Newspaper Page Text
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TEST FINDS
FEWER ILL
IN FLYLESS
Uses Whip on Widow
As She Leaves Movie
Wife and Her Sister Trail Husband
and Companion and All
Four Arrested.
Experiment in ‘Little Italy’ Points
the Way to Saving Babies’
Lives in Crowded Sections of
Cities Where Filth Abounds.
Only One-third as Many Cases of
Infantile Illness in Screened as
in Unscreened Areas, Which
Otherwise Are Just Alike.
NEW YORK, Dec. 6.—The results
rf the relationship between house
the relationship between house-
fi.s and disease ever made in a
Northern city have just been tabu-
luted by the bureau of public health
mid hygiene of the Association for
Improving the Condition of the Poor.
Last summer the bureau, under the
direction of its superintendent, Dr.
Donald B. Armstrong began an m-
\ stigation having for its object tii3
determination of the responsibility j
«,f the house fly for diseases, especial- j
1> those of infants. For the pur- |
poses of the investigation two citv i
blocks in the Little Italy of the Bronx [
wore s lected, in one of which all the
approved methods of preventive san
ction were employed, while in tne
oiTu i the forces of nature—including
the human variety—were allowed to
take their course.
The results, while admittedly not
conclusive, are sufficiently suggestive.
In character to determine the bureau
10 pursue its investigations another
season. It was shown, for instance,
that in the protected area the num
ber of cases of infantile summer
complaint was only one-third til*
number in the unprotected area.
Experiment in Little Italy.
The unprotected block was in the
e-nne« general neighborhood^ and the
character of the population and tf
normal conditions in the two blocks
was the same. The total population
was practically the same, as was the
infant population.
A census was made according *o
age groups, a careful record kept of
the amount of sickness in the two
blocks at the beginning of the in
spection period, and a thorough m^l-
ical inspection given to the two area®
weekly for a series of fifteen weeks,
during which a record was kept of all
deaths and cases of disease, with the
facts relating to them.
At the expense of the association
screens were placed in every window
and door of the block—about 1.700
openings in all. The people were in
structed concerning the desirability
of keeping the screens in place mikI
of protecting them from injury. With
the aid of the local Roy Scout organ
ization large traps were construct-
ii and placed in the countyards and
stables in or adjacent to the district.
1,106,017 Bacteria Per Fly.
At the same time numbers of living
flb-s were caught in the houses, and
with the co-operation of the Health
Department laboratories were exam
ined to make bacterial counts. Some
of these flies were caught in houses
of the protected area and others in
unprotected houses. The average
number of bacteria found on flies—
or in the cultures made from the sur
face washings of the insects—taken
in the “protected” houses was 13,980,
of which 4,489 were intestinal organ
isms.
The average count of the flies from
‘ irty” houses, i. e.. in the unprotecr-
« ! area, was 1.106.017 per flv. of which
292.117 were intestinal. Of course,
flics in a filthy section have a better
or worse—opportunity for bacterial
contamination than those in a clean
area.
'"leanliness was enforced in the
protected area in relation to the
ftreets and courtyards as well as the
ini^rior of the tenements; .and par-
1: ular attention was paid to the sta-
bb s as constituting the chief breed
ing places of the flies.
PITTSBURG, Dec. 6.—While horse
back riding this morning Mrs. •Ger
trude Miller, a prominent young w om
an of the North Side, espied her hus
band, Charles Miller, walking through
West Park with Mrs. Irene Caflish, a
young widow.
Dismounting, Mrs. Miller gave her
horse to a policeman and began trail
ing the couple. While close behind
them she was joined by her sister,
Mrs. Clara Magnani.
Mr. Miller and his companion then
left the park and entered a moving
picture show. Mrs. Miller and her
sister patiently waited outside, and
when her husband and Mrs. Caflisn
appeared proceeded to lash the lattei
with her riding crop.
Mrs. Caflish attempted to fight back,
but without success, and Mr. Miller,
who attempted to interfere, was pre
vented by Mrs. Magnani.
All four were arrested, and after a
hearing were discharged by Magis
trate Goettman, who said that he be
lieved sufficient punishment had been
meted out.
Supposed ‘Dead’ Boy
On Father’s Farm
EATON, COLO., Dec. 6.—Mourne.1 i
as dead for ten years. Arthur Me-
Broom, son of T. A. McBroom, was
found working on his father's farm
as a beet topper. He was afraid to
make himself known, as he and
his father had quarreled just before
he ran away. However, like the prod
igal son, he received a warm welcome.
