Newspaper Page Text
e ST B — v A:‘,v,. ”
R I B N G I N Eléfll
Ffl;?rtx"/‘&‘"&i‘; . J AINL €T - A A L
S 'aw R e IR fe i - : SELL v PRODUCTS
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEN ..—_.———-)gm %‘, ‘umfl?&A» e WHO MAKE AND SELL ATLANTA
q n
Atianta’s storage capacity for ml»’
ton ig to be incredsed inuno.h..mlyl
by B 0 per cent through the m'L:nnlzu-!
tion of the Cotton Warehouse Com- |
pany, with a present storage capacity
of 8,000 bal and improvements to
hegin at once which will increase this
amount to 15,000, The ptesent stor
age capacity of the combined ‘cotton
Wwiare i s of Atlanta is approxi
mately 30,000 bales.
Sin the entrance of the l'nm'd‘
States into the world war, when the |
GGovernment took over the Atlantal
Warehouse Company a dearth in ('nl»!
ton warehouse space has been l'vlt;
by local cotton men, J. R, Ellis, of |
he [Ellls Cotton Company, president |
' the new concern, stated Tuesday. |
“rh ituation has become ::0‘
wcute,” Mr. Ellis observed, “that the|
Atlantic Compregs Company has de
NOBLES!
ORDER YOUR SHRINE CARDS NOW. We have a number of
‘hoice designs with gold embessed Shrine emblem. Get ready for
he Indianapolis trip. Order them now. S
HUBBARD BROS. $
PRINTERS
© '40%5 W. MITCHELL :ST.—~————ATLANTA §
a X
A FREE TRIP
to Atlanta is available to the merchant who buys an
adequate bill from the members of the Merchants’
Association.
Write to
H. T. MOORE,
SECRETARY
Chamber of Commerce Bldg. ATLANTA, GA.
HARD TO FIND A HOUSE?
Then Be Independent—
Be Healthier and Save Money
et Lo
TR IRET B
PR ORI T Y fifie d diipenadsr 4o / ) ™
o -,»4'1»;',3A o AL )
s R i,
EX. )] o Y
Aey ”@?% fomh
Doctors claim, and Uncle Sam h.ax‘ proven,>that camp
life makes medicine unnecessary, Live.in a tent this
summer and you will never regret it. Tent life is
i Pleasant, Comfortable,
Beneficial and Economical
ATLANTA TENT AND
. AWNING COMPANY
Makers of Tents and Canvas
, +: st for Every Purpose -t :«
ATLANTA, GA.
T I TTR AT . BA oL Tel A b
G oA S RS I RLATT SDR P T ANE
oet s J iXo AT VR eRBRL RLR e B Y
) i Yol PG s A Bg| T T TS R
a 8 NRS P B By Yhd 5 )&T A W LN A w!P b 5 1
B Al K 2 @ N Poy T A VAR 7T g osN 20
oTAI Bl L=y ] AV ooy o ; ; 0 B Vil 7
% B g e i MINAY LY OV AA G\ B e
) TG N NG Gk AL s P T ) 0 7t L4Ro iy o e 3 8 O
’!‘"“\g' A BT T '}’2*?}'i“-.~.~:'3“':5; oy 200 BY
BAL IPN s dALI2DAAPReOBRN NeRB L o T ’ o
AA T 2eN TAT 3 SR N AR ) ) PR TT R 4
:.'fl.‘r'.’f/"ffiwl»%";" TR e 2 1‘»."’:"‘.“ PTR - Aol s o o':e Sl ‘“«“"’ e Ael s T e .
