Newspaper Page Text
CURRENT EVENTS
UNION LABOR INFURIATED BY
GEN. JOHNSON — TEXTILE
MILLS ARE REOPENING.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
©. Western Newspaper Union.
OENEKAL HUGH JOHNSON has
VJ become a live issue In the textile
strike; the mill owners prepared to op¬
erate their plants under protection of
Gen. Johnson
thorities in New York, charged that
the textile strike was in “absolute vio¬
lation” of an agreement made by the
United 'Textile Workers with the gov¬
ernment last June, when a strike was
threatened. “If such agreements of
organized labor are worth no more
than this one,” he added, “then that
institution is not such a responsible in¬
strumentality as can make contracts on
which this country can rely.”
Charging that the strike was “politi¬
cal" rather than for the improvement
of economic conditions. General John
son warned that you “cannot unleash
the forces of riot and rebellion, because
you never know when you can control
them.”
He declared that the strike had been
called, despite the previous agreement,
because Norman Thomas, Socialist
leader, and others had circulated
among the delegates to the union con¬
vention, telling them that the men
would be fed by the government if
they went on strike.
The cotton textile Industry, he went
on, was the last one in which a strike
should be called, as increased costs un
der the code and the processing tax
had doubled the costs of cotton goods.
To all this the union leaders, led by
Vice President YVoll of American Fed¬
eration of Labor and F. J. Gorman,
boss of the strike, asserted angrily
that Johnson was not telling the truth
and that his “prejudiced intrusion” in
to the situation was unwarranted.
They demanded that the administrator
resign; and In rejecting a proposal
from Peter Van Horn, head of the silk
institute, that the dispute be placed be
fore the NRA and a public hearing he
held, Gorman said :
“We will not join in submitting any
issue to the NRA as long as General,
Johnson is administrator or occupies
a position of determining influence in
the recovery administration. We said
he ought to resign and we meant it.
Since that is our view, we could not
join in any. submission to the NRA
while h<"J|ras the power to make NRA
decisiotfsf*
’ This response was characterized by
Van Horn as a repudiation of I’resi
dent Roosevelt and the NRA machin¬
ery.
Reopening of the closed mills was
expected to bring on renewal of vio¬
lence and disorder, the danger points
being Rhode Island, Georgia and the
Carolinas. The National Guardsmen
in these and other states were already
mobilized and regular army troops at
various points were prepared to take
a hand if they should be ordered out
by President Roosevelt on call of the
local authorities. Fourteeu persons al¬
ready had been killed and the prospect
was that the death roll would be
lengthened.
Protests against use of National
Guardsmen in the South continued.
Union heads contended that at least
one of the North Carolina mills oper¬
ating under guard was also under ci¬
tation as an NRA violator.
The executive committee of the North
Carolina Socialist party said it would
investigate the possibility of Indicting
Gov. J. C. B. Ehringhatis on charges
of “inciting to riot” through his action
in calling out the guard.
T^FFORTS mediation of board President bring Roosevelt’s about
■*-' to a
peaceful settlement of the textile strike
failed when the employers, according
to the board, refused to make any con¬
cessions that would open the way to
arbitration. The strike leaders had in¬
sisted that all the mills must remain
closed pending arbitration, and this
was rejected by the mill owners. The
cotton textile employers then declared
flatly that they did not believe the is¬
sues at stake are “appropriate subjects
for arbitration.”
The immediate result of this break¬
down in negotiations was the resump¬
tion of rioting and fighting, especial¬
ly in Rhode Island. Thousands of
strikers and their sympathizers fought
with National Guard detachments in
Saylesville and Woonsocket, driving
back the greatly outnumbered soldiers.
Tear gas, nausea gas and finally bul¬
lets were used to check the rioter.
Lj /CONTINUING its efforts to restore
tlie 1929 markets for farm prod¬
ucts of the Middle West, the State de¬
partment is negotiating reciprocal
trade agreements with live t'entral
American governments—Costa Rica,
Guatemala, Honduras, San Salvador
and Nicaragua. These countries used
to be good customers in purchasing
farm products, especially lard and
wheat flour, hut their imports of these
commodities from the United States
state troops and of
tlie regular army if
necessary; the strike
leaders, flatly rejected
the first peace move
by the industry, de¬
claring it was a “trial
b a 11 o o n,” and the
I’rtesident’s mediation
board gave up the
matter as a had job.