McBroom and his father had differ
ences of opinion which caused him to
run away when he was 16. He sent
one letter home from St. Louis say-
TTE.VRST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA. OA., SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7.
‘Poor Little Rich Girl' Happy Now CONGREGATION
RamonaBordenHas HomeatLast CHEERS PUSTOE!
She Pours Out Her Soul in Song ECU KISSING
Miss Ramona Borden, daughter of multi-millionaire milkman,
whose earl\ life was saddened by the separation of her parents. the Pulpit Missouri MiniS— j
and who disappeared from a saniiarium early 1 his year, has found te| . Te || s How He Q ame t „ Sa _
a nome and happiness among Inends m California.
lute Girl Suing for $5,000.
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PLAN EXCITES
Earth Is Swallowing DIPl^l CH CP PC
Tree Century Old rluMLlJ Lubd
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How to Cure Rheumatism
Prominent Doctor’s Best Prescrip
tion Easily Mixes at Home.
This simple and harmless formula has
worked wonders for all who have tried
it. quickly relieving chronic and acute
rheumatism and backache. “From your
druggist get one ounce of Toris com
pound (in original sealed package) and
ore ounce of syrup of Sarsaparilla com
pound. Take these two ingredients
home and put them in a half pint of
good whiskey. Shake the bottle and
lake a tablespoonful before each meal
and at bed time.” Good results coine
i*|ter the first few doses. If your drug
gist does not have Toris compound in
stock he will get it for you In a few
1 ours from his wholesale house. Don’t
h p influenced to take a patent medicine
instead of this. Insist on having the
genuine Toris compound in the original,
ore-ounce, sealed, yellow package. This
was published liepo last winter and hun
dreds of the worst cases were cured by
h in a short time. Published by tire
‘•lobe Pharmaceutical Laboratories of
‘ hicago.
ing that he intended to go on to Chi
cago. The train on which he said
he intended to depart was wrecked
and his relatives thought he was
killed.
‘Use Better English,’
Order of Professor
OXFORD, OHIO, Dec. 6.—Ray
mond Mollyneaux Hughes president
of Miami University, is determined
the students shall use better English
In an address to the members of the
faculty, he said recently:
•There has been much criticism
throughout the country on the char
acter of English used by college grad
uates, and our experience in Miami
has entirely justified that criticism.
T trust that emphasis on the ability
to use at least passable English will
be greater in the future than ever
before, and to this end I strongly
urge the importance of declining to
accept poorly written and ungram
matical papers in any of the depart*
ments of the university.”
Man Dies Poor as
Riches Draw Near
%
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<Y
BROOKFIELD. MO.. Dec. 6. The
Rev. W. C. Atwood. f»f*. pastor of the
| First Presbyterian Church here, eon-
I f eased from the pulpit to a s La riding-
J room-only congregation that he had
| kissed Harriet L. Myers, 20. who is
suing him for $5.OOF and was air-
solved by his congregation.
I The tears came first. During the
j pastor’s opening prayer several ^oung
| gfrls of the choir and many women
in the congregation wept.
The Rev. Mr. Atwood is married
and has two sons, one 22, the other
15.
The story of the kissing as con
fessed by the minister differed some
what in details and altogether in
motive from the story as first made
public 1>\ M s Myers' Father in his
paper, The Linn County Budget.
G.rl’s Version.
Miss Myers' version printed by
her father, is that Atwood, in her
fathers’ office, asked her if she would
not like to go to St. Louis, and said;
“If you would go with me you
wouldn’t need to worry." With this
“he grabbed her. kissed her before
she real.zed it. and hastened out of
the room."
Atwood’s version, as told to his
congregation, \va*. “Harriet was sil
ting in her chirr at the desk. She
held out her arm and said: What do
you think of that arm?’ In reply l
said: I don't know. What do you
mean?’ She replied laughingly: ‘Don't
you see how smooth it is?' I told her
1 could not see distinctly without my
glasses.
Displays Her Arm.
“She held out her right arm and
rubbed it with her left hand, and
saich ‘You can feel it if you can’t see
it.’ At her suggestion I rubbed my
hand over her arm. She asked me
for news, and in a jesting manner I
said: ‘Oh, yes, I forgot! I have some
important news to tell you. I am
going to St. Louis next week. You
had better come along.