b 0 s ke O RSTeRS G A ARV TR A
PO aßy Sk %op oA A¢¢ i s RAN i e T SL A
;,'l‘-:'*' Oiy M 4 "i B : PR ;A A(o 8 g Sy Rg P SO o R
LY ;'.".éfl-"«‘-' [HGR RET a¥ i S e an ¥NBBSRIH 24 GR G B aGE Sype-a L
PRR ey ) ERL Reee LR R E G P(G W AN YS g R
A g isR B R sWb S 5 e ks s 2 8 ndi Yads it SN Er
" TAR gt e(igley eb e gSR s
B RS
a AP ARTE. % -oßoel 18 LY ~ >
’l'l “;Tiih‘; f ,','z*;, / ?“’.' S _,._.if?"’l;:;:f.j“_fr?'.;*,r_;
B ik;&leadmg 4
& L
e TR TN
82. SR L S
B EERnt Ty PR ARy Al ”
5% },rfll“ Ym T gty
b! ; -+ gl }"‘,-"“{-'i-;rf“fi-‘f‘;‘.i':u? ¢
o T T R
B A f £Bolt Cutters
% G i e A
o
R R AN Ty e, 3
e e D AT e
| 5 :‘Mm;;‘l;ég Bt ~'_" 3 ‘f?“.éh?uv.-‘,,;
BpE PR oy P S B e YRR g
e A e L _,Hoto?s'.}f;;,..fz, o
A BN ol [ ™ ik T
e g i Lyl [ EAE S R
B 3 e R WALBT sPR
Y - Electric Lo TR
& "ol Traveling Cranes;
BIy)LR LI e R
OTt T S :"fl':'.'»:f’ - “"}.v'i:;'.“(
o BTN o e A
R KRR - T _.
clared an embargo on further ship
ments, as the plant's storage capac
ity is exhausted, Through the or
ganization of the Cotton Warehouse
Company this situation will be nota
bly relieved.” .
Mr. 13lis then told of the long need
felt by local cotton men for lncren.aedl
warchouse space, Regarding the new |
project, he said: ‘
“We have long felt the pressing
need of more space for the great
amount of cotton which is brought to
Illw Atlanta market, n%d after long|
Icunuiderin‘ the feasibility of the:
proposition have decided that it will
prove the solution to the: problem. ;
“Six large warehouses of the At-i
lanta Milling C'ompany, at the foot 01'
Houston street, near the Atlantic
compress, have been purchased hy!
the company, and while one of the !
buildings has been dlightly damaged
by fire, the present capacity is 8,000 |
bales. As mentioned above, this will |
be augmented immediately by ad(*’-’
tional fireproof buildings which whl |
increase the capacity to 15,000 hnlwi.i
“The company plans to establish a |
| local spot cotton market through the |
establishment of offices and sales- |
Inmm:-: in the ¢enter of the city where |
ilho farmers may bring their m'udur't“
in wagons, drays, automobiles or
other methods, The offices will be es- |
tablished in the close vieinity of Five |
\H\ints. where they are accessible |
from all parts of the city, and will}
be on the ground floor. . {
o S e ISR bB AT IR N RS,
Tk AAL A
s e
S METREOE NSO BoLS eM e
YSR Y S |AR LT
J AT Y]“, PR A,r"',' Y 4
& . N & “,-. > i_ % b / "7’
RN g 8 3 b 2 ~‘?‘-,'-{ A 9,
3 oM E OB e » v,t.%."i(
R e B f("._..q*
‘l» -"*""‘-‘e"' _, E o }af%""gfl
FT N . o P o
SNO O £y Sl
e NN
3 AN EIRTA ¥ST IR
: A x"’ \:Tu‘;‘)' “";.‘j::‘.‘rfi; ’ ,‘f'-;h"fl"&'%”"'—
: B Ll IR
(] RN
1 NTIO T AEAN L L
sMR T AR G TR S &
\-Atlanta, Ga.
3’s o i
'l STRRET R A S SN AR T
BO e T
BTR LT A
& &35 RPN LG 6
A gumt%!c;g;,fixpgn,., g
1l s ARN N TP e ,',j 4 |
|| BromptAttention,
" Re T A KA )
D T T SRR R
T T T
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, MAY 23, 1919
1
{ . §
Expert on Food |
. L
o
Joins Forces of
5 .
{ » N $
. Ga. Preserving Co. |
3 §
AR AR AAA AN A AR A AR AARARAAA
PR R I STR SN
I SR
T R T
gt RO VR TR 5
. SRR
PR Sl TG
s N s 8 TRk
& ; p 2 B
’* . % )
v ‘? ’
R ; i
WL | RS g )
" ke RGN
: SRI '3
R N et
Bz _._-:-‘,é, é@ & .
e ek N
bt . e
::»\~ T . S
i i W i ST
Vo e R
(CHAS. E. LANGLEY.