The NRA adminis¬
trator. speaking at a
of code au¬
have fallen off from the total of $5,
940,010 In 1929 to $1,692,001 in 1933.
It Is the announced intention of tlie
administration to negotiate reciprocal
treaties In such a way that markets,
now practically demoralized during the
four-year period between 1929 and
1933, might he revived by perfecting
“favored" trade schedules whereby
products raised in these five Central
American countries, not In competi¬
tion with American products, might he
admitted to this country at lower tar¬
iffs in return for admitting American
products at lower schedules Into the
negotiating countries.
/"v NR of the sharpest thorns in the
Lf side of the Roosevelt administra¬
tion will not be in the next congress
to to the New Dealers.
J. M. Beck
tacks, for he Intends to continue them
in the courts.
“I am not retiring from public life,”
Mr. Beck explains. “This is no time
for any citizen to lessen his activities
in defense of our form of government.
I am retiring from congress because
I believe I can help in this great cause
more effectively in the federal courts,
where 1 have practiced for more than
fifty years, than in congress, where the
minority is gagged and reduced to Im¬
potence.
“Our form of government can only
be saved by restoration of the Repub¬
lican party to power, and 1 hope with
my pen and voice to serve that party
as effectually in the ranks as In con¬
gress.
II7TLUAM A. COMSTOCK lost the
VV Democratic nomination to succeed
himself as governor of Michigan, being
defeated by Arthur J. Iatcey. The Re¬
publicans named Frank B. Fitzgerald,
now secretary of state.
In South Carolina the textile strike
injected itself into the election. In a
runoff election Olin D. Johnston, union
sympathizer and former mill hand, won
the Democratic nomination over Cole
Blease, old school orator and campaign¬
er. Johnson will succeed Gov. Ira
Blackwood, hated by the union as a
“strike breaking governor.” Gov. Ku
gene Talmadge was renominated by
Georgia Democrats.
In Arizona the Democrats renora
tnated Senator Ashurst and Congress
man-at-large Isabelle Greenway. The
New Dealers tried to get the guberna¬
torial nomination in Colorado for Miss
Josephine Roach, coal mine operator
and social worker, but she was beaten
by Edward C. Johnson, the incumbent.
In Washington, also, the New Dealers
lost out when J. C. Stephenson was de¬
feated by Lewis Schwellenhach for the
Democratic senatorial nomination.
npHE 1 ing»to federal government large is of still try
extract a sum money
from Andrew W. Mellon, former secre¬
tary of the treasury and ambassador
to England. The bu¬
reau of internal rev¬
enue has filed with the
federal board of tax
appeals a brief charg¬
ing that Mr. Mellon
owes $3,07 5, 1 03 in
taxes and penalties,
alleging that he inten¬
tionally defrauded the
government of taxes
on his 1931 income by
three bogus stock sales
and by failing to dis¬
close all his 1931 income on his tax
return.
As before, the Pittsburgh millionaire
retorted sharply, accusing the treasury
of unfair and despotic tactics. He
pointed out ttiat two of the three stock
sales which the treasury attacked as
fraudulent were presented to a fed¬
eral grand jury in Pittsburgh this
spring by Attorney General Homer S.
Cummings. Tlie grand jury threw out
the charges as unjustified and “exon¬
erated” Mellon.
Mellon in his statement placed the
responsibility for revival of the old
tax charges on Secretary of the Treas¬
ury Henry Morgenthau, Jr. He dis¬
missed the third stock transaction,
which was mentioned by the treasury
but which was not presented to the
grand jury last spring, as "both trivia)
and fictitious.”
jkyfORE IV1 League than of 30 Nations members invited of Rus¬ the
sia to join the league and the Moscow
government accepted the hid. Tlie next
things on the program were the rati¬
fication of Russia’s admission by tlie
league assembly and her election to a
permanent seat on the league council.
Germany informed the league tiiat
she would not sign the proposed east¬
ern security agreement—tlie “eastern
Locarno"—because she could not risk
the possibility of having French or
Russian soldiers entering the father
land. She, however, declared herself
willing to accept an eastern agreement
embodying the ideas “of collective non¬
aggression obligations and consultation
between interested powers in periods
of political crisis.”
tit LAWSON LITTLE, a husky Sun
VV • Francisco youth, ha3 accom¬
plished the feat of capturing the Iirit
lish and American national amateur
golf championships in one season. This
has been done only twice before. Lit¬
tle easily defeated David Goldman of
[•alias, Texas, In tlie finals of the na¬
tional tournament at Brookline, Mass.