“By way of pleasantry we bantered
words back and forth. She had just
ansverred the phone and was leaning
over the desk and writing something,
and just as I arose to go she said
something elite in answer to what I
had said, and impulsively, without a
moment’s thought. I stepped up
quickly from behind on tiptoes and
kissed the side of her head above the
ear and said: ‘Now 1 am even with
you,’ and as I passed to the door she
laughed and said: ‘Well, 1 think you
are.’ ”
Pastor Resigns.
His resignation was tendered No
vember 9. The reasons were not
made known, and only a few of the
members knew what they were. The
following Sunday the congregation
voted 197 to 5 not to accept the res
ignation. After Miss Myers filed her
suit her father printed the “story” of
the kissing episode under the head
ing. “Story of a Long-Kept Secret.”
The first outbreak of applause waa
when Atwood said: “That girl is
doing exactly what her father is
coaching her to do.”
Pointing his finger at Myers, who
sat in his customary pew, the fifth
from the pulpit, Atwood cried:
“You haven’t a spark of manhood
in your breast. You have published
] your little story and brought yourself
into the limelight for a brief hour
end your daughter with you.”
Turning to his congregation he
i cried:
} “I have told my story from my
heart. Whose story are you going to
believe?’’
There were cries of “Yours, yours,”
! and prolonged clapping of hands and
stamping of feet.
Ashantee Chief Sam of the Guinea
Coast Says He’s Coming With
Colonization Plan.
OUT H It IK, Old. A., 1)p.. 6. Ne-
groes of Oklahoma. Kansas and Mis
souri are excited over the prospect
of a visit from Chief Alfred c. Sam,
of the Akim tribe, Ashantee, on the
Guinea coast of Africa, who sends
word that he carries an invitation
from all the tribal chiefs of Ashantee
for the negroes of America to be
come colonists in that country.
The chief is expected in Boley,
Okla., a^irictly negro town, in a few
day'*.
According to .1 Boley newspaper,
<M acres of land have been set aside
by each of the ten tribes of Ashantee
on which American negroes are asked
to build modern tow ns.
Free Land Offered.
The land is promised without price
and with no taxes to pay—as much
as a man can cultivate—-with free
transportation to Africa thrown in to
each American negro who pays $25
for a share in the Akim Trading
Company, Ltd.
W. H. Lewis appears to b£ Chief
Sam’s chief sponsor in this State.
Signing himself "Professor W. H.
Ia vis,” lie has a long article in his
newspaper about the plans of “our
own dear Chief Sam.” He says that
Dr. P. .J Dorman and Professor J. P.
I iddell, listed as contributors to The
African Pioneer, asked the Akim
Trading Company about the chances
‘or American negroes in Africa, and
Chief Sam and his fellow chiefs de
cided to permit colonization to share
holders in the trading company,
which, according to Editor Lewis, is
organized under the laws of South
Dukota.
Tells of Chartered Boat.
Mr. Lewis says that in order to car
ry the prod note of Ashantee to this
country and to take American colo
nists back to the Guinea coast Chief
Sam “has secured a ship 318 feet
long by 40 feet wide. 2,400 tons ca
pacity. which will make regular trips
between the Gold Coast and America,
beginning December 13, 1913.”
Among the riches of Ashantee to
which Lewis calls attention are “ma
hogany trees ten feet In diameter
and over 150 feet high,” needing only
;• sawmill two crops of c0ton a
year; cocoa beans selling at f$13 a
hundred pounds, and “gold in paying
quantities.”
Quicksands Are Believed to Account
for Disappearance of Elm Near
Railroad Depot.
ITHACA, Dec. 6.—A huge elm tree
near the Lehigh Valley statioQ at
West Dauby is slowly sinking. For
several weeks the tree has been grad- I
ually disappearing, until at prepent,
its lower branches are in the ground.
The disappearance of the tree is at
tracting considerable attention. It is
the belief of persons living in the
vicinity that the elm is located over a
bed of quicksand. It has stood there ,
for m**re than a century, and It is onjy
recently that it has started to sink.
Many Suitors Woo
Girl Who Can Sew
NORTH YAKIMA, WASH., Dec. 6.
The ability to bake the best loaf of
bread and the best cake, to make the
best shirtwaist and the best plain
dress has brought to Miss Helen
Townsend more than the prizes she
has won at the Washington Sta:e
Fair.
She is getting hundreds of pro
posals by letter, and all of them de
scribe in detail the worldly wealth
and physical attributes of the bach
elors who make them.
