Newspaper Page Text
Modern Army Must Labor as Feverishl y to Stick
in One Place on the Western Battle Front as
It Did to Advance 100 Miles.
By WOODS HUTCHINSON, M. D. /
A modern army in the fleld is a
complete, perfectly organized, self
contained bachelor community. Save
for the fact that all its members are
vowed to temporary celibacy, the
whole length of the western front is
like one continuous industrial village,
or model suburb, with all the mills
running at full blast dav and night,
With all its hatefulness and hard
ships, trench warfare, instead of be
ing & round of dull and dreary out
post duty, with monotonous killing of
time in comfortless camps, is one con
stant, busy, enterprising push and
struggle xl!nlt the enemy with all
the methods and resources of modern
science—as active, as bustling, as re
sourceful and far more interesting and
exciting than even succeasful indus
trial business or professional life in
peaceful times at home.
There are as many different trades
and occupations running full blast in
the war zone as there are in an urban
community at home, and all of them
plied by soldiers.
Pipes Are “Wild Game.”
The only property which Tommy or
Alnhonse seems to be in the least
afrald of losing in camp are dogs. war
‘slics and pipes, which are regarded
as “wild game,” like umbrellas and
watermelons at home,
“Pinkers” are leglon, both in num
wers and kinds, for tlie wearing out
and breaking down of every kind of
plant and equipment In war is from
lve to ten times as rapid as that in\
peace. |
The life of a magazine rifle, for in
stance, in actual service is sald to nv-I
erage about two to three months; that
of a motor on war duty about six
weeks.
The so-called fixity and rigidity of
trench warfare is in one sense only
apparent. Armies today have to work
arder to stay in one place than
STANDS FOR
Mentho Laxene
Cold, Cough and Catarrh Medicine
for Young and Old.
You buy it of any well stocked
druggist in 2 1-2 oz. bottles and take
it in ten-drop doses, or better yet, mix
it with slmple sugar syrup, made by
dissolving 3-4 of a pound of granu
lated sugar in a half pint of boiling
water.® It i 8 so easy to make a whole
pint of cold and cough syrup that
tens of thousands of mothers make it
every year for their loved ones.
All agree that this homemade
cough syrup is frea from harmful
drugs, and that only a few doses are
required for each case, so that a pint
may last a family throughout the
winter season.
For colds, catarrh, cough and bron
chitls there is nothing superior for
prompt, lasting relief. Guaranteed by
the Blackburn Products Co., Dayton,
Ohie, to please or money back.—Ad
vertisement.
Horn Family Now Wealthy by
Lease of Acid Iron Mineral
Rights to Corporation.
Most everyone has read of the great
medicinal iron deposit unearthed on
the Horn farm down near Hickory,
Miss.,, and today the highly concen
trated product is put up under the
A<l-M trade-mark of the Ferrodine
¢ Chemical Corporation, which has
stood for quality and strength In
medicines for over thirty years.
Dr. R. C. Johneon, of Stringer,
Miss., 'n a letter some time ago said:
“I have used Acid Iron Mineral in my
practice for a number of years and
find that it has no equal as a nervine,
bleod purifier and lifer medicine. In
the treatment of indigestion and dys-
Dtsda nothing can compete with it.”
_ Just a teaspoonful or less of Acid
iron Minerar mixed with a glass of
water after meals has relieved many
a man ard woman of severe stomach
If Kidneys Act
Bad Take Salts
Says Backachle is sign you have been eating too
; much meat
" When you wake up with backache
and dull migery in the kidney region
it generally means you have been eat
ing too much meat, says. a well
known authority, Meat forms uric
acld which overworks the kidneys in
their effort to fllter it from the blood
and they bhecome sort of paralyzed
and loggy. When your kidneys get
sluggish and clog you must relieve
them, like you rellieve your bowels;
removing 21l the body’s urinvus waste
lse you have backache, sick head
pehie, dizzy spells; your stomach
0 -Yno is coau%md when the
wi Vot bad you have rheumati¢
ia Wi The urine is cloudy, full of
{ %diny channeis often i.t sere,
= ids-aund yew ers shiiged (o
armies of ‘he open warfare of yester
day had to work to advance a hundred
miles.
