, ' '"" ' "; '
THE WILMINGTON DISPATCH, TUESPAY AERNOONjUNE 19 1917:-
PAGETRRED
iyr-fTTh. sv: If Uhll'lIllllT Til , linrin nmrn linn I
tXV AMI WrXH RWmi d"u "ffiWfc1" iiiiuii unuu iuu 3g
Only Knew I :
You
,i:i;,iWC Flowing Tresses Are The Prnn- HflrW PI INC S : .'V?
Mr-.
on
-
Tii'
ill'
ill-' 1
dan;'1' !
in-"'"
frit" II
V P-
te: ' 1
?i!' r
ter- "
Mi-
r.-iiirii''
y. i Hart has gone to Park
ui be a guest of relatives.
55- w
i; J. Bunson, of Florence, S.
-iiing Mrs. W.-: Copeland,
i. Fourth street.
X- -X- -X-
.. K. Taylor left this morn
i mgaw, where she "will spend
th:vs with friends.
x- -x-:),
lies' Aid Society of St. Mat-
iheran church will meet at
ii tomorrow afternoon at 4
-X- -x-l.rola
Johnson and little
Miss Cora Lee, of Kerr, re
,i i heir home this morning,
ruling several days witlJ
-A" W W
iiwson Conekin and son, Mas
of St. Petersburg, Fla.,
s of Mrs. R. P. Russell, on
ERS' ARE
NSEssiof Ire
Execuive Committee Gather
ed to Formulate Plans For
M.
! !i, lma Anderson, of Raleigh,
m licr liome this morning,
-itiug friends and relatives
tf'ti days.
Ao Walters, of
in her home this
n. -tiding several weeks
iji relatives.
Concord,
morning,
in the
Vy ;.;:.! Mrs. Icighton Boon, of
i i.i-r . "; . are guesis 01 iir. Boon s
i i .3 11 T T f T
ja!t:! . mi. aim wis. jj. lj. xioon,
on Nin it Soventn streec. .
r r
Mr ii Johnson h,as gone to
! C. to spend a period with
!!.. h -i lie win De away trom
fci-
h-
let-
two weeks.
f -
c. H. Albro has returned
lizalit th City and Scotland
. itriv bhe visited friends" and
r, T i V t
are
lieU. Oil
-X-
. C'-orgo -P. Russell and young
T'n ir,:is, of East Orange, N. J:,
1' !'
:! M ;
to spend some time with her
Mr. and Wrs. E. C. Bessel
Aun street.
- .Vws ana iJDserver: "Mr.
. J. V. Bunn and little Nan-j
;s ( ity, ana iir. ana Mrs. t.
Zcbulon, have gone to
for a week."
To formulate and man-out nTans nt
the new organization, the executive
committee of the North Carolina Land
Owners' Association, formed at a
gathering of land owners of eastern
North Carolina here on April 19th
are in session at the Chamber of
Commerce today. Ex-Congressman
R. N. Page, a large land owner of
Briscoe, N. C, is acting cnalrman of
the 'meeting amf made an interesting
address to the committee this morn
ing. Members of the executive commit
tee who are gresent are Mr. H. L.
Finkelstaedt," of Bolton; W. F. Aber
ly, of New Bern; -H. C. McQueen,
Hugh MacRae and M. W. Jacobi, of
this city, and Mr. Clement S. Ucker,
vice president of the Southern Settle
ment and Development Company, of
Baltimore.
Most important of the matters dis
cussed this morning was that of util
izing me nunareas of thousands of
acres of idle land in Eastern North
Carolina and tick eradication in
this section of the country, a matter
that has come ill for much attention
among the farmers and cattle growers
recently.
The session- at the Chamber of
Commerce will likely last all afternoon.
Flbying Tresses ire The Prop
er 1 hing, 1 his Summer, says
Margaret Mason.
(Written by Margaret Mason for The
- United Press.)
There was a little girl, ,
'And she hadn't any curl,
Her hair was lank and straight and
simply horrid.
She saved up her pay,
Had a lasting wave one day,
'And now it curls all round her forehead.