ARE BLOW AT
American Girl Weds
By Customs of India
MADISON, WIS.. Dec. 6.—Cus
toms of the Far East were invoked
at the marriage in Balguam, India. >f
Miss Eva Thellen to Wendell Kum-
lien, of Appleton, Wig., according to
announcements received by friends of
the couple.
y Miss Thellen traveled more thin
I three-fourths of the distance around
I the world to meet her fiance at Buni-
I bay, Whence they traveled on the back
of an elepliani overland to Balguam.
Treatment Is Advocated by Pro
fessor D. J. Lingle of the
University of Chicago.
CHICAGO, Dec. 6.—Professor Da
vid J. Lingle. departmental examiner
in physiology at the University of
Chicago, has struck a blow at the
“high cost of living.”
He advocates “pickling’’ fresh eggs
when they are cheap and eating the
pickled eggs months later when the
hens have gone on a strike.
“The pickled eggs are not quite so
palatable,” declared Professor Lingle
“but they retain all the nourishing
properties.
"Pickled eggs In nearly every other
particular are as satisfactory as
freshly laid. They will fry, scramble
and hard boil.
“The only way in which they are
not easily prepared is soft boiled.
“The question of reducing the coat
Of living is not one of any special
article of diet being replaced, but
rather an adjustable and carefully
balanced diet.
“There, are numerous foods which
may be made use of. Nuts, a prod
uct of California, are a staple of diet.
1 understand, not a luxury. Peanuts
supply more protein than any other
article of food except dried beans. If
more peanuts and dried beans were
Used by fruitarians their diet would
be enriched and the cost of rtving
decreased.”
Good Cheer Aids
Digestion of Food
SALEM. GREG., Dec. 6.—Half
owner of a gold mine worth probably
$1,000,000, and so poor that he barely
knew how he was going to exist one
week hence, James McGuire. 65 years
old. dropped dead here as he was
starting to a hospital. He was an
ex-convict.
McGuire killed his partner In a
mining claim. He was sentenced to
serve ten years.
While McGuire was in prison and
after his release his mining claim
was operated by persons who had,
purchased an interest in it. It now is
worth $1,000,000.
Child Found in Boston Hotel After 1
Strange Disappearance Now
Enjoys California Sunshine.
sage to girls in a similar position who
plan to run away:
“If I could say anything to other
girls because of my experience I
would advise them not to leave home.
I could never be so unhappy without
riches as I was without a home.”
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 6. -Life
nothing but song and sunshine
Boy Sobs for Week;
His Mother Freed
KENOSHA, WIS., Dee. 6.—Here is
a real “sob" story- the story of how a
three-year-old boy sobbed his mother
out of jail and reunited a family.
Little .Joe Kovicli was the hero, and
hr established a record for sobbing
when he kept it up for a solid week.
Five months ago Joe’s mother eloped
from Argo with a man and took the lit
tle boy.
The father finally found Joe and his
mother in Kenosha, and the woman and
the man were arrested and sentenced
to serve six months in the county jail.
Then Joe began sobbing.
Finally the hoy was taken into the
court to show Judge C. E. Randall what
real grief was.
“Mother.” he said. “I will reduce your
line to $50 and costs with this under
standing that you return to your hus
band."
She went back to her husband.
L
Dyspeptics Can Make the Rest of
the Family Happy by Using
a Laxative Tonic.
The temper of the family and the
good cheer around the table depend,
so much on the good digestion of each
individual present that the experi
ences of some former dyspeptics who
overcame their trouble should be of
interest to those now suffering in this
way.
The best advice one can give—but
it is advice that is seldom heeded—is
to eat slowly and masticate each
mouthful carefully. However, if slow
eating and careful mastication fail the
next aid is one close to nature, Dr.
('aidwell’s Syrup T’epsin. This rem
edy is an excellent digestant. and in
addition to helping in the digestion of
the food, acts gently on the liver and
bowels, ridding them of the accumu
lation of waste that snould long ago
have been pasesd off. It is safe, re
liable. pleasant-tasting and results
are guaranteed.
Major S Martin, of Joplin, Mo., now
77. thinks Dr. Caldell's Syrup Pepsin
has helped him to a longer and hap
pier life. Up has not feTt so good in
rears as he has since taking this ex
cellent medicine, and in spite of his
77 years he <*av« he feels like a boy.
It is the Weal'remedy for indiges
tion. no matter how severe; constipa
tion. no matter how chronic, bilious
ness. headaches, gas on the stomach,
drowsiness after eating and similar
annoyances.