A trench is literally molded upon
and supported by the bodies of men
and is perpeivally changing and
growing like a live thing. It has to
fit the bodies of the men who occupy
it like the cell of the honeyeomb does
the working bee.
Must I'-'it Men Snugly.
Roughly speaking, it can only be
six inches deeper than the height of
the tallest man in it, and about six
inches wider than double the depth
of his body from chest to baclk.
' Most first-line trenches are dug just
wide enough for the men to be able
‘to slide past one another by turning
sideways. They must fit the holding
troops like a suit of clothes.
~_lf they are too shallow, obviously
‘the heads of the men will be exposed
to the horizontally flying fragments of
‘shells which strike on-the surface in
front or behind them. If they are
more than a foot above the heads of
the men, there is danger when a big
shall crushes in the front wall of
buryving them so deeply that they will
‘be unable to dig their way.out.
So active have become thé demands
of enthusiastie officers, especially
since road building and agriculture
Fave been added to the regular I(ill
tary duties of an army, that the soul
of Mr., Thomas Atkins has been seri
ously and resentfully disturbed. He
left his happy home and came out to
France to fight, not to plow fields and
dig ditches and build roads and
bridges and model barracks.
I was told on one section of the
front in Ilanders I visited that the
men had sent a delegation to,the gen
eral commanding, asking to be allowed
to spend more time in the trenches
and léss in rest and reserve camps,
where these irksome and degrading
fatigue duties were demanded of them
from morning so night.
HOW TO CARVE TURKEY. ‘
TONDON, Feb. 9.—A ocorrespondent
suggests that a turkoa:hproverly carved
will go twice as far. e breast should
be carved in thin upright slices, begin
ning at the wing and working up to the
breast bone. ’%hr\n the other side in
the same way. The legs should not be
detached, but should be sliced in the
same way as the breast. The wings
may be removed and divided. |
Ultimately the cold legs should be
grilled or deviied, the remains of mea.tl
stripped from the frame and hashed or
curried, the bones put into the stock
pot. G ‘
|
How fe Gu: Tob
| oW i€ ii:. 10Dacco
I @ This veteran, 8. B,
| ks Lamphere, was maafl
I . :ob the ’l:uuin use
o obecco for msny years.
S Ho wanted 10 quit but
e 3 g’ed«l something to help
s m.
He learned of s free
LE book that tells sbout to-
Ak o umm't‘m ‘;na howg
ang saiely. Inh a memol‘:t:n he i “1 have
ne desire for tobacco any more. I feel Itke & new
‘wan.”*
Any ome desiring & copy of this book em tobacce
habit, smoking and chewing, can get It free,
postpald, by Murg Edward J. Woods, WA-308,
Statlon F, New York City. Yoeu will be s
prised n.ng' minemdw.' Ltfinl;‘“fnr T:eur nerves,
stromger . v digestion,
sight, increased vigor, longer Hfe lnm u
vantages if you quit moisoning yourself.
troubles and pains, indigestion and
{he various other symptoms of stom
ach disorders and after a short
treatment not only has their appe
tite buen revived but uric acid seemed
to disappear as if by magie, leaving
people long troubled with rheumatism
strong again and free of pain.
“Dr. A. L. Johnson, of this place,
prescribed Aeid Iron Mineral to me.”
writes E. C. Keen, D. D. 8, of Henry,
Va., “and for the past two winters I
had excruciating pains from rheuma
tism in my left arm. I could not
raise my arm, it was so bad, but after
taking about three-quarters of a bot
tle he prescribed for me I was re
lieved and haven't been bothered
since. In my opinion it is a wonder
ful bood purifler and renfedy for
rheumatism,” H. C. Keen, D. D. 8.
Note-—Naither Dr, Johnson referred
to above know the other or are of
any kin. The files have many peopile
of same name who indorse it. The
local drug stores have it, or a large
bottle will be sent anywhere upon re
ceipt of $1 by the Ferrodine Chem
ical Corporation, Roanoke, Va. Ja
cobs’ Pharmacy.—Advertisément.
seek relief two or three times during
the night.