James M. Beck of
Pennsylvania, leading
authority on the Con¬
st i t u 11 o n, has an¬
nounced he will not
seek re-election be¬
cause congress has
become "a rubber
stamp.” He had been
renominated, but pre¬
fers not to run. How¬
ever, the administra
tion will not be re¬
lieved from bis at¬
Andrew Mellon
C ENATOR HUEY LONG won nnn
O dily in his fight for absolute con¬
trol of Louisiana, his candidates for
congress, state supreme court and
public service commissioner defeating
those of the “old guard.” The election
was quite peaceful despite the pre¬
dictions of bloody “civil war." The
Kingflsh is now expected to press his
investigation of graft and corruption
in the affairs of New Orleans and to
undertake to have his arch enemy,
Mayor T. Senimes Walmsley, ousted
from office through action by the leg¬
islature, which he controls. Huey is
now the virtual dictator of the state,
but his opponents have not given up
tlie fight.
I C'OUlt 1 members of the Du Pont
family, Pierre, lrenee, Felix and
Lamont, appeared before the senate
munitions inquiry committee and told
of the huge business the Du Pont
corporation has done in supplying war
material. Between 1914 and 1918 the
company, which was founded in 1802
to manufacture black powder, filled
$1,245,000,000 worth of war orders. In
that time it did about 35 times the
business it had in the year just be¬
fore the World war, when its sales
amounted to $30,000,000.
lrenee du Pont testified that the
corporation subscribed to preferred
stock in tlie German dye patents seized
during the war by the United States.
He said these patents had resulted in
a “great service” to America. The
corporation entered the dye business
after the war as a licensee of tlie
Chemical foundation, Du Pout said.
There did not seem to be anything
very sensational or scandalous in the
facts elicited from the Du Ponts, hut
previous witnesses had told a lot about
the deals of airplane companies and
other corporations with foreign na¬
tions In which it was alleged they had
been aided by United States diplo¬
mats and army and navy officers. There
was a lot, too, about graft on the
part of South American government
officials. One of tlie stories told
brought in tlie name of King George
of England, and ttiis resulted In of¬
ficial protests by British diplomats
both in Washington and in London.
A USTRIA is thoroughly aroused bj
** seemingly authentic reports from
Brussels that former Empress Zita in
tends to establish her residence in Aus
mm
Yrchduke Otto
tion of the monarchy.
Quite unofficially, it is said restora¬
tion of the Hapshurg monarchy would
not be opposed by either France or
Italy, but the British foreign office
scouted the idea. The little entente
nations would be strongly against it
hut might not hold the Vienna gov¬
ernment entirely responsible.
In Vienna a spokesman for the for
eign office said that the return to Aus¬
tria of the Hapshurg family, even as
private individuals, is “still impossi¬
ble."
Some member of the Hapshurg fam¬
ily may be allowed to return to repre¬
sent the family in the long pending
lawsuit over the Hapsburgs' proper¬
ties, he said, but this is not likely to
he Archduke Otto, because of the dan¬
ger that disturbances might result from
his presence. Socialists and labor un¬
ions would surely start trouble.
A Jt EN of Great Britain have no in¬
i’'-* tention or desire of engaging in
any more wars except those of defense.
Representatives of the London Daily
Express asked in 0S9.301 homes this
question:
“Are you in favor of Great Britain
isolating itself from all foreign en¬
tanglements. treaties and understand
ings and refusing to engage its armed
forces in any war unless our territory
or that of our dominions and posses¬
sions is menaced?”
The paper announced that 006,165, or
S7.9 per cent of those voting, replied
“Yes.” Only 13,070, or 2 per cent of
those voting, favored foreign commit¬
ments. Nine and a half per cent re¬
fused to vote, and .0 per cent were
indefinite.
i i tKAIIY of tlie continuous sabotage
VV and assassinations by terrorists,
leading business and financial men of
Cuba have asked President Mendieta
to approve the organization of an
armed band of vigilantes. The plan Is
to issue permits to carry firearms to
all “responsible citizens” who apply
for the privilege. Those issued arms
would hold authority either to arrest
or shoot “terrorists." The plan has
the approval of Col. Fulgencio Batista,
army chief of staff.
