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EIGHTEEN
COMPLETE LOCAL AND TELEGRAPHIC MARKET REPORTS
CDTTOH TM
Augusta Market
Previous Today*®
clot© opening
Ml DOLING * 1 25 30 50
New York Cotton
Previous V) M
close Open A^M
■luiy. .. —•* “2005 2**6o 22. SO
October 2 ’9 40 29 01
SSSSy r .:v.-::::5S 15:52 »»
Receipts
2 251
Nat receipt® ' 111
Net rece ipt* this day last y**ar . . 257
Sale® today .. .... 997
Shipment® ,■■••• j?n 102
Gross receipt® to c*af<* 420,1 l
Stock
Stock In A u ml*la tyxlay 1,5 •**}
block in Ausuata tbto day la«t yr. ''0.194
Augusta Daily Receipts
f ;w>r srt* Railroad •• *'
Au*n*ta-Alkrn Hallway •• ‘...
C and W C. Hallway I?.'
A C L. Hallway Bz jj
Southern Hallway ~.
Weekly Crop Movement
1919
Receipt* - •••Js*
K k ra,BU .; •
ttamr In uttfhl Itl'VA
Crop In Right 2'iiS’Zl!
VUIbU supply
NEW YORK COTTON
New York^—Th« cotton market showed
further ncrwHunwn «nd very irregular
fluctuation® during todxy'H early trading
The opening wan If* to 31 point® lower
tinder a renewal of yesterday** welling
movement which wa® promoted l.v weak ,
rabies. but the Initial break to 30 50 for
July ®nd 28.60 for October attracted a
good deal of covering and some fresh buy
ing on tip* unfavorable weather In the
oiufttern belt and the firmer opening of the
slock market. Uallie® of neveral point®
folinw«*d by liquidation continued active
and the market later rated off again with
the tom* unset tied.
'Hu* weekly report of the weather mi
rmui wa* bullish but proved a Mlgnal for
renewed liquidation and failed to inspire
any freah buying of consequence. I Tices
broke sharply a® n resuH with July sell
ing off to 30 20 and October to 29.15 with
active month® showing loasea of 71 to
116 points from last night's dosing fig
ures Tills made u decline of between
£6O and .'HO points from recent high levels
and the market later was less active with
prices showing rallies of several point® on
covering*
NEW YORK COTTON
f'otton future* opened steady. July
' H’tots r 29 65; Docomoer 28.44; Jan
uary 29.25.
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
New Orleana —Tin* price of cotton broke
712 to 119 points or about $6 a bale on the
weakest months In the first hpur of trad
Ing today. Tin- decline was almost
wholly due to the break In New York,
during the holiday here, and the slump
in Liverpool today before the American
markets opened
The selling movement gained freah
headway following the weekly crop re
port* cm the% claim by bearish trader®
that the reports wire not as unfavorable
as exported The decline was wldeened to
it?, to Ml point* At noon it" tons wa®
stwtdler and the active month® wars 40
t*> I*o point* up from the lowest.
NEW~ORLEANS COTTON
«Y*tton opened steady July 30 60; Oc
tober 29 to; December 28.75; January
28 38; March 28 16
LIVERPOOL COTTON
Liverpool.-—Oof lon spot, quiet; prices
easy
Good mtddTtng ... ~..20.85
Kully middling 20.45
Middling 19.86
Isnw middling . .18.30
«i»*o*l ordinary ...16,66
Ordinary 16.12
Solon 7.000 bale®, hichidtng 6.200 Am
erica A; receipt® 17,000 bales. including
11. Out) American Futures closed easy
JiitM 19.24
July 18 so
September ••«.« .... .... 18.03
October 17.80 ;
January . M «. 17.28 '
March ...... ». M 17.01 ’
CHICAGO GRAIN
MAY QUOTATIONR.
lYrvloii* Today’*
dose opening Noon 1
C«m .......... 171 1 7t1% l 70% ]
<>*t» .. .. 99'?, 85 US'S,
I.urrt 33 07% 33 02% I
Rllw .28. MS 38 00 28 JO 1
CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET ;
CMe ago, lll,—Corn today lacked the |
®tvu< which has characterised the market i
of mt«- Opening prices which ranged <
frt*m tha MiaiH i® y< it i ' iit i j nlsh to
low*** with July $1 70V* to 11.70*4 sml |
mbrr 11.41 1 * $162 wen • ....