Either consult a good, raliable phy
siclan at once or get from your phar
macist about four ounces of Jad
Salts; take about a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for a
few days and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts is made
from tha acid of grapes and lemon
julce, combined with lithia, ‘and has
been used for generations to clean
and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also
to neutralize acids in the urine so it
no longer irritates, thus ending blad
der weakness.
Jad Salts is a life saver for regular
meat eaters. It i{s inexpensive, can
not injure, and makes a w
HAEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN “— A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1918,
‘Cq.a,l Man’ Garfield No Shir.ker
He’s Willing to Take All Blame
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DR. HARRY A. GARFIELD
By D. M. EDWARDS, ‘
WASHINGTON, Feb, 9.—What
manner of man is this Dr. Garfield,
who inaugurated the fuelless days?
And who sald, “Can’'t help it; {t's
got to be done; I will take all the
responsibility 7
Have you ever seen General Leon
ard Wood, with his iron, square jaw,
broad, powerful shoulders, standing
straight, his arms at his side, as if
awaiting the flrst move of a deter
mined offensive attack? Have you
ever noticed the calm, penetrating
glance that seems to measure minute
ly the situation ahead? Have you
ever observed the broad forehead,
perfectly free of wrinkles, in a criti
cal emergency?
If you have, then you have before
you a typical mental picture of Dr.
Harry A. Garfleld, the fuel adminis
trator. There is only one striking
difference. General Wood has a clear
blue eye; Dr. Garfleld has a clear
light brown eye. The two men are
about the same age; about the same
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Don't Stay Headachy, Sick, orl
Have Bad Breath and |
Sour Stomach. |
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' Wake Up Feeling Fine! Best
| Laxative for Men, Women I
' and Children,
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EWORK WHILE YOU SLEEP]
Enjoy life! Remove the liver and
bowel poison which is keeping your
thead dizzy, your tongue coated,|
|breath offensive, and stomach smn'.l
{Don't stav bilious. s&ick, headachy,
lconstipated and full of cold. WII'VI
ldon't you g\et a box of Cascarets
{from the drug store and eat one or
Itwe tonight and enjoy the mvr‘sL')
igentlest . liver and bowel cleansing|
ij.'nu ever cxpetienced? You will wake|
up feeling fit and fine. Cascarets|
'never gripa or sicken like salts, plllHl
'and calomel. They nct co gantly that|
!you hardly realize lou have thken a|
cathartic. Mothers should give cross, |
sick,, bilions or feverish children a|
whole Cascaret any time-—they act,
thoroughly and are harmless.—Ad-|
vertisement. I
2 Free Trial Treatment on
‘fi'/_fi Request, Ask also for my
8 ‘“pay-when-raduced”’ of
? far. My treatment has of
ten reduced at the rate of
ol a pound a day. No dlet
ing, no exercise, absolute-
M 1y safe and sure method
’ Mrs. E. Bateman writes: “Have
R taken r’aur treatment and It is
™% wonderful how it reduces. It does
§5% Just as you say. | have reduced a
3 pound a day and feel fine.”
Mrs. Anna Sehmidt writes: ““I weighed (78 pounds
before | ctarted your treatment and | now weligh
138 pounds. You may print this 1 yeu like.
These are just examples of what my
treatment can accomplish. Let me send
you mote proof at mmy expense.
DR R. lelii l.lu Physician,
height and about the same build, and
with very much the same volce—a
strong voice under pressure, but nor
mally smooth flowing and modulated.
Perhaps the best illustration of Dr.
Garfield's character was given the day
after the fuel restriction order went
into effect. A storm of criticlsm and
condemnation burst from all quarters
of the country affected by the regula
tion. Everyone was evading respon
sibility; not a member of the Cablnet‘
would say it was a good thing or a
bad thing; some high officlals who
were directly concerned skillfully
avoided taking any position that
would leave them open to criticism.
In plain words, everyone was “pass
ing the buck.” Some even were say
ing that “somebody has got to be the
goat for the tying up of fuel, food,
munitions and transportation.”
Dr. Garfleld was approached by a
group of perhaps fifteen men, plying
him with various questions, more or
less impertinent and pertinent.
“Who is responsible for the order?”
he was asked. “No one seemes to want
to take itjon his shoulders to admit
he was even consulted.”
