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^ ’ — r —
THE ATLANTA UEUm+lAJN AM) 1NEW».
SAN FRANCISCO 12-YEAR
FifiHT FOR WATER SUPPLY
HEARS! PAPERS
ELABORATE PLANS LAID TO MAKE
XMAS FUND-GIVING ATTRACTIVE
WASHINGTON, Dec. 8. — For
twelve years, just so long as the city
of San Francisco has sought to ac
quire Hetch-Hetchy Valley as a site
for a reservoir for its water supply,
just so long has William Randolph
Hearst fought with all the power of
h $ great papers to get this pure wa
ter supply for the hundreds of thou-
garnih of inhabitants of that city, ana
to his campaign more than to any
other one thing is due the victory just
won. \
In season and out of season the
Hearst papers, from Boston to At
lanta. from New York to San Fran
cisco, have urged editorially that Con
gress give the people of San Francis 'o
the right to convert the mosquito-
ridden, inaccessible vallej/ of Hetch-
Hetchy into a reservoir for the im
pounding of the pure mountain
streams, to safeguard the health not
0I1 f the citizens of the city, but of
the millions who pass through it an
nually on their way to other destina
tions.
The closing weeks of the campaign
were marked by two great achieve
ments carried out under the direct
personal orders and supervision of
Mr. Hearst, which struck tremen
dous blows in behalf of the project
and which illustrate better than any
thing ever done before in any coun
try of the world just what is meant
by newspaper enterprise.
Special Edition of Paper Aids.
These were the special Hetch-
Hetchy edition of The San Francisco
Examiner, published in Washington
last Tuesday, and the preparation of
a gr* at petition from the citizens of
San FYanciseo and the residents ot
the contiguous territory appealing to
Congress to grant the plea.
Few persons outside the newspaper
profession realize just what it cost in
money, energy and talent to prepare
end publish the special Hetch-Hetchy
edition of The Examiner, which pre
sented to the members of the Senate
In graphic form the facts in the argu
ment of San Francisco and the falsi
ties in the argument of the water
power interests which oppose the
grant.
When Mr. Hearst issued orders for
the preparation of the special edition,
he indicated that no expense should be
spared to make it the most impressive
publication that possibly could be
compiled.
Mr Edward L. Hamilton, veteran
of the San Francisco office, was
rushed East with a special staff of
aides, every one of whom was thor
oughly conversant with the situation.
Artists and men skilled In preparing
"copy” and making up newspapers
were hurried to Washington frorr.
New 7 York. The entire Washingt )n
bureau of the Hearst service, num
bering about 25 men, were placed at
Hamilton’s disposal. The work of
preparing the edition, including writ
ing the articles, gathering the inter
views, making sketches and cuts and
printing the edition was accomplished
in about three days.
On Tuesday morning, four days be
fore the date set for a vote on the bill,
every member Qf the Senate found on
his desk in his office a copy of this
special edition, on the first oage of
' iich appeared a sufficient reason for
its being, and a reproduction of a
notice issued by the company which
now supplies San Francisco with wa-
ter warning the people to conserve
every drop, as "the w^ater consump
tion now exceeds the dependable sup
ply available for distribution.”
Pleas by Noted Persons.
Accompanying this warning, on the
same page, were statements by Vice
President Marshall. Secretary of
State Bryan, Secretary' of the Inte
rior Lane and Secretary of Agricul
ture Houston, urging that San Fran-
isco’s appeal be not heard in vain
The remaining fifteen pages of the
•special edition were filled with simi
lar statements by noted engineers,
State and city officials of California,
members of Congress and other men
and women high in public life, all to
the same effect.
Mr. Hearst’s San Francisco Ex-
GASH GROCERY CO.
118-120 WHITEHALL ST.
No. 10
Snowdrift
aminer, which has been, of course, a
devoted advocate of the Hetch-Hetchy
reservoir site for many years, lent a
great stimulus to the fight for the
adoption of the Hetch-Hetchy bill in
the preparation of the petition above
referred to.
In repeated editorials The Exam
iner asked its readers to write per
sonally to members of the Senate,
urging upon them the imperative ne
cessity of a water supply for San
Francisco and its neighborhood, and
requiring them to vote for the Hetch-
Hetchy bill.