4r moderate decline® all around.
Oats wore «*ff with corn
Ibvwisiofts deeding! with grain and hogs. <
I*tU W • i* I •
NEW YORK STOCK MARKET
N«*w Y©r* —All tr?m'«*h of tha excited
riewtHur* which character!***! yesterday**
MNMton wore lacking- at the owning of
Itw* Ht«*rk market tod*> Starting off
ftw majority of vliMnv showing a
«torM«<t upward tendency. the Hat aoon
cxtHWtod greater atrenrth all around,
wtfh the rW i»nmo»»nerd in now* 1 of the
NHI P *«•'■
ora CVntral I author. Heading. Southern
Pacific. Utah American Wool-n,
Omolrieh American l/KHiinotlVi» and Am-
International 1 to 6
MMhUk Tobacco* were hr avy an worn
Urthhham Steel and Mercantile Marine*
LIVE STOCK MARKET
*T. Locn CATTtr, SHFF.P AND HOQ
«ECf IPTS.
Loun, Mo,—ling* Roreiipta n.MM;
Tjgtiio t'lpnrr so.is
»*!«» ISOMW Wo#
Hoavy SO SR«tf ”0 40
<'at tSo Ttreetj.i* ;*00; alend
n*» »< ibvit ii r,r»H i« so
Hotter* '■Mlrtlfiml
Oow* —— MiOuf IS SO
R*o.-k*r» inoo«* ISM
BtxH-t* n<-o»tpti> SM>O, pn>*|>erot*
fltwnvr
... .is. Mas ts"s
»»«• ;n.«t» i« so
CHICAOO CATTtr AMCC* AND MOO
RECEIPT#.
£fctc*e«, itt. H i H<wipt« -sooo
mark.* atnndv to loe higher with re«ter
>tay‘» tsmwnil average: tup f?n r,t,
lit elk |.'o •o.tfp «s
np "•••■ U SSte is no
OS tin Receipt* »(W beef meer* an,l
hartcber ater ntcck. «U’W. bulla .Irmly t,
■krona, ••«!»>•*. Klondv
tWf atror*.
mealtufn end
heavy wight J 4 TSfl 1« -S
Medhtm ... lt.TSff 14 T 5
Vaal calve* .„ 14 004* 11*1
SW*. Blonrg to 0041 jjj#(i
!AH*e#ier Miner* , T ?f. • 1? S*
K4w*w> ItecefpiK IthOPO about
team- |
RprWi.
FUNERAL RIOTICI
UUCP—JVNK 4TH IN TllUi riTV
Mil* MKItIAHAII ntWlNn Kum-ral
*ervtce* TOMORROW iThtiredav >
MORNING. |0(»0 o'clock at Rlllntt'a
Funeral Home Interment In the t'lty
araKrrs u
THE DAiRY MARKET
CHICAGO BUTTEr’aND POULTRY
RECEIPTS.
Chicago, lll—Butter, lower; creamery,
4 8 ft r,i Uj C .
Hggs, lower; receipt*, 34,391 ca*"B,
firsts. 37*7 38c.
1 Poultry, alive, lower; fowl®, 29%c.
COTTONSEED OIL
New York.—Cottonseed oil Tin sday was
act Ivo with considerable Irregularity In
1 quotations Forward deliveries were
sharply higher early on buying by the
west and hrok«Tß who trade for the south,
but some reaction billowed when cotton
weakened. Final prices were 125 point®
higher to 25 point* lower. Sales, 3.600
barrel®. Prime crude. 20.00; prime sum
mgp yellow. y,pot 24.75. September 26.25;
October 26.27. December 24 80
SUGAR AND COFFEE
New York. —Raw sugar unchanged at
7 28 for centrifugal; refined, 9 cents for
line granulated
'dry goods
New York.—Bleached cottons Tuesday
advanced. Gray cotton goods markets
were qulter Silk trade was good. Be
tween H« asons in men’® wear fabric®, mill®
well sold.