The GGeorgia Preserving Company
cecures the services of another ex
pert. Charles E. Langley, expert in
the mar@facture of high-grade food
products, has heen released from serv
ice with the Government. Mr. Lang
ley's qualifications and experience as
a high-class expert was established
by a competitive examination held
threughout . the United States. Mr.
Latgley was one of the four men
elected of the many men who took
this examination, Mr, Langley stand
g second 1n rating,
Mr. Lanzley has rendered the Gov
ernment valuable service by his great
knowledge of foods and the proper
preparation of them for the market,
which has enabied him to stand be
tween the soldier and the shipper of
food to the (jovernment, and to a
great extent it is to this service that
the general health of our soldiers
have been on such a high plane, as
‘there was no food issued that was
not pure ard wholesome.
The Government officials at Wash
ingten approved every important de
cision rendered by Mr, Langley during
his service with the Government as
an expert. All of the officials were
most flattering 1n their approvai of
his services rendered in this most re
sponsible position. We are most
pleased to announce to the many cus
tomers of ours and the public that
the Georgia Preserving Company has
just secured the services of Mr. Lang
ley Mr. Langley will join the staff
of experts that we will have in our
organization That will enable us to
zive the publiec the hest possible sery
ice and the best quality of marma
ilades. preserves, jams and iellies that
R 3
e FINCKS
Y 4 S DETRO-SPECIAL
/18 e i OVERAU.S 3
- 3 3 o2g D
& ey
bk 7% 4 /.’\E;i: 13 :
: a'»-‘*" ‘ "'7»’\:
RT S T
They cost more, but are |
meoere than worth it. |
““The man who thinks ‘
Invests in FINCK'S" |
W. M. Finck & Co., Mfrs,, ‘
Detxoit !
Write for Prices and Secure ‘
Agency
W. R. CANNON
Dalton, Ga.
Southern Representative.
5 R YT
7 8 A e
L] eV B T
,;&:;z,_,,Mach L BRI E
R A el ‘;"3‘,",-,5",* %
ot RSO A el
i iIR AR Y e
R b a 0 Ul SRR
Gr R TR o o
| g“%,'vmes}’
Flttlnl‘;d o R
I S A R RIS e L G T
L,fi:?%lgyah&ga T ’%’s‘% f
, B N i A A B R Tyt &1
.
[ - Power Tramsmission . |
Rl et e
e o 1 Tl, T 8 ) Efi"m; \,‘
LA a 8 v BT R oLI
i bl oL S T
B=L TSI A g
‘Sharpe Milling Cutters, |
y@q;q;@’gutteuf;nd L
L R B
i
|
\
\
Romance in business?
None at all, say the wiseacres,
Thep what should you call the ca
reer of an Oklahoma man who, start.
ing business three years ago in a
frame shed at Tuisa, is this year
erecting at $30,000 factory: has caused
the American Can Company to move
One of its plants from the East to the
L\‘\'esl: buys “guns” by the carload, as
‘the United States army ordnance de
partment buys munitiony; has 25
salesmen covering 25 States from
l.ake Superior to the Keys of Florida,
refuses foreign orders until the na
tions will guarantee proper protection
for nis patents; at the beginning of
this his fourth year's business, has
authorized an advertising expenditure
of $40.000—80 times more than he was
worth 26 month® ago, and, quite in
cidentally, has overridden and upseta
firmly established business rule.
0il? You're wrong. Just business—
the husiness of ntaking and selling an
every-day commodity: Romanecg”
F.ots of it. And an outstanding-fed
ture.is that for five years preceding
his rapid rise this man was a news
paper man.
J. Burr Gibbons, president of the
Hofstra - Manufacturing ‘Company, ol
Tulea, has accomplished all this and
i{s still at it. His company manufac
tures an ingect powder distributed in
the familiar round “guns,” whose ais
play cards extol the name and fame
of Oklahoma from the:shelves and
counters of thousands of druggists
and grocers. Associated with Gib
bons-is G.-N. Wright, president of the
Wright Producing and Refining., Cor
poration, and_\W. A, Brownlee, cash
jer of the IKxchange National Rank of
Tulsa. The three men are Oklahom~
ans, proud of it, and accept as a mal
ter of course their unique feat of hav
ing knocked the props from, a hard
and fast rule of commercialism.