As a result of this appeal, thou
sands of letters were sent to Wash
ington. among them letters from the
most influential citizens and organi
zations In the State.
As a final argument to lay before
the Senate The Examiner had print
ed and circulated throughout San
Francisco and all the territory tribu
tary to the metropolis a petition to
the Senate of the United States call
ing for its favorable vote upon the
bill giving San Francisco the only
available water supply adequate to
Its present and future needs.
Signatures Pour in.
The petition was first circulated on
Saturday, November 22. Citizens
everywhere seized the opportunity to
sign it with enthusiasm. A minia
ture petition was printed each day in
The Examiner. Readers were asked
to sign this and return by mail.
Every mail following the first pub
lication 6f this petition brought hun
dreds of signatures.
Wednesday. November 26. was the
last day upon which the petition was
at the disposal of citizens. Although
the five days during which the peti
tion was in circulation included two
holidays. Sunday and Jupipero Serra.
Day. a state holiday, more than 15,000
signatures were affixed.
This petition, signed by the Gov
ernor of the State and the Mayor of
San Francisco, was brought to Wash
ington in charge of Mayor Rolph, of
San Francisco, and was laid before
the Senate.
The mass of signatures affixed to
the petition indicates how earnestly
the people of California desire this
water supply for San Francisco, for
which that city has been fighting for
twelve years.
Every class of citizen 'was repre
sented among the names on the peti
tion. Entire communities remote from
San Francisco, which rely upon the
metropolis for their welfare and de
velopment, signed the petition en
masse.
Civic Organizations in Plea.
Clubs, social and improvement or
ganizations were represented on the
petition in a body, through the names
of their presidents and secretaries.
The people of San Francisco and
the communities tributary to it real
ized in The Examiner petition an
opportunity to make a direct and per
sonal appeal to the Senate for the
water supply of which San Francisco
stands so greatly In need.
A great number of names were
signed to the petition in Oakland and
the cities across the bay from San
Francisco, thus refuting claims late
ly made by Senator Works, in the
name of the people of Oakland, that
that city was not fully protected by
Hetch-Hetchy bill.
Signatures of a great many mem
bers of the Sierra Club were found on
the petition as a protest against the
opposition of a section of the club to
the reservoir site in the Hetch-Hetchy
Valley. In addition to signing the
petition, many members of the Sierra
Club wrote letters to The Examiner
vigorously denouncing the theory that
the formation of a lake in the Valley
would mar its beauty and make it
less attractive to nature lovers.
Grand Lodge Head
To Be Given Banquet
Gate City Lodge, No. 2, Free and
Accepted Order of Masons, will have
the officers of the Grand Lodge of
Georgia as their honor guests at the
communication to be held Tuesday
evening.
Preparations have been made for
elaborate entertainment. A banquet
will follow the evening ceremonies.
Gate City Lodge numbers among its
members some of the highest Masons
of the State, and the functions men
tioned promise to be of much inter
est to members and guests.
BUSINESS NOTICE.
To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE
Tablets. Druggists refund money if it
fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S signa
ture is on each box. 25c.
WARM UNDERWEAR
UNION AND TWO-PIECE
The prices at which we are selling Under
wear during this reorganization sale should be
of interest to every man.
Our stock is composed of the greatest va
riety of garments in union and two-piece suits
—cotton, cotton and wool mixed and all wool.
Summer weight garments included.
It might be a pretty good thing to
begin the week with a little reminder
of the Empty Stocking Fund of The
Georgian and Sunday American, and
of what it means.
For a whole week now you have
heard every day about the ambitious
plans arranged to make it attractive
to give. You have heard of the tango
party that will be held at the Wine-
coff Hotel after the theater Monday
night. You have heard of the all-
star matinee Friday. You have heard
of the dolls to be dressed.
You have heard these things until
you are about to fall into the danger
of forgetting what it is all about.
What do you think of a word just
now of the spirit behind it all?
Suppose we talk to-day of little
Johnny Merritt, who never dreamed
of a tango party, and whose theatri
cal experience has been limited to a
wistful inspection of the bright-col
ored lithographs . that stand on the
outside of all moving picture shows,
and who thinks of Santa Claus only
to feel a little dull ache in his heart,
an ache that has a whole lot of envy
in it because he hears the other boys
and girls talk happily of the Christ
mas that will be here soon.
