judge, hired
two men at $3 a day to dig around
the shack.
Tucked carefully away near the
head of the bed they came upon a
□package neatly folded. With bated
breath they opened it.
Inside they found—three copper
cents.
Tne administrator has abandoned
the treasure search.
Conservationists to
Make First Report
WASHINGTON. Nov. 29.—Fol
the first time since the historic confer
ence of Governors at the White House,
at which the conservation movement
started five years ago. a national re
port Is to be made, showing just what
conservation has accomplished in the
different States. A National Conserva
tion C-earing House will assemble at
the New Willard Hotel on Monday, the
day before the big Conservation Con
gress opens.
This clearing house will be made up
i f Conservation Commissioners from uli
the States. The name of the organi
zation is "The National Association of
Conservation Commissioners " The
commissioners will discuss what has
been done in their States since the
White House conference.
Bottle Floats 1,100
Miles in South Seas
Disguised as a Man,
She Fails as Footpad
SUNBURY, PA., Nov. 29.—While
Harold K. Jones was walking along a
dark street, returning from a visit to
bis sweetheart, he was accosted by a
stranger, who asked him for a match.
Jones said "Sure," dropped his
head and was getting It when the
person said, "Hands up." Jones looked
up and into the barrel of a small re
volver.
Life a flash Jones' foot and
fist flew out and the highwayman
was on the ground.
The footpad was then revealed as a
woman, She begged off, saying that
her husband had deserted her.
Spanking for Bride
Promised by Mother
BILLINGS, MONT., Nov. 29 —Out
witting his brother. Hays, Henry
Bryan, a recent arrival in the city
from St. Louis, eloped with Miss Vida
Emmerick, who arrived here reo^ytly
from that city.
The girl, who is 16. was de
nied a marriage license here on the
orders of her mother,
Bryan then secured an automobile,
and motored to the first town west of
Billings, where they boarded a train
for the West. The girl’s mother as
serts t'.iat when she returns that she
will give her a first-class spanking
for not obeying her.
Girl Works as Boy
To Enjoy Freedom
NEW BETHLEHEM, PA.. Nbv. 29 -
Miss Elizabeth Stratton. 18. and pretty,
for whom the police throughout Western
Pennsylvania had been searching, and
who was found here in mate garb, push
ing a wheelbarrow in a brick plant was
taken to her home in Falls Creek, Clear
field County, in her brother's automo
bile.
Miss Stratton left home after donning
her brother’s clothing and cutting her
hair, and got work here. Later she was
recognized.
"I wanted to have a boy’s freedom for
awhile," Miss Stratton said. "My hands
are blistered, but I was game and en
joyed It.”
Walter Hughes, Pupil of Class of,
1913 at Boston Technology
School, Cooks Own Meals.
BOSTON, Nov. 29.—Walter Scott
Hughes, Institute of Technology,
class of 1913—extended—is some
parasangs in advance of the unknown
donor of the $1,000,000 check, as a
man of mystery, according to fel
low-students at Tech.
For they say Hughes Is:
“The pride of Tech.”
A grind.
A dreamer.
A hater of the conventions as re
gards dress.
A millionaire, yet most democratic.
And last, but not least, a leader
in the army trying to solve the high
cost of living.
Hughes, who is a resident of Mil-
I ton, is the son of the late William
| Hastings Hughes, for years a wealthy
importer of wines. He is 26, was
graduated from Milton Academy, and
later spent three years at Williams
College.
On the roof of the Walker Build
ing at Tech, a reporter found Hughes
trying to extract a high-class sugar
from a carbon monoxide or sopie oth
er solution. Nearly six feet tall,
gaunt of frame, his upper lip hid
den by a drooping moustache,
Hughes looks older than the average
Tech man.
Tie Was Askew.
Hughes' tie was askew as he
worked. His soft collar was open
nt the throat, and the ancient shoes
that covered his feet w-ere almost
separated from the heels.
Although wealthy in his own name
and heir to an estate estimated at a
j million, Hughes is always striving to
lower the cost of living. Daily, in
stead of helping to pay the expense
of the New York, New Haven and
Hartford. Hughes hikes to his home
in Milton, "it’s good exercl.se.” he
said, "and it is saving. And I am
some saver.”
The Tech boys say*that some time
ago, when he decided to economize, I
Hughes visited a five and ten-cent
stole. He bought a .supply of tins,
cups and cooking utensils, deter
mined. while in Boston, to cook his
own meals.