'^MATIONWIDE started distribution poster pledging lias been tlie
on a
public to support Blue Eagle business
establishments. Four inches square, it
is gummed for pasting in windows.
Code authorities and local NRA com
mittees are counted upon to aid its
distribution.
This agitation is to accompany the
temporary internal reorganization of
the recovery administration, as decid¬
ed upon by President Roosevelt and
Hugh S. Johnson, the NRA adminis
trator.
Authority is to be split three wayi
instead of the present one-man eon
trol. General Johnson Is expected t<
continue in an important post. Sepa
rate agencies will he In charge o’
policy-framing, administration, and de
ciding controversies.
CLEVELAND COURIER
tria, along with her
eight children, includ¬
ing Archduke Otto,
pretender to the
thrones of both that
country and Hungary.
It was asserted that
this Hapshurg family
had been granted per¬
mission to return as
plain citizens if Otto
would promise not to
seek in any way to
bring about restora¬
Georgia News
Happenings Over the Slate
The Newton county fair opened
recently and continued for one
week. A large crowd attended the
first day.
The 31 Confederate pensioners in
^Lowndes county were given the
state checks this week for the first
half of July pensions.
The bureau of census at Wash¬
ington has reported net sales of the
179 wholesale establishments in
Savannah, Ga., aggregated $54,344,
000 during 1933.
One hundred Savannah citizens
have endorsed a proposal by the
city to purchase the Diamond Match
Company plant in an effort to in¬
duce new industries to go there.
The steel for the master tank
which is to be erected at Valdosta
for the use of Turpentine & Rosin
Factors, Inc., has arrived and con¬
struction work has been started.
A regional conference of the
Georgia Education Association and
the annual high school conference
for the eighth district will be held
in Waycross Tuesday, October 30.
Cedartown overwhelmingly voted
the use of $30,000 of the fund owed
by the Georgia Power Company to
the city of Cedartown toward the
erection of a new municipal hall
at that place.
Fishermen frequenting the lakes
in the Valdosta section report a
few flocks of ducks coming in, the
advance guard of the winter vis¬
itors who escape cold weather on
the lakes in that section.
The tax levy for Henry county
has been set by the commissioners
of roads and revenues at 15 mills.
In addition to the specified 15 mills
a county-wide levy of 5 mills is
made for school purposes.
The treasury department at
Washington announced recently
Murphy Pound, of Columbus, was
low bidder for the contract to ex¬
tend and remodel the federal build¬
ing at Valdosta, at $49,450.
The tax rate for Thomas county
has been fixed for 1934 at 11 mills.
This was done at the regular
monthly meeting of the county com¬
missioners held recently. This
compares with 13 mills for 1933.
Waycross has started the con¬
struction of the FERA meat can¬
ning plant which is to be 54 by 108
feet in size.’ It is located just be¬
yond the packing plant where the
cattle are to be slaughtered. Virgil
C. Parker is in charge of the con¬
struction.
Commissioner C. M. Davis, of
Stewart county, has fixed the tax
rate of the county for the year 1934
at six and one-half mills, and in
addition two mills for public roads
and five mills for the county-wide
school system, making a total of
13 1/2 mills for the county.
Two new members have been
elected to the Muscogee county
commission, complete returns re¬
vealed. N. R. Aldredge, local whole¬
sale merchant, defeated Chairman
Edward Wohlwender for a six-year
term and Sam D. Snelling, farmer
and businessman, defeated Judge
Frank D. Foley.
Public Works Administrator Har¬
old L. Ickes, at Washington, has
announced that a previous loan and
grant of $27,000 to the board of
trustees of the Alma High School
district, Alma, Ga., for construction
of a school building, has been in¬
creased to $31,400 because bids re¬
ceived from contractors showed that
the cost would be higher than esti¬
mated when the allotment was
made.
Mike Benton, president of the
Southeastern Fair and American
Indian Exposition, which opens in
Atlanta September 30 and lasts un¬
til October 7, assures the public
that the exhibits this year will be
better even than heretofore. North
and South Georgia days, Governor’s
day and other features promise to
be greatly enjoyed by the many
visitors in attendance.