THE WEATHER
Washington, D. C.—Forecast for Wed
nesday and Thursday:
Georgia and South Carolina: Probably
showers tonight and tomorrow.
Weather Data.
Highest temperature yesterday. 81.
Lowest temperature this morning, 70.
Precipitation yesterdav, 0
River stage at 8 m., $5; fall In twenty
four hour® ending 8 a m., 0.3
Moon tonight s<*t ;it 1:23 a. rn.
PRODUCE AND LIVESTOCK
Tho AiifijPtfi Stork Ynrrlx ftuoto* hopii,
«•*<!'■ "t"! <-alv«.H to,lay a* follow*:
HfKlfi -fOim-fed) — p*r. I.b
Si venty-flvo pound* and up.. 14 ifnir,
CATTI.B—Hoof A pork on hoof—
fommon 8 m 7
Ordinary 8%4, 9%
“•aT.vks- "
Ordinary Kt^f9 9V4
2 n '" 1 13 4*13
rancy 14 fjjs
PROVISIONS MARKET
(forrrctrd hy Murphiy A <’o.)
Moat l>. S. ray iilatrn, 8-lb av $ 27 %
Oat.«—*>rd oata 92
Meal- Waterijround, 100 lb* 4on
WaterKroiind, f.O lb* 2 05
Flour Fancy, pat . aelf-rlafntt .... 12.50
High patent, plain 11X11
Com -No. 3. white 2.10
Hayl No 1 Timothy. lon 48.00
t'ottoneeed feed meal 48.00
Chicken feed, 100-Ib ban* 3XO
Cottonseed hulls 20.00
STOCKS AND BONDS
Rsllroad Stocks.
Bid®. Asked
A. and W P U R. Co 140 150
Chattahoochee and Gulf U. It. 92
Southern Hy., common 31 33
Southern Hy., preferred stock 71 72
Georgia IMI At Banking C0..220 232
Bank Stocks.
Bids. Asked
National Kxchange Bank of
Augusta 140 115
Planters Loan & Havings f 10) 40 15
f'ltlxens Ac Houtnern Bank . . .226 . 260
Merchantc Bank ..ISO IHS
Union Kvgs , par value $110..150
STOCK QUOTATIONS
(Ftartilahed by f>oremua and Company.)
Previous Today's
close opening Noon
A F mil* 104V4 1..5T4
Anaconda . . . . f,9Xx 59%
Hal. Loco. .. ..104 102 103
H and 0 53% 53% t.»%
Canadian .... 57 58 57%
Mrle 18% 18% 18%
<l. M. O .. .21(1 216 219%
<1 N 0 16% 45% 45%
11. ft Steel .. .107 107 107%
M N. I* 1*9% 190 192
Marine 44 11% 46
M y no 119% 122
North Pac. 98 s , 98% 98%
R. U. ...... *7 89 90%
Rock Ixlaml 29% 29% 29%
South llwy. 91% 91% 92
T X o .. .276% 277 273
Pn. Pac . .. 133% 133% 133%
»’• 0 37% 37% 37%
H I. y 124% 123 125%
col. Mcelroy dead.
Aahevlll*, N. C.—-Colon**l John A. Mc-
Klroy. former commander of the Six
teenth North t'aroJinn regiment. Confed
‘*r*te nrmy, died ut hi* home In M tdl
hoh county thin morning nt the age of
eighty-four.
WATERMELONS
Ttiln bureau ■ ninkiiy a atioeial com-
PJWII «o lak.. rare of tlir tnoltm bu.lmuw
thin year \Vt are in touch with the car
load btiyrra of thla country, ami arc now
llatluft onroad shippers of mdona. In
order to carry thin plan to a micccsaful
conclusion, we should have the name of
every carload shipper of melons In Ocor-
Kla- ,
If you arc Interested In the melon bual
ne«H. write ua ylvtny acreaye planted, va
riety, probable yb-ld, and approximate
date you will be prepared to ship
It Is essential that more attention be
paid to yalberlny, yradiny and loadny
than ever before. If you need Informs*
tlen. aaK ua
The ahtpptny season Is now on us -no
time should hr lost. Write us at once,
and also tell your friends to do so.