New Organization. -A .ai: n'Jf?
ij. KJL IUC UUUUUU1K UI11UW VUU
had better get busy and see the gink
who puts the kink
WINTER OATS SHOULD
BE SAVED FOR FEED.
o
K'tt'ie Sandlin, the 12-year-old
r ot" Mr. Ed. Sandlin, of No.
ket street, has been ill sev-
Washington, D. C, June 19. Farm
ers in the South who have winter
oats of good quality are urged to save
them for seed rather than to feed
them. This crop winter-killed very
generally over the South last winter,
and specialists of the United States
Department of Agriculture say the in
dications are that the seed supply
will be very short. Many counties in
the Southeastern States will have to
purchase all their seed from other
enl dayt of appendicitis, friends will realities, and those favored sections
: -: t 1 1) learn. ' where a partial or full crop was pro-
1 duced should, save every available
I bushel to meet this demand. Farm
ers -are urged 'to feed corn or other
grain to work stock or to purchase
Northern-grown spring oats for feed
ing in order to save, the winter oats
for sowing.
Because of the scarcity of winter
oats of good quality those who have
?M'ni:iy's Asheville Times: "Miss them are quite sure to profit by sav-or-in
: Cofiin, of Birmingham, Ala., ' ing them for seed rather than feed-
"i- Mary Wright Taylor, of Wil-j ing them. Farmers who do not know
ffiiicii:'). arrive Tuesday to be the where they can sell oats should com
or MLss Hilda Conyers at her muniate with their county agent, the
I'o- - on Cumberland circle. Miss j director of their State experiment sta
Mi t(,i Jiutt, Miss Miriam Parker jtion, or R. A. Oakley, chairman, Com
ar.fi .Mi Sarah Mellon, all of Char- j mittee on. Seed Stocks, United States
Department of Agriculture, Washing
ton, D. C. Present indications are
that there will be a ready market for
all good seed o fthis crop this year.
in the flowing
tresses. Ocean waves and permanent
waves certainly do fine team work
and there is nothing like the joy of a
woman who sees the water and her
hair ripple at one and the same time.
I remember getting my first hand
I hearing of a permanent wave (and 1
use the verb hearing advisably, since
this permanent wave seemed all sound
wave to me) in a St. Paul beauty par
lor when my nymph of the shampoo
explained to me the meaning of the
muffled shrieks' coming from a rear
room. A patron was having a perma
nent wave, she said, and it was an
extremely painful ordeal that lasted
from five to six hours.
My, how times have changed. Now
you can get a perfectly good lasting
wave in three hours and the victim no
longer-shrieks she just moans gent
ly. It certainly is worth suffering for
when you emerge from the torture
chair and your tresses are released
from their electric coils of sizzling
heat to fall in natural coils of undu
lating beauty about your pain-furrowed
brow. And to think they will
continue to coil for six long months,
no matter how11 many days it rains
or how many baths you indulge in,
Be Sure You Take Right Kind
of Iron Acid Iron Mineral,
Nature's Remedy the Best
Don't Take Alcohol it Injures
Kidneys.
"I 'climb into my clothes these morn
ings with a hearty appetite speeding
me to the breakfast table. Your little
old nerves, all smoothed out by Acid
i Iron Mineral, seem to shout their hap
piness at the return of the old vitality
and reserve ' energy. It is common
sense too. When you recall the solid,
substantial meals eaten a few years
ago and compare them day after day
with what we now eat, it is no wonder
a fellow begins to get pale around the
gills, and sort of loses interest in
things.
"A cold drink of 'coke' or dope will
now and then put you back for an hour
or so, but to take good old medicinal
iron in big. .quantities gives you the
'stay-there' feeling. In Acid Iron Min
eral, you get the most iron per dollar.
Irrjiact a dollar bottle lasts from two
to ten times as long as other and weak
er iron .remedies which often, as not
contain alcohol which everyone knows
has only a temporary effect and always
dongerous reaction when taken in ex
cessive quantities.
. Give Your Blood a Real Cleaning.