Dreads Day Others Welcome.
Johnny can’t conceive of Christmas
and happiness together. Christinas,
he thinks, will be a day like last Sun
day—a cold, wet, gray day. with no
fire inside the house, and no sun out
side, a day made miserable by a
lingering hunger for goodies to eat,
and by his child whimper for some
thing that he wants, without know
ing what it is. a ,, ,
A stocking with just the toe full of
candy and a single orangewould sat
isfy that hunger. A horn or a wood
en gun, or—oh, no, it could never be
—a cowboy suit, would quiet that
pitiful whimper.
And a whole pair of shoes and
warm stockings probably would have
the effect of brightening the whole
winter for him.
That’s a moral effect, you know,
because contentment makes a good
boy, where discontentment would
make even a 6-year-old person surly
and cross, and a fruitful field for the
germ of bitterness.
Johnny, ragged little fellow cant
arouse much cheerfulness by his
thoughts of Christmas But the
Christmas Editor is here to tell you
that is if you won’t tell Johnny—thai
the little boy is in for a great sur-.
prise.
Atlanta People Responding.
Atlanta people, giving heartily tc
the Empty Stocking Fund, are go
ing to see to it that Santa Claus
becomes a wealthy person this year,
wealthy enough to lay by a stock of
Don't Forget Tango
Sunner to Aid Santa
ii
Tang
■'Upper
75c Garments
$1.00
1.25
1.50
2.00
2.50
3.00
3.50
55c
85c
$1.05
. 1.35
. 1.65
. 2.15
. 2.55
. 2.95
cloud-staXford CO.
61 PEACHTREE STREET
REDUCING ALBUMEN
BRIGHT'S DISEASE
To prove that Fulton's Renal Com
pound reduces the escape of aloumen
fn many cases of Bright’s disease we
will mail on request formula for quan
titative test that will show t ie P^r-
centage of albumen from day to day.
As the albumen reduces, patients com
monly improve, recoveries hav ng been
reported in thousands of cases.
Patients with Bright’s disease are
largely on Digitalis. Nitro Glycerine.
Basham’s Mixture, etc., admitted to be
hopeless in chronic cases, t nder Ful
ton’s Renal Compound patients often
4iegin to feel better before the albu
men shows much decline, thus patients
often know 7 the case is responding be
fore the tests show it. Important—
Keep the liver active.
If you have Bright’s disease do you
not owe it to yourself aid family to try
Fulton's Renal Compound before giving
up? It can be had at p;<Jmondson Drug
Company. .. . u t
Ask for pamphlet or write John J.
Fulton Company, San Francisco.—Advt.
Remember the
\ Monday night.
Dancing starts at 10:110 in the ■
' ballroom of the Winecoff, and ar- ;
j rangements have been perfected to
make the event as pleasing as it )
i will be novel.
. Admission will be 50 cents, ind -
; the proceeds in entirety will go to ;
\ the Empty Stocking Fund.
All roads from the theaters .will J
c lead to the Winecoff Monday
night. i
goodies and toys and useful presents
that will be enough not only for
Johnny Merritt, but for the hundreds
work-stooped women and helpless
men of Atlanta, who are in the same
plight that Johnny is, and who are
thinking of Christmas with the same
thoughts as Johnny’s
Atlanta people are listening to the
appeal of the Christmas Editor, that
person is prourl to inform you. And,
as this story has told you once before,
a number of arrangements have been
made so that it will be attractive to
give. There is the tango party, now,
for instance.
It will be a glorious affair. It will
be epoch-m<iking, because, if all the
plans work out, Atlanta will see
something of an after-theater party
that ought to become an institution.
There is too little of bright, enjoy -
able, novel evening’s entertainment
in this great city, outside the show-
houses.
And the next attractive feature—
the all-star matinee Friday. The
money that you pay to hear and see
Robert Edeson, and Wilton Lackaye,
and Max Figman, and Rose Goghlan,
and of the vaudeville star, Yvette,
from the Forsyth, and others—oh,
there will be others, without doubt—
the money that you give over to come
io this really great show will go to
the Empty Stocking Fund and will be
devoted to purchasing the dream that
little Johnny is afraid won’t come
true.
Don’t Forget the Dolls.