Address all mail to State Htireau of
Markets. State t'apltol, Atlanta. Oa.
FARMERS’ ATTENTION
COOPERATIVE SELLING OF HOGS
Clemton Coll#o» The Animal llua
hnndry IHvtwion of th* Rxtension Ser
vlet* la giving «»ut a loiter to farmer* in
the Interest .of cooperative hog market
ing The letter given in suhatanco be
low urge** that farmer* aid In thla good
wx*rk by notifying the agent* a* to the
number of hog* they expect to have for
*Hle next fall
The campaign carried on by the Kx
tcnxlon For<e* of the Department of
Agriculture for an Increane In the
amount of ftnttl printu« »*d mi the Amerl
*an Farm, together with the necessity
tnevltatde urrtxal of the 801 l Weevil, the
IncreoHed coat t»f production and unwtt
i*factor> price of cotton, have created a
marked increase in the number and qual
ity of swine over the *tate of South
t aroltna
i»ne of the grwate*t drawback* to the
*wtm* tmtuHtry In South Carolina In
the imat ha* been the problem of mar
keiing M tuy farmer* with a *urpiu*
animal* for aale have found It alrnont
tmtxv*atblc to di*po*e of them atid are
dtacourujged and feel that there in no
market for their hog* and no future for
the buain*** Thl* t* a mistake, for
j there ar»* a number of the beat market*
! In the United Stale* to which we can
j whip, ntul price* are a* high a* at any
lime in the hltttnry of the country Mow-
I ever, to realise the greatest net return*
; H ** ne» e**ary to whip in carload lot*,
j winch few farmer* In thi* aection are
i prepared t,> do
To relieve thl* condition a number
■ ‘*ounty Agent* In the State have
| adopted the plan of cooperative ahlp-
I ping where a (urge number of farmer*
; with one or more hog* get together and
*htp * carload Thowe whipping have
realixcd thrw to four cent* above the
] prkre on their Iwnl market* Tht*
( Ptethod ha* been m> very *\icce**f\il that
I «*ount> Agent* arv imping and plan
! nlng to make a number of ahtpmrnt* next
fall and winter They w tnh to atmw the
practicability Of the plan, the vata* of
cooperation, and the profit* which th*
huiUnea* hold* out to farmer*
i k. *” 1 County Agent* need to
Know the nsmss of those e\peetlt\.r to
I tinvr surplus stork for twle. together
with tbs approximate nunibsr of head
I Karmere who .Xpert to have mu- or
j mors hoe* for aalr m-vi fall or latrr In
tho winter should notify i-ounty ayente
I now This Information will oot bo ,-on
* aldorod blndlnc on thr farmera
MARKET GOSSIP
Report® over Doremus Ac Co.’® private
wire®; t
Reading earned $5.71 a share on com
mon stock Ip J9IS against $4.96 in 1917.
Beading bank< rn iri conference on plan
to furnish financial aid to European
countries appoint committee of five to
study problem® and report to large com
mittee later tentatively proposed to co
ordinate America’s combined resources.
Director General Hines outlines railroad
merger plan whereby road® would be
consolidated into from 12 to 20 great ®y®-
tem’s under government control that will
attract private capital and afford protec
tion to weaker r'»ad®.
Gall money at 11 per cent third time
since federal reserve system ha® been
operating
W’HHhington hears that Villa ha® cap
tured Chihuahua city also that Japanese
Interests have purchased one million
acre® of land southeast of Tampico.
James A. Stillman succeed® Frank A.
Vanderllp cm president of National City
Bank. Vanderllp to continue In directo
rate® of various corporations and bank®.
Strike in Toronto end® while general
"trike In western Canada extend® to Van
couver tying up the city.
McKJroy Cotton--We Intend to watch
the market from day to day to discover
the point at which we may again ad
vise buying hy our frl* nd®. Further de
cline seems to be ahead and may be hast
ened hy unloading of stubborn long® with
big profits who now see them vanishing.