• You can obtain Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
Pepsin at any drug store for 60 cents
pH
e '<4
• -» '-t'c ; 7-V
MAJ. S. MARTIN
or $1, the latter size being bought by
heads of families already familiar
with its merits. Results are always
guaranteed or money will be refunded.
When you use Syrup Pepsin you
will see the fallacy of chewing mints
and tablets or of taking cathartics,
salts, pills and similar drastic medi
cines. Unlike these. Syrup Pepsin
does not lose Its good effect, and by
automatically training the stomach
and bowel muscles to do their work,
soon restores these organs to normal.
Families wishing to irr a free sam- ;
pie bottle can obtain it postpaid by
addressing I>r. W. B. Caldwell, 419
Washington Ht., Monticello, Ill. A
postal card with your name and ad- ,
dress on it will do.
for
Governor’s Wife to
Buy New Leg for Dog
GRAND ISLAND. NEBR.. Dec. 1 —
Through the thoughtfulness of Mrs.
Hiram Johnnaon, wife of the Govern
or of California. Honk, a railroad dog
of Grand Island, is to have a new
wooden leg.
Mrs. Johnson passed through
Grand Island. As she looked through
the Pullman window Honk limped up
with a conductor. Mrs. Johnson,
calling the conductor. 6aid: “Please
get me the address of the owner of
that dog. When 1 get back home
I’ll send him a wooden leg.”
Stop Foot Torture
Corns. Callouses. Bun
ions. Frost-bites, Aching
and Sweaty Feet. A
spoonful of CALOCIDE ini
a warm footbath gives in- j
stant relief. If used fre- ,
auently brings permanent
cure. Get a 25c box at any 1
drug store. j
In Prison 21 Years,
Wants to Stay There
JEFFERSON CITY, MO., Dec. 8 —
Felix Begby met for the first time
in 22 years* bis brother. Simon Beg
by. who has been in tiie prison 21
years.
Both are
vict did n ><
Begby h>
parole and
10 sixties. The con-
gnize his- brother.
. i». e been offered t
ach time declined, say-
KODAKERS.
Special Enlargement Offer
5x7 Art Mount ... 25c
8x10 Art Mount . . - 30c
By Mail Sc Extra
Select 'our favorite negatives and bsv
enlargements made - handsomely mounted
-a desirable Xmas gift.
FONT’S Two Slores—AUania, G*.
g be desired to end bis life in the
prison.
Gets Property After
Slaying His Parents
QUINCY, ILL., Dec. 6. -Judge Al
bert Akers, of the Circuit Court, de
cided to-d<| f<>r the first time in the
history of Illino’s that a defendant
convicted of murdering his parents or
relatives to secure real estate does
< 1,>t forfeit the property.
The decision was on a cenuirter :<•
, partition suit b\ at tore . s for Rn
n«* , bm5fTi. who *fn •< death foi
'' • |*a 1 ni s.
| Rcnnona Borden, the “Door little rich ;
j girl," whose wisli for love and a home i
| has been gratified.
I Miss Borden is the daughter of Gail
1 Borden, the multi-millionaire »f con-
] riensed milk fame, whose sensational
| disappearance in New York last April
| was the talk of the country for
I weeks.
“The poor little rich girl.Y as her
j friends used to call her, after an ab-
j sence of ten days, was found in the
| Hotel Yendome in Boston, in com
pany with Mrs. William J. \\ hite. wife
of the millionaire chewing gum man
ufacturer. and Mrs. Marian A. Backe, ,
of Brooklyn.
The women explained at the time
that they had felt sorry for Ramona
because of the dull life she had led.
and, interesting themselves in her
welfare, had planned to make her life
a happier one.
Her father and mother had sepa
rated some months before the girl’s
disappearance, and she was.placed in
a private sanitarium in Compton
Lake. N. J. She disappeared from
there in an automobile with two
women, who were later found to be
Mrs. White and Mi - Backe. Private
detectives, engaged by the father,
traced them to the Boston hotel,
where Mrs. White turned the daugh
ter over to her father.
Some weeks later she left New York
j quietly for Los Angeles and remained
there for some time with her mother.
A month or two ago she went to live
with friends, and it was on a visit Ut
i Los Angeles that she announced her
self as the “happiest girl in the
world.”
“What 1 wanted most of all.” she
1 old her friend, "wa a home. Now l
have one and I am happy. I am hav
ing a real good time, spending most
• »f iny time out in the open.”
Then for follow nt mes
Raw! Raw!
After Shaving?