“Well, gentlemen,” replted Dr. Gar
fleld calmly, “if the order is not pop
ular I can not help that. It was the
only thing to be done in the emer
gency. 1 will take all the responsibil
ity and condemnation for the order.
But as soon as people realize why it
was necessary, yon will find a Aiffer
ent spirit. Of course, I consulted all
others who might be interestad; but I
will assume all the burden of blame
myself.”
Frankly, Dr. Garfleld was the only
man that day who was willing to
stand up and face the music. Others
were predicting that “somebody had
to he made the goat.” Maybe Dr.
Garfleld has teen made the goat, but
if 80, it is safe to predict that he Is
going to be about the roughast-horned
goat anyone ever tried to ride.
He had the courage to do some
thing drastic -and that order has
béen the means of releasing port
bound vessels with thousands of tons
of supplies for ithe Allies. The whole
riess of transportation and delay of
sypplies came down to the simplest
matter of moving trafii~. There W%as
a ten-mile belt of freight all aleng
the New Jersey water front and at
many of the water fronts along the
seaboard. Little coal was going into
’
YOU'LL LAUGH!
!
DOESN'T HURT TO
o
LIFT CORNS OUT
Magic! Costs few cents!
Just drop a little Freezone on
that touchy corn, instantly it
stops aching, then you lift the
bothersome corn off with the
fingers. Truly! Nohumbug!
<>
,I 1111 !
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Try Freezone! Your druggist
sells a tiny bottle for a few cents,
sufficient to rid your feet of every
hard corn, soft corn, or corn be
tween the toes, and calluses, with
out one particle of pain, soreness
or irritation. I'reezone is the
mysterious ether discovery of a
noted Cincinnati genius. Greatl
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IKrernko Spent Many Stormy
I Days Under Old Regime Before
{ Becoming Commander of the
Bolshevik Forces I 7 Russia.
(By International Nows Service.)
GENEVA, Feb. 9.—Who is “Ensign
Krylenko 7"
The first few detalls of the life
jand character of the Bolshevik
“eommander-in-chief” {s furnished
by the Lauzanne Gazette, The paper
discloses that Krylenko's military ex
| perience befors he was summoned
the bunkers of the Allied siilps be
cause it could not be forced through
that belt of freight. Cuslicars were
laden and lying on the tracks for
miles back from tlie seaboard: other
cars were being moved eastward and
Jammed up egainst the crush, making
it all the mote ln\pu:ss‘h:e(;u move the
coal. Dr, Garfleld applied to the sit
uation the most fundamental princi
ple of traffic relief--he removed the
pressure at the neck of the Dhottle, the
freight belt being the nocl. As New
York's surface trolley traffic is con
trolled by the triple crossing at Her
ald Square, and as the gubway move
ment is controlled by the <rush at
Grand Central Station, so the whole
crux of the coaling congestion lay' in
the impassable freight belt,
Dr. Garfield’s suspension order re
moved for' five days the urgent ne
ceasity of forcing coal through to the
factories. The Government has been
oversupplied in some essential war
equipment. The relief was almost in
stantaneous, and, even in the face
of the worst weatlier conditions the
Eastern railronds have seen in years,
relief is already being felt.
Dr. Garfield comes from Hiram,
Ohlo, where he was born October 11,
1863. He i§ an A. B. of Willlams Col.
lege, a LL.D. of Princeton, Dart
mouth, Amherst and Wesleyan, and
practiced law in Cleveland from 1888
to 1903. He was president of the
Cleveland Chamber of Commerce and
the Municipal Association. He was
president of Willlams College. He g
a specialist in organization and con
trol and has made coal and rallroads
a study for more than twenty years.
He has two boys in the army, one in
France and one ™~ in a cantonment
awaiting word to go over.
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No. I~A complete seven-place
water f:‘?. ‘The pitcher has a capac-
I:'K:"' | three pints. The set in
des the six hall pint tumablers.
N 0.2 A flower baskef, with scal
m‘d edge and,shaved handle,
ght to top of handle, 974 inches;
width, 554 iaches.
No, 3 A footed mayonnaine bowl, with ladle,as
shown. Height, 3} inches; diameter, 53¢ inches.
N? 4-A footed comport. Height, 5% inches;
er, 434 inches.