The company - was organized in
June, 1915, but did not begin active
operations until January, 1916. Much
of the intervening, time was spent in
proving that the impossible could be
done, For Be it known that men of
counting room and desk have decreed
that a successful business must be lo
cated close te its base of supply of
raw material or within easy reach of
its point of consumption.
The Hofstra Company imports tons
of raw material from Japan; it
reaches eastward to New York for
another ingredient; then to Chicago,
Cleveland, Ohio and Argo, 1., it goes
for more. Its metal ‘guns” are
shipped from St. Louis.
The American Can Company for
merly manufactured these “guns” ina
plant at Brooklyn, When Gibhons
entered the field he was a very small
customer. Then his business grew.
The American Can Company began to
take notice; It sat up with a start at
his first order for a carload, 13¢,000
‘guns.”
Surely, reasoned the “wise” men,
this Oklahoma novice would move his
plant eastward, nearer to Broolklyn.
Then came a hurry-up order for two
carloads, 260,000 “guns.” Then five
carloads, nearly three-quarters of a
million, were ordered. The American
Can Company capitulated and in
stalled a gun-making plant at St
Louis—to be near its chief customer,
who stubbornly refused to leave the
State of Oklahoma.
That the move was a wise one is
evidenced by the fact that this year
Gibbons is ordering 2,000,000 “guns,”
an entire trainload of sixteen cAars.
His consumption of metal “‘guns” is
greater than that of all other con
cerns in the United States combined.
From woodshed to $30,000 factory
in three years is a far jump. Three
yvears ago Gibbons’ relation to his
company was that of president, sec
retary, treasurer, general manager,
sales manager, bookkeeper, traveling
salesman, shipping clerk, janitor, of
fice bov—n'everything, He mixcd the
materials, packed the flnished prod
uet in paper bags, demonstrated in
business place and home and sold
“Hofstra' till his supply was exhuast
ed. Then he mixed another supply
and did it all over again.
Now, three years later, power-driv
en machinery fills the big factory.
One intricate mechanism takes insect
powder from one side and sheets of
fiat cardboard from the other and
turns them out folded, filled, weighed
to the fraction of an ounce and sealed
ready for shipment. This is not the
small “gun’” for household use, bul
cartons of various sizes for institu
tional use or for houschold refilling
of smaller “guns.”
Institutions send to Oklahoma for
Gibbons’ product. The Michigan State
Hospital at Kalamazoo uses the Ok
lahoma powder. SSo does the ITowa
State board of control which has su
pervision over the State's orphanages,
snldiers’ homes, hospitals and all pub
lie iastitutions. The agricultural col
leges of several States are heavy buy
ers, 'The Missouri Tuberculosis San
itarium at Mount Vernon, Mo., is
another. The largest drug and gro
cery jobbers in the country now in
clude it as one of their staples. The
I/nited States army used it extensive
ly in cantonments for the extermina
tion of flies, ants, roaches, etc.
(:ibbons’ success is founded upon an
intensive study of insect life—and
death. The company boasts that it
annually kills more bugs of various
kinds than all the human beings ever
killed in all the wars in history.
Insects form the most numerous
family in existence., There are more
than 1,000,000 separate species, more
than all other forms of living crea
tures combined. A peculiar fact is
that while insects breathe air they
have no lungs. They breathe through
the pores of their skins, Numberless
insect exterminators and poisons were
on the market when Gibbons entered
the field. But his product is a finely
ground compound, fatal to bugs, but
harmiess to humans and all lung
breathers, which,. when sprayed or
“shot” into the air from little round
metal “guns,” is drawn into the pores
of insect skins, producing death from
suffocation. It has killed every insect
on which it has been tried.
. The prospects for Lioistra Insect
Powder in Atlanta and throughout
Georgia are now exceedingly bright.
The line is being pushed ageressively
by Mcßoberts Drug Company, J. g
Barnes-Fain Company and the Unity
Grocery Company. More than half
of all the retail druggists in Atlanta
have stocked Hofstra and a third or
more of the Brocs now have it.