Liverpool duo 29 to 34 lower, opened ir
regular at 41 to 60 point® off at midday
market wa® barely steady at. a net de
cline of 34 to 40 point®. Spot cotton
quiet at 51 points off: middling 19.35;
sales 7.000, including 6,000 American®.
Weather - Showers continued yesterday
in the southern states, the Mississippi and
Missouri vallle® and the plain states.
Temperature® were high In the Ohio val
ley, lower. Michigan, the lower lake reg
ion and the Atlantic state® and consul«-
erably lower below Ihw normal between
the MHfli®::]ppl river and the Rocky Moun
tains and in the west portions of Ne
braska tind Kansas Local showers will
continue today and probably Thursday in
the east gulf and South -Atlantic states,
and occasional shower® are prrbable In
the lower Ohio valley. Fair weather is
forecast for Texas cotton.
J. W. Jay At Co. —Today’s decline ha®
placed th- market In a better technical
position, although we believe there Is
more liquidation to come.
Orv'l* Bros. Ar Co -Large declines are
not likely to be sustained.
Hubbard Bros. Ac Co. —We do not be
lieve that the market can stand a period
of dry. warm weather, but it will remain
very sensitive to change® In weather con
dition®.
H M Weld Ar Co.- -We suggest buying
on such Hharp setbacks a® occurred to
day.
Weld Ac Go ’s traveler wired from Han
Antonio- Route Austin to .San Antonio
crops very Irregular and spotted. Cotton
from two to ten Inches high, mostly from
4 to 6 inches. • Considerable grassy and
weedy field® owing to cold wet weather,
stands Irregular, some poor; some good;
some replanting necessary. Weather un
favorable, cold cloudy, light scattered
showers.
Stock® Irregularity and cross currents
are expected a® a result of the wave of
profit taking and call money a flurry. A
composite of expert opinion Indicates that
advances may he confined to a few spe
cialties during the correction of technique
through recessions. There seems to be no
lack of confidence a* to the attraction®
of food, steel and railroad issues during
reactionary activities. More liquidation
Is reported pending In the motor and oil
group® on account of further loan calling
In th*' banking campaign to cure market
excesses. The labor situation is regarded
in some quarters as unsettling again.
PREFERRED DEATH BEFORE
CAPTURE BY BOLSHEVIKI
Omsk, Siberia.—A thread of suffering
runs through the stories told by refugees
from all parts of European Russia, hun
dreds of thousands of whom have found
asylum here. Almost all of them tied
from Bolshevik terrorism. They tell of
(murder of the members of their families,
i deprivation of property, savage treat-
Ivnont. hunger and terrible hardship of
their flight from Bolshevik bandits.
Th correspondent of Th*- Associated
Press talked with a number of these refu
gee* in order to learn their adventure*.
Several cases came to light in which
girls unable to escape before the ap
proaching Bolshevlkl shot themselvr*
rather than fall into the hands of the
terrorists. The wife of a Russian colo
nel now ut Omsk said to the correspond
ent :
"We lived a life of comfort and con
tentment on our land not fur from Sa
mara. Warned by our j»easants, we tied
across the hills hidden in a farm cart.
My cousin, a girl of IS. thought she could
not escape, took a revolver from the desk
in her drawing room and shot herself
through the head because she knew what
her fate would be. You can understand
why It j® difficult for us to believe in
Bolshevism.”
i Till* preference for death rather than
| apture by Bolshevism seems to be prev
alent among the young women and girls
of former well-to-do families of Euro
pean Russia, who are now in Omsk. The
wife of an assistant minister of state
and her sister, a girl of 25, fled from
Bessarabia The -irl said with quiet
Russian fatalism: "If the Bolsheviki suc
ceed in getting to < >ni®k 1 shall shoot my
self.**
Some stories tell of the famine which
existed in the district of the Ural moun
tain* When a relief train arrived at
Kalina, not far from Perm. It was sur
rounded by children hogging for bread. A
man of 72 years wa* so overcome when
he received a loaf of bread that he faint
ed and two little children, when given
bread, became Insane from sudden joy.