Surely' you can make your contri
bution through this channel, and be
glad of it, no matter if you be the
crustiest man alive.
Isn’t It being made attractive for
you to give?
And if you be a woman, with a
woman’s heart for the dear, dainty
task of sewing pretty things, it must
be attractive, indeed, that you have
an opportunity to dress the Christ
mas dolls. There are still a number
of these dolls at The Georgian and
Sunday American office on Alabama
street that you can dress, if you want
to, for the poor children’s Christmas
presents. A great opportunity to
help thwart the Empty Stocking
specter.
But never mind the attractive part
of this thing. There is your duty.
Everybody has a duty at Christmas
time, to do something, probably only
a very small something, to make the
world a little brighter, and happier,
and more beautiful.
Here are the latest contributors to
the Empty Stocking Fund:
Anonymous 15.00
Inman Park Girls' Club 5.00
Geraldine and Violet Word. .. 1.00
George F. Hanes 1.00
A Friend .. 1.00
Captain Ben Schlomberg ...... 1.00
Carnegie's Fortune
Has ‘Dwindled' to
Only $15,000,000
BOSTON, Dec. 8.—Andrew Carne
gie has given away all his fortune
with the exception of $15,000,000, ac
cording to a Wall street correspond
ent for a Boston news bureau.
The story is that Carnegie had
planned to save $25,000,000, but found
that as s»ome of the trustees of his
various funds differed with him on
some of Ills ideas, he was forced to
take $10,000,000 from his private for
tune in order to have his own way
about certain bequests.
He has provided handsomely for
Mrs. Carnegie and Miss^Carnegle.
I I
CISffiETS" FI*
HERE FOR DIG
Great Incohonee Carl Foster, of
Bridgeport, Conn., and visiting chiefs
of the Improved Order of Red Men
now in conclave here were shown At
lanta Monday morning pending the
completion of preparations for ihe
great celebration Monday night.
This is the first time the chief of
the national body has visited this city.
He expressed himself as surprised
and highly pleased with Atlanta.
"I have heard a great deal of this
city,” said Mr. Foster. "Wherever I
travel and my duties for the Re i
Men carry me to every part of the
United States—I am told of the won
ders that Atlanta has produced. It
is all true.”
Other Officials He
On the tour with the great incoho
nee were a number of officials of til 1
State organizations, including George
A. Treadwell, of New Orleans, past
great sachem of Louisiana, now great
chief of records of that State; Charles
F. Stroberg, of Macon, great sachem
of Georgia; J. r Bush, of Macon,
great guard of the forest; J. R. Mill
er, of Marietta, great senior saga
more; M. J. Daniel, of Griffin, grea:
chief of records of Georgia, and oth
ers.
An outburst of applause was ac
corded Judge R. T. Daniel of Griffin,
past great incohonee of the nation 1
body, when he appeared at headquar
ters.
The present incohonee in appear
ance resembles more closely a Ger
man student than the chief executive
of an organization numbering 500,10(1
men. Mr. Foster is large of stature,
with bushy head crowned by a cap,
and he wears spectacles.
His work as head of the Red Men
has met with marked success. De
spite the xactions of this great organ
ization, however, he conducts also a
large business in his Connecticut
home.
When asked to say something of
the future of the order, the great in
cohonee "bubbled over."
Lodge Growing Rapidly.
“We are gaining strength every
day,” he declared. “At present the
organization never was in better con
dition, in my opinion. Reports to me
from all over the nation show this,
and more—they show a most wonder
ful future. .
“Tiie order of the Red Men. you
must know, is not an Indian institu
tion. Its basis is patriotism. The
organization is in no way iyteresti i
in politics, and takes no active stand
at any time in political affairs, except
for file good of our country.”
The motor oar tour of the city was
scheduled to last from 10 until 2
o’clock, and at 6 o’clock Monday even
ing k was planned to form a double
line of Red Men. each with a red
light fuse, from the n^w wigwam >n
Central avenue to the Hotel Ansley,
through which triumphal gauntlet the
guest of honor and the high chieftains
of the order will drive in motor cars
to the wigwam.
There a reception is to be held, at
which Governor Slaton will Introduce
the great- Incohonee. At 8 o'clock a
great council of the Degree of Poca
hontas, the ladles’ auxiliary of the
order, will be assembled and instituted
by the incohonee and officers installed
and at 9 o’clock the initiatory rites
Will be performed by Chippewa Tribe
No. 50 over a large number of pale
faces from ail over the State.