The Georgia representitive of the
‘Hotstra AManufacturing Company, Mz,
V. H. Merryman, reports good busi
Grand Lpdge, Grand Encamp
ment and Rebekah Assembly
to Hold Three-Day Session,
The annual convention of the L O,
0. . of Georgia, comprising the
grand lodge, the grand encampment
and the” Rebekah Assembly, will be
held in Atlanta on May 27, 28, 20,
More than 2,000 delegates, represent
ing more than 600 subordinate lodges
in the State, are expected to be in
attendance
The three hranches of the order
will hold their sessions separately “the
grand lodge will megt in the Audito
rinum. the grand encampment wi,. use
the 1 O, 0. F. Hall at corner of Ala
bana and Broad streets, and the
members of the Rebekah Assembly
will zather in Taft Hall at the Audi
torium.
At the openiffg ses®ion Wednesday
Maver James L. Key will welcome the
grand lodge in behalf of the city, and
Grand Master W. S, Slaton, of Wash
ington, will respond to the address
Mrs. Myrtice Beattie, past president
of the Rebekah Assembiy, will deliver
the address of welcome in behalf of
that body. The opening session of
the. grand lodze will be beld at the
Anditorium at 9 o'clock Wednesaay
moruing. 3
+ Reception Tuesday Night.
An elaborate reception will be ten
déred the delegates by .the Rebekah
Assembly at the New Kimball Tues
day night. *Following thp reception, a
ball “vill be given at Taft Hall in hon.
or of members returned from service
overseas, the officers of the grand
lodze, the zrand encampment and the
Rebekah - Assembly, .- g
Foremost among the prominent fig
ures who will* attend the ceonvention
are John B. Goodwin, of Baltimore,
former Mayor of the city of Atlanta,
who is now’the grand secretary of the
sovereign grand lodge, and W, H.
Barnes, of Sdcramento, al, past
grand .master, and .past, patriarch of
Georgia and now grand scribe of Cal
ifornia.
Mr. Barnes, who is more than 80
vears old, is-one of the oldest mem
ness and increasing demand through
out Georgia. If vou are a retail mer
chant and haven't stocked Hofstra
vet, take a little tip and do it now.
he (Georgian is carrying a smashing
hig campaign of Hofstra advertising
and you may as w‘ll cash in on the
increasing demand?
“" ;‘/}‘ '-‘,
- i'c fi. ,{ [
~,.\ .a kl . fi‘
T :
% ’ )
@‘ / \
U / \
Constipated Children Gladly Take
“California Syrup of Figs”
California Syrup of kigs
For the Liver and Bowels
Tell your druggist you want genuine
¥California Syrup of Figs.” Full directions
and dose for babies and children of all ages
who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue
coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on ‘
the bottle. Look for the name “California”
and accept no other “Fig Syrup.”
—Advertisement.
Bt e ||| —
e D . \
s & ™ 7
; N |
¢ D i
Y ,l/
R A /
g I
. /
I |
I VW 4 I
L ~.. 1 l{f
o) 1 Q¥
-,). iy y)< ,r,’ N
REINY, £ /
Lift off that CORN
» Ladies! Here is magic! Apply a few drops of
freezone upon that tender, touchy corn. In
stantly that corn stops hurting, then it be
comes so loose that you just lift it off with the
fingers
Doesn’t hurt a bit
You feel no pain or irritation. You can rid your
feet of every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between
the toes or hardened callus without a twinge of
soreness. 1 hink of it!
Freezone is the wonder discovery of a Cincinnati
genius. It is a new ether drug and safe. : o>
A tiny bottle of (
66 29 ’ ;
Freezone” —costs few cents
at any drug storc, anywhere 4 7
e e 080 ee e es e e eet
AL AR T T TP, R R eA T e g S v
bers of the Odd Fellows in the United
States and has held the highest of
fices glven by the order, He enjoys
the dagtinetion of being (he only live
ing member of the order for whom a
lodge has been named. The lodge I 8
located in Atlanta and is called
Barnes Lodge, No.' 66, \fl
Many Important pics.
Many natters of Importance pers
taining to the welfare of the order
will be presented to the convention,
The degree contest for admission to
the grand lodge will be participated in
by teams from subofdinate lodges
throughout the -State. Prizes of §2OO
to the team with the highest bercent -
‘nxr. SIOO to the next best team and
SSO to the third will be awarded the
winners, The grand lodge derree will
he conferred on all successful candi
dates by Dr. T. B. Bonner, grand
warden, Wednesday morning.