Saves Five Cents.
Disdaining a wrapper over them he
tied them together on a string, sling
ing them over his shoulder, walked
to his Marlboro street room, thereby
saving, as he afterwards said, five
cents.
"I’m not much of a fellow for mix
ing up,” he said. '"I don’t belong to
the clubs, and about the only fellows
I kndw here are those who work
next to me and my old roommate."
Hughes cares little for social af-
r- I don’t bunny hug or tiirU-
trot or tango, either,” he saldJ "I’m
not opposed to them, although it
makes i difference who is dlmclng
them and why. It’s no wojf.se for
some to dance them than it! is for
others to waltz. As for myfelf. I’d
rather enjoy a good sleep or ;a long
walk than attend a social.”
On the subject of marriage flughes
has his own views. "I suppse I’ll
get married some day or oth*r,” he
said, "but I have not picked ©ut the
young woman yet.”
According to Hughes, his opinion of
marriage coincides with Robert Louis
Stevenson’s that "marrige is like life
in this—that it la a field of battle
and not a bed of roses.”
Turn the Baby's
Tears to Laughter
A Gentle Baby LaxativeWill
Quickly Relieve the Usual
Cause of the Trouble. *
It is often difficult to tell just
what is the matter with a crying,
peevish baby or child too young to
express its feelings in words, but
as a general rule tpe mother will
constipation, which has brought
on a headache or nervousness. The
little one has no pain, but feels
"out of sorts.”
The first thing to try is a family
remedy containing good but mild
laxative properties, and many
mothers will say that their choice
would be Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pep
sin. Thousands of mothers keep it
in the house for such emergencies,
among whom may be mentioned
Mrs. John Kirch, Jr.. 1527 Abstract
Ave.. Pittsburg. Pa. She has been
giving it successfully to little Wal
ter. whose picture we present at
three months, when he weighed
14 1-2 pounds. He is a healthy,
laughing youngster to-day and Mrs.
Kirch gladly gives Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin credit. It saves many
an illness and many a large doctor
bill, for by administering it prompt
ly when the first symptoms of ill
ness are noticed it prevents a se
rious ailment.
It is so pleasant-tasting that no
child will refuse it, and as it does
not gripe, the child is glad to take
it again. A bottle can be obtained
of any druggist for fifty cents or
one dollar, the latter being the size
T *
\ * ^
Y • > • ^ M m
.... ^
WALTER J. KIRCH
bought by families already famil
iar with its merits. Results are al
ways guaranteed or money will be
refunded.
Syrup Pepsin is for all the family
from infancy to old age, and be
cause of its mildness families
should prefer it over all other rem
edies. Tt is absolutely safe and re
liable. You will never again give
cathartics, pills, salts or such harsh
physics, for they are usually un
necessary, and In the case of chil
dren, women and elderly people are
a great shock to the system, and
hence should be avoided.
Families wishing to try a free
sample bottle can obtain it post
paid by addressing Dr. W. B. Cald
well* 419 Washington street, Mon-
ticello. Ill. A postal card with your
name and address on it will do.
Hunters Uncover
Arrowhead Cache
MUSKOGEE. OKLA.. Nov. 29 —Had
there been any loo.«e rocks lying under a
tree where Jim and Bart Stanley had
treed four squirrels, one of the most
interest;?’}? "finds” of Indian relics ever
made in Oklahoma would not have oc
curred.
One of the brothers had fo kick pieces
off the edge of a limestone outcropping
and uncovered the cache of an ancient
Indian arrowmaker, from which more
than 1,700 beautiful flint arrow points
have been removed
Girl Weds Rival of
Suicide Who Shot Her
MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 29.—As a
sequel to being shot by a rejected
suitor, who committed suicide. Miss
Hattie Weier. of Corcoran, was mar
ried to Rudolph Babler, the man who
aroused the jealousy of the frenzied
suitor, Remie de Rosiers.
Watch Your Pimples
Go Away
Then Feel the Ecstasy of Delight
When Your Complexion Is
Made Perfect By Stuart’s
Calcium Wafers.