Mr. Foster will leave Atlanta at
midnight, continuing his tour of in
spection to other points in the South.
Pankhurst, Freed
By Hunger Strike,
Taken to Hospital
Special Cable to Tne Atlanta Georqian.
LONDON, Dec. 8.—Mrs. Emmeline
Pankhurst, leader of the militant suf
fragettes. who was released from jail
in Exeter because of illness, brought
on by a hunger and thirst strike, was
brought to Ixrndon to-day.
She was taken in an ambulance to
the headquarters of the Woman’s So
cial and Political Union In Klngaway.
These quarters have been tempo
rarily fixed up as a hospital.
The famous militant was haggard
and so weak she could not stand. She
had suffered a general breakdown.
Now ‘Dixie Limited'
Passes Through City
The "Dixie Limited.” new, through
train from the Northwest to Florida,
which has been put on by the C. and
E. I. Railroad in conjunction with the
W. and A. and Central of Georgia
through Georgia passed through At
lanta on its initial run shortly after 9
o'clock Monday morning. The trip
from Chicago to Atlanta was made In
24 hours.
On board the train were W. H.
Richardson, general passenger agent
of the C. and E. I., Chicago; L. B.
Washington, district passenger agent
Frisco System, Jacksonville, Fla.; M.
H. Smith, Jr., assistant general pas
senger agent L. and N. Railroad,
Louisville, Ky.; W. I. Light foot, as
sistant general passenger agent N.,
C. and St. L. Railway, Nashville,
Term.; F. J Robinson, assistant gen
eral passenger agent Central of Geor
gia Railway, Savannah, and J. A. Da
vis, chief service inspector Pullman
Company, Chicago.
Candidates Indorsed
Before Office Exists
DALTON. Dec. 8.—An effort to secure
a United States Commissioners’ Court
is being made here, with good prospects
for success.
When the movement was first
launched s, number of friends of W. M.
Jones indorsed him for commissioner
Later a petition for the appointment of
J. J. Bates as commissioner wa« circu
lated and received a number of signers.
9,000 Ask Jobs of
Mayor-Elect of N. Y.
NEW YORK, Dec. 8.—It is reported
that 9,000 applications for positions
under the administration of Mayor-
elect John Purroy Mitchel have been
filed at the City Hall.
The annual memorial day of the
Elks was observed by Atlanta Lodge
No. 7 at the Grand Theater Sunday
afternoon with an impressive cere
mony. More than 2,000 people were
in the. theater. 500 of whom were
members of the local lodge, who
marched to the meeting
The meaning of this organization
of fellowship and brotherly love woi
wonderfully impressed on the gather
ing when the roll of 55 brothers who
have died during the last twelve
months was read.
A vacant chair, covered with
wreaths of white roses, sat on the
stage in the midst of the officers of
the lodge. While John Anderson reid
“The Vacant Chair” the names of the
departed brothers were flashed upon a
screen. As the last name was flashed
the audience rose and sang an ode to
the tune of “Home, Sweet Home,”
which ended with the words:
“May charity, justice and brotherly
love
At last lead us all to the Grand Lodge
Above!”
Tears flowed down many a cheek
that has been known only to smile
for many a day.
Blood
Is the fluid life of man, and for
tho maintenance of good health It
should be sufficient in quantity
and not be allowed to deteriorate
In quality.
Bad Blood
Means raplfl decline In health and the
appearance of scrofula, eraema, bolls,
sores, rheumatism and a long train
of foul and painful diseases.
Good Blood
Is produced by taking the proper
medicine, the one originated and es
pecially prepared to act upon the
blood and through that upon all the
organs and tissues of the system.
That HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA
does this most successfully Is shown
by its record of more than one-third
of a century in relieving aJl forms of
blood diseases. Prepared only by
C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass.
TIES
IN XMAS BOXES
25c 35c 50c
Reduction on Everything in.
the House
IXL HAT SHOP
4 W. Mitchell St.
Sluggish Bowels Cause Gases,
•Indigestion and Food
Fermentation.
Get a 10-cent box now.