N0.85~A footed jellydish 2% inches high,4{ inches
in diameter, with plate 6 inches in diameter,
NEVER AGAIN! Your last chance! You'd better
ask for your set now. A rich, GENUINE cut glass
set of eighteen pieces on your siniple request. Xf
delighted, pay $1.50 monthly until $9.87 is paid;
otherwise return the set within 30 days at our expense.
Cut glass has advanced 40 per cent
since this offer was first published. Since
thén we have distributed nearly twenty thou
sand of these sets for advertising purposes,
Thus do we popularize our victorious plan of
factory shipments and short-circuit prices.
We shall comglm this distribution precisely
as” planned, but when the limit of twenty
thousand sets is reached, that will be the end
~-and we are nearly there now,
Have you, dear madam, asked for
yowr set? If not, take the solemn assurance
from us that this is the final opportunity. It
is not likely that you will ever see this offer
again. Then you'll have your whole life to
regret it if you don’t act NOW,
We'll send the set direct from the
factory to your dining-room for you to use
and enjoy thirty days beforc remitting the
first small payment of $1.50.
by Premier Lenine to head all Ruseing
armies, consisted of exactly one year
of training under the compulsory scr
vice system of the old regime,
Nicolas Krylenko comes from a
family of semi-rebels, a race that
suffered for generations because of
the liberal ideas tt-'mcmben either
expressed too vociferously or acted
upon too freely. Under Czarism, the
chief “crime” of the Krylenko family
at Lublin was that it entertained, in
addition to strong rebel tendencies, a
warin affection for the Poles,
Soon after the political police had
started “shadowing” him, young Kry
lenko was arrested and expelled from
Petrograd. He came back and was
rearrested more than once. Twice a |
year he slipped Into the capital under ,
an assumed name to pass his exams |
at the university, Later he went to |
study at Cracow and won his diplo
mase in history and jurisprudenfe.
He wanted to become a lawyer, but
fe¢ that a certificate of loyalty was
required, and this was refused him.
He was too well known to the Czar's
‘secret police. He went to Lub!n to
teach the Russian language and his
tory in the Polish schools.
Soon afterward Lenine went to
Cracow. To be near him, Krylenko
‘moved to Sosnovicz, taking a profes
sorship in a Polish school there, But |
the authorities had redlscovered his
trail and after a few months they
forbade him to teach in any schools,
éven private Institutions,
- It was thon that Krylenko decided
to serve the year in the army which
‘he was compe'l:d to serve sooner or
later. Rebellious at first, he gradu
ally developed into a model soldler. |
Justbefore the war his year was up,
and kr.vlonko went to Switzerland to
rejoin Lenine. There he was when
the great conflict began.
How he returned to Russla never
has been known. Only he hlmself’
knows, and he refuses to tell, “Not
just now,” he answers invariably, |
Police Find Enough
Food to Feed Parish
1.6.){ Internalioral News sarvlcc.h
DON, Feb. 9.—~A metal reflner
named John Thomas was sentenced to
six months' imprisonment and fined S2OO
for hoarding food. The police found at
his house:
Four hundred and twenty-four pounds
of tea, 211 pounds of bacon I.I'NP ham,
175 pounds of flour, 232 tins of meat
and fish, 127 tins of tomatoes and frult,
183 pounds of . cults, 127 gounds of
sugar, 449 pounds of peas, beans and
oats: 124 pounds of syrup, 96 tins of
condensed milk, 100 pounds of nuts
nine sacks of potatoes, 36 bottles of
soup, twelve pounds of lard, nine gal
lons of vinegar, ten dozen bottles of
ale, ten bottlies of champagne, 156 bot
tles of other wine, four bottles of
brandy, twelve bottles of rum and four
teen bottles of whisky.
A large quamltg' of food was found
in ‘a recess In the cellar, which had
been bricked up and whitewashed. Other
goods were found in a safe in two new
dusthing in an attic.
The defense was that Thomas was
agsociated with a Roman Catholie
church and, anticipating hardama
among the people, had bought the goods
to Iglvo away.