Don’t worry about your pimples Ftop
that heartache and regret. Just make
up vour mind that you are going to use
Stuart’s Calcium Wafers and make pim
ples vanish
Round Trip Ticket To
BIRMINGHAM
At Our Expense
WE WANT YOU TO SEE FAIRFIELD
(Formerly Corey)—the great model Industrial City—the “Gary of
the South”—the heart of the big payroll belt of the Birmingham Dis
trict, where the IT. S. Steel Corporation and other Companies have
expended millic; s in the construction of furnaces, steel mills, wire
and rod mills, bi-product plants, etc., and where they will expend
many millions more in finishing mills and other mammoth plants em
ploying thousands of skilled workmen whose homes are now and will
continue to be at FAIRFIELD.
We want you to see the place where more houses are being
built now than in any similar spot in the South—the place where peo
ple are willing to go on a waiting list for homes which cannot at pre
ent be built fast enough for them.
We want you to see FAIRFIELD, the place where an investment
as small as S500 or as large as $10,000 will bring larger returns than
any other real estate in the South, not even excepting the City of Bir
mingham itself.
We are so sure you will buy a lot when you see FAIRFIELD we
make the following proposition: If you buy a lot from our published
price list, we agree to pay your railroad fare from your home any
where in Alabama, Mississippi or Georgia to Birmingham and re
turn—this amount to be credited as part of first payment on the lot
you buy from us. Accept our offer—come to Birmingham — see
FAIRFIELD—go home with the satisfaction of knowing you have
done well—exceedingly well—for yourself.
* * *'■ : v ' 4
' ' - •> " - V, - ' \ , •*„.
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 29—After
: drifting 1,100 miles through the South
Seas, u bottle containing a menu card
of ttie liner Sonoma, thrown overboard
! from the steamer near Honolulu in
. April. 1907, has been picked up at Arorai
Island, in the Gilbert group.
The bottle was sent to Sydney from
.the Gilberts and presented by the
steamship agents to Captain Trask of
the Sonoma
Girl Married and Is
Rushed to Hospital
ST JOSEPH. Nov. 29—John E.
Frost, a lawyer of Plattsburg. Mo.,
married here Miss Georgia M Smilej
of St. Joseph, a few minutes before
his bride was operated on for appen- \
dicitis.
The couple had been engaged for [
several months, but the date for the
ceremony had not been set. When it •
was discovered the bride would have ;
to undergo a surgical operation, Frost
hurried to St. Joseph and insisted that
the ceremony be performed before she !
went to the hospital.
YEAR IN JAIL FOR TWO EGGS.
HUNTINGTON, W VA , Nov. 29 -
For theft of two eggs. Charles H. j
Thumel was sentenced in Criminal j
Court here to serve a year in the pen- ■
itenti&rv. It was his second convic- I
tion on a charge of petit larceny, and J
this, according to State statutes.*
j amounts to a felony.
*1 Don't Look Like I Did Sineo I Used
Stuart’s Calcium Wafora,**
The pores of the akin are little
mouths Each has a sort of valve that
spens into tiny canals connecting with
the blood. These mouth-like pores be
come closed. When these canals fill
up, the valve refucea to work and pim
ples, blotches, rash, tetter, liver spots,
etc., appear
Stuart’6 Calcium Wafers keep the
pores open and the canals then carry off
the waste matter the blood empties Into
them.
Don’t use cosmetics. They will not
nide pimples long, and then they clog
the skin You ought to know that the
skin breathes in a!r almost like the
lungs The pore* tnrow off Impurities
every minute of the day To plaster the
•kin with paste, etc., is to actually pre
vent nature doing her work
Stuart’s Calcium Wafers will In a very
•hort time cleanse the blood, open the
pores and remove ai blemishes so that
your skin will become of a peach and
cream kind so much desired.
Stuart’s Calcium Wafers can be car
ried in purse or pocket. They are very
pleasant to the taste and may be pur
chased anywhere at 50 cents a box.
Look at your pimples and unsightly
• kin in the right way as a disease of th«
blood and pores and use Smart's Cal
cium Wafers to give you th* complexion
you want
MAIL THIS OOUPOS 1
Jemison Rea! Estate
& Insurance Company
Birmingham, Ala.
I Interested tn Fairfield s»d
want to know more about tt Mail
me copy of Jemison Magazine and
other literature oa Fairfield.
Name .....
Address
Mercfcttuia of Alabama feerlag Fairflekl, Aug. 29,1013
JEMISON REAL ESTATE
& INSURANCE COMPANY
Ground Floor First National Bank Building, Birmingham, Ala.