Start taking a teaspoohful of Acid
Iron Mineral (natural iron) aftereach
meal for aeek or ten days. Get out
in the airmd draw in a few great big
mouthfuls of ozone, set the alarm for
early and see how sound the sleep gets,
and how refreshed and full of vim you
feel on getting up. Everybody needs
iron. Here it is. Non-alcoholic, non
injurious, helpful and beneficial to
blood, kidneys, stomach and bladder, it
is death to germs, uric acid, and other
That you could save from $3.00 to $5.00 on a
suit, you'd take time to do it, wouldn't you? WeU
that's just what you can do, by spending a few
minutes in this store. There is a reason. The
"Belk Stores' are the -largest buyers of men's
popular priced clothes in the South. We buy only
frorn the best manufacturers, but the quantity we
buy gives us the advantage in the price. Sounds
reasonable, doesn't it? Then the next time you
want a suit just step hvhere for a few minutes and
see what we can do for you. '
$10.00 Palm Beach Suit, light or dark
shades, made -up by high grade tailors
and guaranteed fo fit correctly. Longs,
stouts and regulars, at
$8.50 Palm; Beach Suits in natural
shades only. Plain or pinch back model.
All regular sizes, at
tub or ocean, or how many strokes ofbl?.d Poisons. Begin by phoning or
noon
fa::'
F!or
5!!'l
"A- -X-
Quincy B. Satchwell, of Flor
C, is here to attend the Pe-
iloii wedding tomorrow after
She is a guest of her mother,
M. A. Hayden, on North Sev
:n "t.
Vi-!
ire expected to arrive Friday
Mis Conyers."
SAVE THE FRUIT CROP
-'.- -Stand ard of Purity- r 1
I r SUbARRCFIMINGCOL J
Sold in convenient bay and cartons
One of the best liked desserts
Preserved Cherries.
A Franklin Sugar for every use
Granulated, Dainty Lumps, Pow
dered. Kxntt actioner. Brown
the brush you treat them to every
night. Off with the curling irons of
the frasseur, off with the binding
bonds of the curling papers. At last
you are a free woman and beauty's
hairess.
Of course, it is true, that besides
the pain one also has to run a little
risk or two. If perchance your hair
should be too dry to take the natural
wave it will all break off close to the
roots. Again, instead of the undulat
ing wave of your heart's desire your
head may emerge kinky as aSena
gambian. These little contretemps
are, of course, the fault of your own
peculiar hair cells. No one could ever
be narrow-minded enough to lay them
against god or goddess of your hair
rowing fate.
Just think, if it turns out all right
you may even go in 'the movies. If
you know how t6 vamp a little that's
all you need if your hair's curly. Per
mament wave is a moving picture
hero's or . shero's middle name. Yes,
of course, Gladys, you guileless thing,
the movie Adonises fall for it as well
as the Venuses'. You never for a
minute thought Nature was lavish
with curls as the heroes of the screen
seem to register, did you? For the
stars of the screen, male or female,
a permanent wave means a perma
nent job. Such a marked character
istic is it of movie heads that it
might fittingly be dubbed a reel wave
in lieu of a real one. No film favor
ite" can afford to be without one.
During the month of May in New
York we had just three days of sun-
calling at the nearest druggist this
very day. A large bottle of Acid Iron
Mineral will be sent anywhere prepaid
upon receipt of -one dollar. Ferrodme
Chemical Corp. Roanoke, Va. Advt.
IB
elk-Williams Company
1 sum
RICH
MEN
J
r ' "" i
! WRIGHTSVILLE BREEZES
i . ' 1
i i 1
i
shine. Consequently all the girls
who have been saving up for a rainy
day are now broke. After the third
day of downpour they promptly in
vested all of their savings in a perma
nent wave and are now rich in ring
lets, though poor in purse. It has
been great weather for gardens and
permanent wave emporiums.
Indeed, it is true that the summer
girl's fate hangs by a hair. If it is
straight hair she'll probably lose for
ever the susceptible young million
aire when he sees her at the yacht
club dance with her coiffure strag
gling down in wisps. If it is a curly
one she'll undoubtedly "be unable to
lift her diamond-burdened engage
ment finger without assistance before
the month is out. In the golden days
the straight-haired 'girl' hat no alter
native.. She had to grit her teeth and
see her matrimonial chances become
as'straggling and wispy as her tresses.
Now, however, all she has to do is
grit her teeth and have a wave seared
in for six months and that's time
enough to land any man.
As a boon to womankind, the
vacuum cleaner, the electric sewing
machine, the tireless cooker, the wash
ing machine and the bread mixer are
mere piker inventions compared to
the permanent wave. Long may she
wave.