One of the important features of
the convention will be the report of
Homer R, McClatchey, chairman of a
committee anpointed in 1917 to raise
funds for a memorial to the late
grand sire, Robert T. Daniel: The
memcrial was authorized to be in
the form n. establishing an orphans’
home in Griffin, Ga. Mr, McClatchey
‘will tell the convention on Wednesday
‘what steps have been taken toward
the establishment of this home,
The annual election of officers will
be held by the grand encampment on
Tuesday and the Rebekah Assembly
and grand lodge on Wednesday. The
present officers of the Graud Lodge of
Georgia are as follows:
Grand Lodge Officers.
The officers of the Grand Lodge of
Georgia are as follows: ‘
Grand master, W. A. Slaton, Wash
ington; deputy grand master, Bueil
Stark, Dalton: grand master, Thomas
B. Bonner, Lavonia® grand secretary.
T. H. Robertson, Gainesville; grand
treasurer, R, E. Edwards, Atlanta;
g:and represeniative, J, E. Boden
hamer, Decatur; grand representa
tive, H, R. McClatchey, Rome; grand
chaplain, Boyce Ficklin, \Washington;
grand marshal, J. W. Markham, Ma
con; grand conductor, M, C, Strick
land, Atlanta; grand guardian, R, L.
J. Smith, Commerce: grand herald,
Johr 8. Wikler, Savannah,
The grand encampment officers are:
Grand patriarch, R. C. Burnham,
Savanah; grand high priest, C. A.
Vander Lieth, Athens; grand senior
warden, J. S. Lohr, Augusta, grand
junior warden, J. C, Davis, Rome;
grand scribe, T. H. Robertson, Galnes
ville; grand representatives, James H.
Groves, Marietta, and Homer Ashley,
Atlanta: grand treasurer, I. O, Teas
ley, Alpharetta: grand marshal, C. A,
I'retwell, Fitzgerald: grand inside
sentinel, J, F, Sunofsky, Savannah;
grand outside sentinel, C, C. Parson,
Watkinsville.
The Rebekah Assembly officers are:
President, Mrs, Sarah Lee Trice,
Augusta; vice president, Mrs. Alma
Justice, Fitzgerald; warden, Mrs. Nan
Singletary, Thomasville; secretary,
Mrs. M. C. Strickland, No. 332 Luckie
street, Atlanta; treasurer, Mrs. llvie
Henderson, Savannah; chaplain, Mrs.
Gussie Trippe, Atlanta; marshal, Mrs.
Marion Woodberry, Augusta; conduc
tor, Mrs. Willie Mae Brown, Fitzger
jad; inside guardian, Mrs, L. 1. Sut
ton, Adairßville; outside guardian,
Mrs. Myrtle Cramer, Savannah,
. ’
To Act in :Movies
MEXICO, MO., May 24, ~Three days afts
or moeting Alfred H. U. Bayers, of St
FLoule s« Anna Mcloney answered
“Yen," and they were married Just 21
days later she filed suit for divercve, Mrs
SBayers is now appearing in the "movies"
with a Hollywood (Cul.) organization, uns
der the name of Ann Malone,
:
If Backachy or: | ‘
Kidneys Bother §
Eat less meat, also take glass of Salts before
cating breakfast
Urie acid in meat excites the kid
neys, they become overworked; get
sluggish, ache and feel like lumps of
lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the
bladder is irritated, and you may be
obliged to seek relief twe or three
times during the night. When the
kidneys clog you must help them
flush off the body's urinous waste or
you'll be a real sick person shortly.
At first you feel a dull misery in the
kidney regions, you suffer from back
ache, sick headache, dizziness, stom
ach gets sour, tongue coated and you
feel rheumatic twinges when the
weather is bad.
Eat less meat, drink lots of water;
also get from any pharmacist four
ounces of Jad Salts; take a table
spoonful in a glass of water before
~ Banished Corns
Blue-jay was invented by a scientist of distinction.
By a man whose lifetime has been spent in the study
of surgical dressings.
This is a master's method — correct, complete and
efficient. “And the millions of people who know it,
never think of enduring a corn.
% { As \
“shas Y
All in One
The first step is to stop the
pain. This is done by re
moving all pressure —by the
soft protecting ring marked A.