Use ZEM0!
That Rough, Drawn. Stinging
Feeling Goes Like Magic.
Leaves Face Cool and
Comfortable.
Buy a
Bottle To-day and Prove It
Rub a. little ZKM<» on your lace
when you are through shaving. Won
der of wonders! Your face will feel
as flesh as a June morning! You’ll
justVlove to shave. ZEMo does to
MULES GET DAILY BATHS.
I TREVERTON. FA.. Dec. 6. -The
Reading Coal and Iron Company to-day
opened a new concrete stable at the
North Franklin colliery. The structure
contains a bathtub 30 feet long and 15
feet wide, in which nudes will be given
I daily baths to make them stronger and
I give them longer leases of life.
Painl Without Oil
Remarkable Discovery That Cuts
Down the Cost of Paint Sev
enty-Five Per Cent.
A Free Trial Package is Mailed to Ev
eryone Who Writes.
A. L. Rice, a prominent manufacturer
of Adams, N. Y., lias discovered a pro
cess of making a new kind of paint
! without the use of oil. He calls it
Powdrpaint. Jt comes In the form of a
: dry powder and all that is required is
cold water to make a paint weather
. proof, fireproof and as durable as oil
1 paint. It adheres to any surface, wood,
stone or brick, spreads and looks like
oil paint and costs about one-fourtli as
much.
Write to Mr. A. L. Rice, Manuf’r., 1050
North St.. Adams. N. Y., and he will
send you a free trial package also color
card and full information showing you
how you can save a good many dollars.
Write to-day.
iNHiiHiioniifl
MB
r'//
14
Ns
4
ove
ft
Jl
iv
l i \
(A
FREE
"V'",
••Rev.'. Raw: No Longer Raw! ZEMO
Made My Face Feel Fine.”
the skin what no talcum powder, lo
tion or witch hazel can do. The
roughness, rawness and ‘‘drawn’’
feeling vanish instantly. ZEMO
makes cuts shaved-ofT pimples and
sore places l\e; 1 almost magically.
Shaving loses its terrors for wiry
beards and tender skins.
ZKM< ■ is a revelation for any sores,
ouis. inflamed, irritated skins. It* is
absolutely guaranteed to stop Itch
ing instantly. For eczema, tetter,
ra.-di. pimples, sail, rheum, it simply
can rot be equaled.
Zi’.\i‘» is a clean, antiseptic .solu
tion. not 1 greas\ paste or ointment.
- sell ZEM< >,
a scaled bottle, or sent direct on
receipt l f uric, to E. W. Rose Medi
cine (Vmpar.v, St. Louis. Mo.
Sold ard guaranteed in Atlanta by
i'fan’< Edmondson S- Brother Four
soy & Munn. Druggists. 39 Marietta
Str< •( ; K. I*. ('one Dreg Elkins
Drugy Go., Gunter & Watkins Drug
o A
0.1
COLORED PEOPLE'S HAIR
Ml K 11114 I'ATAMn: JT'^T MIT
Shows all nt*w Htyh.-s in Coinml Women's Hair
W hiv the largest iinr>ort»rs and mannOn”urei-
of Colored People's Flair. i»vinjr flip oldest jni.J
ni'.st rellanle Ann in thin line. We ffu&renn-e jut
feet satisfaction or money refunded. We positively
guarantee (hat our hair Is superior to anv on the
market, ami our prices are lower than those quoted
anywhere else.
TliUs hair will stand I'liniMn* and wsshln*
• hi !■- as your own. We si P hair hy ai,e pouu
hair nets a:u1 all styles of hair, also itn cxee
■ loiiailv fln« lim- of toilet article* and straightening
4mile* at wholesale prices,
rteml 2-tv/t stamp for free catalog. A gen
ortpd rrmvhfre
H Urn AN • A IIA'R COMPANY
Drat 121. 2'i Diianr St' t. N w York Cltv.
BLEND
""“•i-urtr>*r\pimErmmCR» l 'l* u l |1
SERWLN“W«) j|!jU
twsMaki
Zn 4he
SPOTLIGHT
yruBLic
APPROVAL
A little better than the best
and a lot better than most is
*&em4 66
A whiskey that has satisfied the best judges
of liquor for nearly fifty years.
Case of Four Fall Qaarts $5.00. Express Prepaid
For idle by *11 leading mail order bouses and cafes. Never
sold in bulk. Sold only in glass direct from distillery
THE STRAUSS, PRITZ CO., Distillers, Cincinnati