There's hut a hair divides the false
and true, " '
If it be curled or straignt is up to
you.
ft
NOVELTY THERE
ANOTHER OIL SHIP
VIGT1 OF U-BOAT
I
This Store Sells
(xX I Garments made by
YoungVomen's Coat
andtutnaKcrs
2
Mr. and Mrs. Max T. Payne, of
Greensboro, are spending a "few days
at the Seashore Hotel.
i em ember
This Store is
Headquarters
for ;
Ba!h
iing Suits,
Bathing Caps
and Shoes,
W Women and Children
A. D. BROWN
Black Cat Hosiery.
Reservations so far made at the
Seashore Hotel indicate that there
will -be an attendance of about 300
for the meeting, of the Southern Tex
tile Association, which will be held at
the hotel Friday and Saturday of
this week.
The 'following guests are registered
at the Seashore Hotel:
Mr. M. M. MuTphy, Mr. E. V. Dur
ham, Mr. E! Conroy, Mr. J. A. Hud
son, Mrs. Dixon, Mrs. F. W. Dixon,
Miss D. Dixon, Master E. Dixon, Mr.
W C. Hudson, Mr. W. P. Todd, Mr.
j Bennett Todd, Mr. S. M. Furger and
i wife, Charlotte; Mr. R. F. Soule and
wife, J. D. Alexander and wite, jyir.
A. L. Austin, Mr. E. E. Risley, New
York City; J. E. Armfield, Mrs. J. E.
Armfield, Goldsboro; Mr. N. Malone,
Mr. Malone Whitless, Philadelphia;
Mr G. R. Harwood; Richmond; Mr. N.
W. Thayer, Mr. Frank Redfern Mr.
R E. Boiling, Monroe; Mr. T. F.
James and -son, Mr. A. W. Welling,
Mr. A. R. Craig, Mr. E. R. Terry, South
Carolina; Mr. W. M. Whittemore,
Misses Whittemore, Mr. G. W. Swain,
Mr F. M. Smith, Reidsville; Frank
Green, Evansville, Ind!.; Mr. E. H.
Orantham. Mr.; L. B. Coble, Mr. N. R.
i Hodgin, Mr. S. S. Morris, Greens
i boro; Mrs. A.'B. Cooper, Mr. J. B.
(Gray, Mr. Frank Eldridge,-Mr. W. I
'Morris, Mr. vW.- L. 1 Mann, Baltimore;
Miss Daisy Smith, Tarooroy, Mr. . n.
Hicks, Miss R. Mulpass, Snow Hill;
m, m n Halliday. Miss Florence
Halliday, Miss Jessie Halliday, Mr. H.
Mr. Bruce Comarti, Dunn; Mr. M, L.
Milton, Mr. C. H. Webb, Albemarle;
Mr. H. L. Gaudy, Florence; C. W.
King, Rockingham; Mr. T. F. Jones,
sonWadesboro; Mr. M. J. O'Neii, Mrs.
M. J. O'Neii, Henderson; Mr. W. M.
Terrell, Mr. P. H. Tedder, Hhartsville,
S. C; D. E. Turner, Mooreville; L.
J. Waiford, Pageland; Sv A. Gifford,
two daughters, Miss Sallie and Miss
Annie, Clover, S. C.
DOING GREAT WORK
City Boys Are Farming- at
Rocky Point.
The farm unit of the Patriotic Serv
ice League, composed of ten boys be
tween the ages of 12 and 18 years,
members of the Y. M. C. A., are do
ing their "bit" for the country by aid
ing each day in' harvesting and plant
ing on a 600-acre tract of land at
Rocky Point, owned by Mr. Hugh
MacRae.
Although at present the boys are
conveyed to and from their work in
automobiles, it is their ultimate idea
toscamp at the farm. Until that time,
however, they are very desirous of
some patriotic citizen donating the
use of an automobile to get them back
and from Rocky Point.
The ten boys of the farm unit are:'
Wesley Turrentine, Ernest Thompson,
William Holden, Charlton Symmes,
Robert James, Carl Mahler, Hardy Ja
cobs, Victore Gore, Robert Rasberry
and Buck Morriss.
VOCAL
AND INSTRUMENTAL!
. CONCERT.
Friday, June 22nd, at 8:30 p. m., at
Harbor Island auditorium, will take
place one of the features of entertain
ment during the Southern Textile Con
vention, a iconcert participated in by
the following soloists: Miss Anna
Graham Harris, Miss Catherine Wil
liams,. Mr. J. F. Harris, Jr., instrument
solos, and also a male quartette. There
will be no charge for admission. Full
program published later. The general
public are invited.