The bench ordered the goods to be
confiscated., .
g oAI i
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et () 22 —<:l 5 :\III
Y D ey
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I“I'\I" !Ilb,"’
You like inanimate companions, well
as those of flesh and blood, that are good
thru and thru, Hence, in the eelection of
your heme-furnichings you avoid the tawdry
and the sham, and choose those better
expressions of refinement and good taste.
And that js why you have always admired
GENUINE cut glassware. But the prices in
retail stores have been so high that persons
of moderate means could afford only two or
three plecca at most; whereas, here are eight
een perfectly matched pieces, every one of
them useful as well as beautiful; and the
price of the entire set is probably less than
ycu have Raid for any single piece that you
may now have, ’
.\\(\ 24z @ ‘\ oy B .'
FACTORY BARGAIN DISTRIBUTORS
Mll and River Sts, AURORA, ILLINOIS _
.
High Speed Ry, Plans
160 Miles Per Hour
LONDON, Feb. §.—~The Kearney high
speed rallway, so the inventor, E. W.
Kearney, told the Soclety of Engineers,
had now been satisfactorily worked out
for speeds up to 160 miles an hour, and
would come Into use as soon after the
war as was practicable. Future tube
rallways would provide effective epeeds
of from three to four times those of the
A tmb‘}', (A » 3!--10::1»1-
Sl WE o e T
ALA PRNESEILTINES ..
LA B 8 P W " Mother
A 4 [{Rvl] BN~ EF g s . e '
12 N /e GE )A\ 4
g: S :fi*\\v@:; > : _‘g Slster,
AR PR !! VEL’I’IE& Brother,
Y .*” {4 \»L - 3 .
Favors for parties. Nut and Cream Containers for Val
Hats with Valentine designs. entine parties,
Napkine.
Lunch Sets. Maske.
Tally and Dinner Cards. Dance Programs.
(All with Valentine decorations.)
Ribbon-Tied Books and Plctures, Sultable for Valentines.
MAILING CARDS FOR EVERYBODY,
GAVAN'S 71 Whitehall Street
SOUTHERN BOOK CONCERN
The Intimateness of Small
Booklets
One of the chief advantages of the “thumb
nail” booklet is its intimateness.
Another is its economy.
Our representatives will be glad to help you
prepare a series of small booklets, either to sup
plement your catalog, or to take the place of
sales letters which 3-cent postage makes too
costly.
Webb & Vary Co., Inc.
Printers and Engravers
Atlanta, Ga.
So we feel sure that we shall get l
your coupon without delay. Here it Is, ready
for you to eign. =
)
CLIP [T, SIGN IT ;' ’
AND MAIL IT -
TODAY e g A T
I QuAKER VALLEY MFG. CO., 4
l Mill and River Ste., Aurora, lllinols, "
Ship direct to my home for 30 daye’ free trial, the
l p(egeCut Glass &t. as aljvirtl”d J’:fato pay nl
"%‘. charges on arriva entirely pleased,
$1,50 a month until your ghort-circuit mce of $9.87 4
I otherwise 1 will reture’ the Set within thirty days at'yous
l expense.
| R
i : :
I i b Firal Voute a 7 sirest and BEDEY BENY
present London tubes if the system was
adopted. e
A recent Jimprovement in the !aw(
system was the design of a ‘‘stepl !
street level station. An Intcndlnm
senger would step off the pavem b
to the Ylaltorm and Into the train,
the traln would then descend a
sent of one in seven to a depth of 310
feet, 80 that a speed of 00 miles an'
hour wouwld be reached In 23 secol
from the start.
The train would then proeceed om &
level until the approach to the ncxmy
tion, when it would run up a r
Igrndient, which would bring it to &
gtandstill without the dJdestructive wuse
No, 6--A ¢ b 6 inches In
diameter, md;’:boo.
No, 7-A ar bowl. Width
tips of h::gics. 4?1@«: dm:
454 iuches.
No. 8-A am tczr. Width,
(l’nchxdinnchr:;\dle.g: inchas; helght,
3% inches,
‘-"»".4-'; ‘
II"’I;: 2
{45 "Iw
"%
No.9—A vase, 10 inches high. '
N:;'l }O—A celery dish, 10 inches long, 4% tnches
e.
Every piece {s guaranteed a first sefection cuttin
free from blemish, and in quality fully up to the h! t
Qunk:r Valley shngard. - w .
5A