“It is not my will to harm any
one, but the citizens of Georgia
must be protected, whether they are
union or non-union, strikers or oth¬
ers,” said Governor Talmadge re¬
cently when he ordered out the
National Guard in the textile strike
regions. An internment camp was
hastily erected at Fort McPherson
to receive about 200 members of
a “flying squadron” who tried to
keep workers from returning to the
mills. A great number have re¬
turned to work.
About 400 head of FERA cattle
shipped into Georgia from the
drouth areas are being slaughtered
daily at the plant of Swift & Com¬
pany here. The canning plant is
expected to begin operating within
the next few days.
A contract for highway improve¬
ment in Chickamauga and Chatta¬
nooga national military park in
Georgia and Tennessee was award¬
ed recently by the park service to
R. B. Tyler Company, of Louis¬
ville, Ky., for $63,130.
Vwwwi IMPROVED
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
Dchool CUNDAY I Lesson
(By REV P. B. FITZ WATER. D. D.,
Member of Faculty, Moody Bible
Institute of Chicago.)
<Q. Western NewsD-aper Union.
Lesson for September 30
REVIEW—GOD IN HEBREW HIS¬
TORY
GOLDEN TEXT—Thy kingdom is an
everlasting kingdom, and thy dominion
endureth throughout all generations.
Psalm 145:13.
PRIMARY TOPIC—The Goodness of
God.
JUNIOR TOPIC—God Working
Through a Nation.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP¬
IC—Discovering God’s Standard for My
Life.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADI LT TOP¬
IC—Lessorrs From Old Testament
Leaders.
The method of review must always
be determined by tlie genius of the
teacher, the aptitude of the pupils, and
the particular grade in tlie school. For
tlie senior and adult classes three
methods are suggested:
I. The Biographical.
During the quarter the following
prophets have figured: Aliijah, Elijah,
Elisha, Micaiah, Amos, Hosea, Micah,
and Isaiah. Assignments of these
characters to representative members
of the class should be made the week
before, so that they may come pre¬
pared to present the vital characteris¬
tics of these men.
II. The Application of the Prophetic
Messages to Modern Life.
Assignments should be made the pre¬
ceding Sunday, so that the members of
the class may come prepared to make
application of tlie vital messages of
the prophets to tlie affairs of modern
life. The following questions may be
considered as representative;
1. What application can be made of
tlie prophets’ teachings as to the land
question in the United States?
2. What bearing do the prophets’
teachings have upon tlie problem of
pauperism? Do they offer a cure for
poverty?
3. What bearing do the messages
of the prophets have upon the prob¬
lem of capital and labor?
4. Do tlie prophets throw ligtit upon
the theological controversies of the
present time?
5. Do the prophets have any mes¬
sage for the modern woman?
0. What word has the prophet bear
Tig on tlie cause of prohibition?
7. Do tlie prophets have any word
concerning modern amusements?
III. The Summary of the Facts and
Teachings of the Lessons.
The following suggestions are of
fered :
Lesson for July 1.
Allijail, in a most striking symbolic
manner, made known God’s purpose to
wrest the kingdom from Solomon and
give ten tribes to Jeroboam.
Lesson for July 8.
In spite of the handicap of idolatry
and immorality fostered by two for
uier kings, Asa did that which was
good and right in the eyes of the Lord
Lesson for July 15.
Because Elijah faithfully declared
God's message to Allah, God niiraeu
Icusly cared for him through a long
famine period.
Lesson for July 22.
Though Elijah faithfully and cour
ageously stood for God in a time of
great distress, he now fled for his life
from Jezebel.
Lesson for July 29.
Johosliapliat sought advice from the
Lord after he had formed an alliance
with Aliab. This should have been
done beforehand.
Lesson for Augu.i 5.
Elisha, in helping tlie widow, de
tnanded the use of that which she had.
The Lord is pleased to use that which
we possess, whether it ho much or lit
tie.
Lesson for August 12.
Formal worship when the heart is
out of fellowship with God is an abomi¬
nation.
Lesson for August 19.
A life of temperance concerns other
things than indulgence in intoxicating
liquors. Our age is intoxicated with
pleasure, love of money, and pride.
Lesson for August 26.
The reign of Jeroboam II was out
wardly prosperous. With ttiis pros¬
perity came luxury, immorality, and
apostasy. Hosea’s message is a vitai
one for our age.
Lesson for September 2.
Those who oppress the poor shall
come £o judgment at the hand of God.
Lesson for September 9.
Tiie only way for a sinning people
to get back to God is around tlie cruci¬
fied Lord Jesus Christ.