D. " Halliday, Mr. R. I Comarti,
' Mrs. Jacksie Daniel Thrasher, of
Tarboro, president of the North Car
olina . Daughters of. the Confederacy,
is a visitor at the beach, being regis
tered at The Oceanic. Mrs. Thrasher
is just back from the reunion in Wash
ington. She . has during her adminis
tration visited the many local chap
ters in North Carolina and speaks in
high praise of the work of each. She
is. a Southern woman decidedly, pop
ular and talented, and the Daughters
of Cape Fear chapter of Wilmington
are iving her a hearty welcome.
AN ADDED CONVENIENCE.
Express Trains Will Stop at Harbor
Island This Evening.
To accommodate the large numbers
who will no doubt go down to the Har
bor Island Auditorium to hear the
Honorable Max Gardner's address to
the Bankers' convention tonight, spe
cial arrangements have been made
to have the express trains, due to
leave the "Center" at 8:00 and 8:30
o'clock, stop at Harbor Island. Ordi
narily Harbor Island is not an express
stop, but will be made one for this occasion.
Masonic Temple, June 19th, 1917.
WILMINGTON LODGE, NO. 319, A. F.
AND A. M.
Standard Oil Company Seamer
Sunk FourMembers of
Crew Lost. .
Only Extremes Are in Evi
dence in Buenos Aires
Much Abject Poverty.
(By United Press.)
Buenos Aires, June 19 Economical
ly it is obvious that something is ex
treme!:' "arrO"ff in Argentina.
The republic is one-third the size of
the United States. Agricultueally it is
one of the vichest countries, in propor
tion to its acreage, on earth. Its pop
ulation is less than 8,000,000.
On the face of the situation, it would
seem as if anybody who wants to work
could make a good living. The coun
try is new, to be sure. Most of it lacks
, j a a; . -vSJ i i
aaequate irauspu! wuuu 'r.r':iship was on board. The names of
some or tne.renne u the missing crew members are Jose
Lorenzo, an oiler; Gregorio Soza, a
(By Associated Press.)
i New York, June 19. The oil tank
,steamship, John D. Archbold, of the
Standard Oil Company, has been sunk
,by a submarine. The announcement
was made at th offices of the com
pany here today. Four members of
the tanker's crew wore lost. The
Archbold was sent to the bottom last
.Saturday in European waters.
The John D. Archbold was two
'days en route to this country from
France. The ship was armed and a
gunners' crew from an American, war-
life are not to be had. Settlefs ought
to be prepared to "rough it." But it
does look as if everybody should be
able to have, for the asking; a good
farm the raw material for making a
living, which, in turn, Should mean
prosperity for other people who do not
actually work on the land.
Yet Argentina is suffering from
frightfully hard times. Some people
say this is due to-the war. The fact
is, however, that the hard times start
ed before the war did. Indeed, there
are good' judges who think the war
helped matters, by furnishing the gov
ernment with an excuse for taking
emergency measures to abeliorate con
ditions. When the war ends, these
outhorities are afraid the situation will
be worse than ever.
Even casual tourists remark that
evidently there are only two classes
in Argentina the very rich and the
very poor. And of the supposedly form
er a very large proportion are merely
"putting up a front." The massps of
the people live in a state of absolute
destitution.
I The answer to this- puzzle, after all,
id easy enough.
A man who owns land in Argentina
and who conscientiouslyrefrains from
making the slightest improvement on
it pays practically no taxes. The min-
ute that he does begin to, make im
provements the taxes take his land
away from him unless he is able to se
cure a prodigious return on his invest
ment. One of the peculiar results of this
condition is that, though land is a drug
on the market, the enormous rents are
mainly responsible for the scandalous
cost of living.
In the cities the taxation authorities
do not even wait for a property holder
to start making improvements before
beginning to punish him for making
them. An enormous levy is made for
a mere permit to erect a new building.
Just as an illustration, a concern whicn
owns the big Caja International Mutua
de Pnsiones, at the corner of Pueyr
redon and Corrientes streets. Buenos
Aires, had to pay 100,000 pesos, or
$44,000 United States money, before
work could begin.
(fireman, and Domingo Lago, a wiper,
and a crew member whose name is
uncertain. The company has cabled
for further information. The John D.