The refugees tell of several cases In
which peasants murdered the proprietors
of the land upon which they lived in
order to obtain possession of the farms,
i>n the other hand some of th© i»ea®unts
imperilled their own lives to help th©
landholders to escape from th© Bolshe
vik!
New York—Cotton goods today w©re
quieter than at the ©nd of lad wetk
but price* wore firm. Yarns advanced.
Burlap® were firm and some alight ad
vance was reported Raw silk was
higher with demand steady. J 4>bcrs
reported good mall orders.
A Bear That Noah Didn’t Know
MHIMtfPI
1 - ■■'■'■■« *'■ ■ -«
Noeh rmiet have ha.l a grudge agal net the K;,,*ia Hear, for her aun t even
mention. ,t a* at e.g Ihoa.- prer.nt at Ihe fantou* Ark party It* bear I y poaalht*
he «a* a iner, *tuw»w»y Anyway M a.tge Kennedy divided It trei high time
in •"'•*•« for hi* nmt pi.'ture. and t» grooming him
''"*' hrr in the tiling. ll« hal I* from Auntraiia. where he n been In hid
tuc wiu« the Ararat •piavu«.
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
WILD SCENES IN N. Y,
STOCK EXCHANGE
New York.—The~ stock market experi
enced Tuesday one of the wildest ses
sion* the exchange ha® known since the
days of the "war bride” boom. An ad
vance in call money rates after noon to
11 per cent, a new high figure since the
establishment of the federal reserve
banks precipitated a sharp break in
; prices, th** selling stampede continuing
j almost uninterrupted!v until the close.
Some of the stocks which have been spec
ulative favorites dropped from 3 to 20
point®.
The turnover was more than 2,000.000
shares, 600,000 of which changed hands
during th* final hour, congesting the offi
cial reporting facilities, to such an extent
that it. was 28 minutes ester th** closing
time when the last sale appeared on the
ticker tape®.
There were unconfirmed reports that
another so-called "money committee”*
would he created with a view to curbing
the speculative tendencies which, during
the past few months, have aided in car
rying quotations steadily upwards
The rate on Industrial collateri.nl rose
to 10 per cent late Tuesday, but this cir
cumstance %<1 not deter professional
traders from continued Hpeculation and
several of the leading bank® called loans
in large amounts, causing the quick ad
vance in the rate on mixed collateral.
Several financial houses with specula
tive proclivities recently have added
I largely to their loans and have been art
| vised hy federal reserve hank managers
to reduce these commitments on the
| ground that the situation was becoming
: undesirable. Record-breaking prices have
been reached in recent weeks, and th 6
{market had been declared in some Quar
| ter* to be in a sensitive position.
H!B IMS
st pm intis
San Salvador, Republic of Salvador. —
marines nave been landed at
Punta Arena® and Port Linion, Bosta
Rica, because of the revolution against
the government, headed by General Tin
oco, according to dispatches printed in
newspapers here.
The revolution in Costa Rica has b 'en
going on for the past two month®. Forces
said to have been recruited from politi
cal exile® formed band® along the Nica
raguan frontier near Lake Nicaragua and
advanced southward, clashing on several
occasions with forces commanded by
Joaquin Tinoco, Costa Rican minister of
war. The fighting ha® been restricted
almost entirely to the mountainous coun
try near the Nicaraguan border, although
recently skirmishes further south have
been reported.
The situation 1® quite obscure owing
to the fact that reports from Costa Rica
have been of a conflicting nature. Punta
Arenas is a port on the Pacific coast of
Costa Rica and is the Pacific terminus
of the railroad extending over Costa
Rica to Port Limon, which is on tho
South Atlantic side of the country.
As Last! Proper
Clothes For Aida
After ten year* of study Mme. Johanna
Kristoffy Onesti, Polish prima donna, has
determined the correct costuming of Aida,
the leading role in Verdi's opera of the
same name.. It is a radical departure
from the tiger skin or the transparent
open skirt of the Egyptian court. The
new costume is combined Kgyption and
I£thiopian with sufficient beads to point
out Aida's early life in th© wilds.