Lesson for September 16.
Isaiah presents the consummation of
the redemptive purpose of God in the
establishment of Messiah’s kingdom.
Lesson for September 23.
Hezekiah's behavior shows that tie
dwelling place of God is a sure and
safe retreat for his people in times of
distress.
Something to Live For
Do something worth living for,
worth dying for. Is there no want, no
suffering, no sorrow that you can
relieve? Is there no act of tardy jus
tice, no deed of cheerful kindness, no
long-forgotten duty that you can per
form?
Trustful as Children
The normal child Is instinctively
trustful; and this is one of tlie mean¬
ings of the saying of Christ that his
followers roust become as little cliil
dren.
Housewife's Idea Box
FOR ICE-BOX COOKIES
An ice cream container makes an
excellent mold for ice-box cookies.
Dress your cookie mixture into the
carton firmly. Put on the cover.
Place it in the refrigerator. When
you are ready to bake, tear away the
cardboard and you have a perfectly
shaped cylinder to cut up into
cookies.
THE HOUSEWIFE.
Copyright by Public Ledger. Inc.
WNU Service
Swamp’s Mysteries Now
Hidden for All Time
The dismal Pymatuning swamp
near Espyville, Pa., is disappearing
beneath waters impounded by a mil
lion-dollar state dam, closing it&
secrets to mankind forever.
Natives of this boggy area 25
miles south of Lake Erie insist that
strange monsters, survivors of their
species of an earlier geological era,
roamed in the semi-tropical heart ot
tlie swamp.
Biologists, skirting the fringes oi
its mucky depths, found unknown
plants and animals believed to have
survived the Glacial age. Beautiful
orchids, poisonous reptiles and car¬
nivorous plants abounded there.
Natives say the halt'-rotted hull of
an early Spanish sailing ship lies
deep in the swamp. They say it is
the ship Griffith, abandoned by De
Soto after the expedition up the She
nango river was bogged in the marsli
over 350 years ago.
The Delaware Indians called the
swamp “the dwelling place of the
crooked-mouth man.” They warned
of a “great spirit of many shapes,”
which rose from the swamp with tlie
moon.
White men laughed and began to
explore. Some never appeared again.
Skeptics discounted tlie stories toid
by the few who returned. Soon the
truth will be covered with 5 to 14
feet of water.
Root of Sympathy
One learns to pity others’ woes
from one's own.
MercolizedWax
ffceefts $ksn Young
Absorb blemishes and discolorations usin#
Mercolized Wax daily as directed. Invisible
particles of aged skin are freed and all
large defects such disappear. as blackheads, tan, is then freckles beauti¬ and
fully pores Skin
clear, velvety Mercolized and so Wax soft—face brings looks
years younger. out
your bidden beauty. At all leading druggists.
Wanted Sales Agents. Exclusive territory. Sell
Waterproofing materials, roof coatings and paints
to farms. Domes, factories, utilities, hospitals
Valuable Possession
There is something outward in a
perfectly healthy nature.
Your own druggist is authorized to
if cheerfully refund your money on the spot
you are not relieved by Creomulsion.
MONEY MAKING OPPORTUNITY
for rm-n and women with nationally known
organization selling raincoats, zipper jack¬
ets and all weather coats for men, women,
children Liberal commissions—high qual¬
ity—low prices. Sell friends first—their sat¬
isfaction brings you more customers. We
guarantee fit and satisfaction or money
back. r.ack. All All samples equipment free. Com¬
plete instructions for taking measurements.
Write today for full information about this
pleasant way to make money. Give refer¬
MING-BRQWN ences, experience first ietter. J. B. CUM
CO., ROME, GA.
BEATII SHOT kills all insects. Dilute $1
bottle 40 time 1 *. BEST-UV-ALL PRODUCTS,
305 Dyal-Upcliurch Bldg., .Jacksonville, Fla.
FREE! A BEAUTIFUL PAIR OF LOVE
ly pure silk hose for a few minutes of your
time. Send dime for card and instructions.
B. ANDERSON - - • Columbia, Miss.
POOR COMPLEXIONS
Clogged few pores, pimples improved in
a days effective by Resinol Soap and of the
Resinol medication «
SORE EYES z>r Eye ^ Lotion ,,er J
rel ■elleves and cnreB sore and inflamed
ho
WNU—7 39—34