Archbold was an American steamship
of 8,374 tons gross register, owned by
the Standard Oil Company, and built
of 1914 at Newport News. The ship
left here May 20 for Havre and
!Rouen, France, with cargo, under the
command of Captain H. B. Thompson,
with a crew of 41 raea, of whom 12
were Americans.
PERSONAL MENTION.
FATHER III PRISON v
SON RELEASED
Former Threatened to Kill Son
if Latter Registered Under
Draft Law.
(By Associated Tress.).
San Antonio, June 19. Alfred Jur
gens, 23 years old, of Gonzales, Texas,
charged with failure to comply with
the registration law, was released yes
terday on his own recognizance by
United States Commissioner Edwards
after he had promised to register im
mediately. A witness at the hearing
had sworn that Jurgen's father, Frank
Jurgens, had threatened Ao cut his
son's throat if the latter registered to
fight against Germany.
On a charge .of preventing his son's
registration, the elder man was re
manded to jail in default of $1,000
The chief registrar at Gonzales testi
fied that young Jurgens had entered
the registration place at 7 a. m. on
June 5, but was called out ' by his
father and did not return. ' -
AMERICAN VOLUNTEERS
TO THE FRENCH FRONT
Lieut. R. F. Ruff, of the V. S. Med
ical Officers' Reserved who has been
stationed here to examine volunteers
for the regiment of engineers to go
to France, has left for Fort Ogle
thorpe. Mr. Charles E. Taylor returned
yesterday from a short business trip
to Richmond.
(By A8Boclated Press.)
Paris, June 19. Two hundred and
seventy volunteers left the headquar
ters of the American field service for
the front during last week, making al
together 1,500 men actually serving in
the American ambulance or American
transport service with' the French
armies or in training camps within
the army zone. Thrfee hundred Am
ericans are in the ne..iy organized
transport branch. The field service
has 700 cars either at work or under
construction and several hundred
more have been ordered.
STAGE OF WATER.
4.
Stage of water in Cape Fear river
at Fayetteville, N. C, at 8 a. m.,
yesterday, 11.3 feet.
LOCAL MAN APPOINTED.
Mr. William A. Canady is Sworn in A
Narcotic Deputy Collector.
The following from today's Ra'elgh
News and Observer will be of interest
here: Mr. William A. Canady, of Wil
mington, was sworn in yesterday a
narcotic deputy collector in the office
of Collector of Internal Revenue J. W.
Bailey and at oilce entered on the dis
charge of his duties.
x -x- -x -x- -:- -x- -x-
X-
-X- -x- -x-
i SIDELIGHTS ON GREAT WAR
X-
-X- -X-
An entire regiment of Scandinavians
has been recruited in Canada.
Canadians have
navy during the
Regular. monthly,
communication this,
Tuesday evening, at
eight jo' clock P. M. for
the transaction of
such bnsiness -proper
to be ' presented, and
for the election of of
ficers for the ensuing, year. . All mem
bers are requested to be present; visit
ing Brothers, cordially invited to meet
with us . ' " :
J. F. CLOWE, Sec'y.
More than 6,000
joined the British
presentwar.
The standard ship now being built
in British ship yards to make good
the loss of tonnage due to submarine
warfare is of 8,000 tons, and aiL the
ships already laid down are of Identi
cal pattern. ' ' ' J
The Young Women's Christian Asso
ciation has three quarters of a million
members.
The last census showed them -were
5,900 barmaids in the : metropolitan
district of London. .
Elinor Glyn wrote her first success
ful novel to distract her thoughts dur-
ing a serious illness.
1 "PORTERS"0?; J
The LUZIANNE
Guarantee:
If, after using the
contents of a can, you
are not satisfied in
every respect, your
grocer vrill refund
your money.
It's Got to
Make Good
your grocer will make good to yon.
to the last penny. We knew you expected
something unusually good in a coffee when
we first had Luzianne in mind. So we -made
Luzianne so good that it will stand
on its own feet, without apologizing, with
out acknowledging any rivals. YOU buy
a can of Luzianne. If you can't honestly"
say that Luzianne tastes better and goes
farther than any other coffee at the price,
then you are entitled to your money back., '
And your grocer will give it to you upon
request. Ask for profit-sharing catalog.
. The Reily Taylor Company, New Orleans
11
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