The next step is to gently
cause the corn to disappear.
This is done by the re
markable B & B Wax, which
no corn can resist.
This bit of wax-—marked
B —is‘centered on the corn.
Ii cannot spread. So, unlike
. old-time methods, it acts on
;i the Irn alone.
g IC'Ys bber-coated adhe-
Ldive. o Phis gnugly wraps the
RTa o r Tt i .
*
Blue-jay
S ‘ The Scientific Corn Ender
, Stops Pain Instantly Ends Corns Completely
A 25¢c—=At Drugdists
BAUER & BLACK Chicago, New York, Toronto
Makers of Sterile Surgical Dressings and Allied Products
(1032)
A CRENR - Yk e R ¢
< Buy ‘Bull Dog Brand
s ‘A)?;f In"the Patented Bellows Package: -
SRR ]
SR . ERE
S EEPS your house entirely free of ?%
these pests. Ground from the heads «"s’/
of imported pyrethrum flowers— 3&,{,
i harmless tochildren and domestic animals By,
..5 —but quick death to bugs of most kinds. B
o We pack Bull Dog Brand in a handy [
iz Patented Bellows Package. All that is - PE@sgs
;. necessary is to make small hole in end i
G with point of pencil. Squeeze it and a -
i fine stream of powder is shot into any e
i crack or hole where insects hide. Clean, . pEiseds
i efficient and convenient. 2 RN
G Close a room up and with the bellows :»
iz package blow the powder into the air.or = EEiss
s burn it on ashovel. Kills flies and mosqui- | [Easasd.
izl toes quickly; keeps other insects away. | 'va*’f
e iy Py
s Use it along baseboards and around [Efsasds
i sinks in kitchens where you are troubled &
Frd with roaches or ants. It is an invaluable 'ii."?i.y
;H aid at house-cleanmg'tlmc. 9 %fi
S Bull Dog Brand is equally effective [
iaid against plant and animal vermin. Con-. Eusg
Caind tains no chemicals. Use it freely with _..5
Gl entire safety. ;;gcf‘
R 4 o
,45 If your dealer can’t supply you, se_qd e
fie;:‘:, us 10c¢ together with his name and we will J{fi' .
e T g ¢ DRI
{:...’f mail you, postpaid, a package. o ::S'év-?%;"‘
s . R
R \ pae
.\ Frank Laboratories /\{
s 5 . . W Fm
i Cincinnati, Ohio \\‘ S
st N
cin - : o ‘/; / vx\‘:-?;;;:;;;:;:;;::. :
Roy /() B
Rl RUt LW m=n
.| 10c Everywhere [d
01»’0 S CHESTNUT T ¥
(.Iry Mr’;nfloul News Ne ¢
QUAKERTOWN PA., May 34§ nt
wana claimed to bo the largest chepthut
tree in the United States was hilast on
A farm nesar here recently. 'l‘nm’nw
measured 34 set 6 ipehes in eclrcumfers
ence and 11 feet in dinmeter. The for=
ostry commission says the tree wu“:"
to 400 yonrs old To fell It twenty theev.
toot holes and four ten-foot heles wern
drilled In the roots One hundred and ten
pounds of dynamitec wus used,
breakfast for a few days and your
kidneys will then act fine. This fa
mous salts is made from the acld of
grapes and lemon juice, comblng
with lithia, and has been used f
generations to clean elogged kidneys
and stimulate them to normal ncua'-
ity, also to neutralize the acids fl
urine, so it no longer is a source of
irritation, thus ending bladder wnh;-
ness. e
Jad Salts is inexpepsive, cannot in
jure; makes a deligtful effervescent
lithia-water drink4gwhich everyone
should take now afd then to keép
the kidneys clean and active, Drr’-
gists here say they sell lot§.of
Salts to folks who believe in ovér
coming kidney trouble while it is
only trouble.—Advertisement,
application, protecting every
thing. g
You apply this Blue-jay in
a jiffy. The corn pain stops
at once. The wrapping is
comfortable and you forget it.
In two days you remove it
and the corn can be lifted
out. Only rare corns need a
second application. :
This is the scientific le,‘
the easy, sure and right way
to end corns. You will never
return to any wrong method
when you try a Blue-jay once.
Try it tonight.
11A