SPAIN NAMES ENVOY.
Madrid. —The Spanish government has
Instructed Alejandro Bereay Rodrigo, the
consul at New Orleans to represent Spain
officially hi connection with the celebra
tion of the anniversary of the discovery
of tho Mississippi
WOMEN TESTIFY AT «
HENRY FORD TRIAL
Mount Clement, Mich. —Three women,
wive* of soldiers who joined the colors
Thus tiny CAPSULES
ire superior to Balsam
L of Copaiba, Cobsbs or
■ Injections,and s N
■ RELIEVES In (MIDVI
■ 24 HOURS ttw V— /
" same diseases with
out kieoneenience.
Sold by mil druwuts.
fsANTA?
I CAPSUUS
I for service on the Mexican border in
1916. testified Tuesday for Henry Ford
in his $1,000,000 libel suit against the
i Chicago Tribune. They were Mrc. Ma-
I be! Richards, Mrs. Floyd Bertraw* and
Mrs. Gertrude Baker.
i Mrs. Baker, admitting on cross-exam-
I ination that Bhe had lied to get her
) husband out of the army under the de
| pendency law. asserted that the ends of
Doings of the Duffs :. : By Allman
THE CHIEF DIDN’T SEE THE AD UNTIL LATE THAT EVENING.
[ OLIVIA,VW HAV A 3 VJELL Dt3 Ml33 Th. 3 TDI * AU-TUft JUN* SOMtOF
AOVEPTISIIJG FOB A HD3OAXID -
fPOM VoURMINO (?IS«T NOW- ITS r 1 El TReSE 01005 SEND '**
SWM WOICUUM 4XIO tom is IMA ( S H AND TkeS EXPECT
RACE OVER IT - , i nW fl TS FAUL FOR IT - This
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ier worn roofs with
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the chemist’s prescription for metal roofing and siding. Magnesia Coat
ing is especially adapted for roofs. Universal Coating is a low cost mate
rial for creosoting and general preservative purposes.
Come in; let us show you with a pencil how cheaply
and profitably you can protect your property .
CAREY BUILDING MATERIALS
Asbestos Built-Up Roofs
eitex Asphalt Felts
Elsstite Expansion Joint
85% Magnesia Covering*
Theß. 0. CAMPBELL COAL CO.
DISTRIBUTORS
GENERAL BUILDING SUPPLIES AND COAL
Pee Gee House Paints, Stains, Enamels, Fillers, Varnishes, Etc.
E2A-232 Marietta Street ATLANTA. CA.
justice sometimes requier a lie, and add
ed. ‘‘Uncle Ham does not always tell the
truth, either.”
The husbands of each of the women
were Ford employes and two of them
testified that they began to receive re
lief payments from the Ford educational
department about a month after mobili
zation of the guard.
On cross-examination, Attorney Wey-
AND REPAIR MATERIALS
saves monet) for 9011
No matter how threadbare, scaly and tat
tered your composition roof may be, Carey
Fibre Coating will fill the pores, seal every
crevice, lay the scales, build up a heavy body
of asphalt coating and give you a reborn roof,
good for many years of first-class service, and
absolute protection to your property. It
amounts to a new roof on an old foundation.
• Noahs Pitch is a plastic plugger for all
kinds of leaks in all kinds of roofs. Carbon
Paint is for heated metal surfaces, boilers,
smoke-stacks, etc. Black Asphalt Paint is
Asphalt Pitch
Wall board
Roofing Paints
Insulating Papers
Aaphait Built-Up Roofs
Asfaitslate Shingles
Carey Flexible Cm’t Rfg.
Fibre Coating for Roofs
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4
mouth Kirkland, for The Tribune, con
tinued to emphasize that for a month
after their husbands left, the women re
ceived nothing from the company, but
none of them confessed any resentment
jat the delay, although it was admitted
that their resources were slender while
heir husbands, who in civilian life re
ceived $5 a day, were absent with th*
colors.
Fib crock Asbestos Felts
Asbestos Materials
Roll Roofings
Damp-Proofing Comp’d*