That awful soreness, belching of acid
and foul gasps; that pain in the pit of
the stomach, the heartburn, nervous
ness, nausea, bloating after eating, diz
ziness and sick headache, means a dis
ordered stomach, which can not be regu
lated until you remove the cause. It
isn't your stomach’s fault Your stom
ach is as good as any.
Try Gascarets; they immediately
cleanse the stomach, remove the sour,
undigested and fermenting food and
foul gases; take the excess bile from
the liver and carry off the constipated
waste matter and poison from the bow
els. Then your stomach trouble Is end
ed. A OaScaret to-night will straighten
you out by morning a 10-cent box from
any drug store will keen your stomach
sweet, liver and bowels regular for
months. Lon’i forget the children
their little insides need a good, gentle
cleansing, too.—Advt.
IF YOU ORDER NOW YOU CAN GET
$15 and $18 Suits Made for | .50
Special No. 1 in 25th Anniversary Sale.
Biggest bargains ever offered in mid-season
$20 and $22 Suits for J.50
Choice of twenty-five new designs.
Anniversary Special No. 2
STOUT
GOOD
TAILORS
FOR
25 YEARS
11
14
$25 and $28 Suits for $4 0.50
Fifty of the most popular weaves.
Anniversary Special No. 3
18
Finely Tailored Overcoats for $20 and $25
Rich, warm fabrics—Chinchillas, Kerseys, Meltons—the very newest effects
Morton C. Stout & Co.
is stores 122 Peachtree SI. good tailors
15 CITIES NEXT TO PIEIJMONT HOTEL FOR 25 YEARS
Little Children Almost Devoured by Monsters
FOUR LITTLE ONES, MEMBERS
OF TWO FAMILIES. ARE
SAVED FROM INEVITA
BLE DEATH BY
“QUAKER."
Two more remarkable cases were
brought to the attention of the Health
Teacher when here, which serve to
prove that worms are the cause of
over 80 per cent of all ailments of
children, whlcn has been the conten
tion since the Health Teacher has been
here. Mrs. A. L. McClendon, living at
175 Kelly street, has three children,
one six years old, one ten years old
and one thirteen. All were in a weak,
puny, run-down condition, restless at
night, nervous and fretful, and were
listless, not having ambition to even
play. They would eat very little food,
and were the source of much anxiety
to their fond mother Mrs. McClendon
procured a treatment of Quaker Ex
tract from Coursey & Munn’s drug
store, and. after giving it to her babes
for about two weeks, says they are all
as red-cheeked and rosy, and full of
real life, as any children she ever saw'.
They eat almost anything they can
get and are gaining strength right
j along. One of them, the oldest, ex
pelled a large number of stomach
worms soon after beginning the use of
Quaker Extract. The other case is
that of the dear little five-year-old
daughter of Mr E. Robinson, living at
483 Bass street, who is a motorman In
this city. His little one. who had been
complaining with pains in the stomach,
restlessness and languid feeling, ex
pelled a great stomach worm, over 7
Inches in length. With this proof that
their child was the victim of these
parasites, the parents began to give
the little girl worm syrups, candies,
powders and various parasite expellers
(so called), but there were no more
worms of any kind passed. Still the
child became worse right along. The
father got a bottle of Quaker Extract
from Coursey & Munn’s drug store,
and after taking but four doses his
baby passed over 24 large stomach
worms, averaging about four inches in
length, and all of which were alive.
This had been the entire cause of her
very alarming condition, and Quaker,
by expelling the cause, had created a
complete cure for all her symptoms.
Now. if your children are pale, puny,
restless at night and nervous during
the day. picking at their nose, gritting
their teeth, listless, and having pains
in the slomaoh. with a poor appetite,
don’t you think you owe it to them
and yourself to2 get rid of all the
trouble? And now that school days
have begun, they will need even more
energy, more, ambition and courage,
which can only be displayed by a real
live, healthy, normal child. Get some
of the wonderful Quaker Extract,
which will put the little ones of your
family Tn a normal state of health,
and rid their systems of all worms or
germs that may be infesting them.
The price is six for $5.00, three for
$2.50 or $1.00 a bottle.
Call to-day at Coursey & Munn's
Drug Store. 29 Marietta street, for
these wonderful Quawer Remedies.
We prepay express charges on all
orders of $3.00 or over.