The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, November 30, 1934, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4
mi CAMDEN CHRONICLE
*. I). N1LM8 .Kdltor aiul Publiaher
Fubll b*d tvwy yrJ<1*y?a*4 N-U.m^I
aLsr^."lrL'.sf..."'asa?& ?
itcond ctM* mail matter. Prloa P*r
aauuiii 12 00, payable In advance.
Friday, November 30, 1934'
NEWSPAPERS AND THE NEWS
Newspaper architects these daya
have no easy job*?the boya who take
a daily glance at enough material to
print two or three times the size of
a paper that is going to he printed,
and muat u#e -their beat judgment in
selecting the preferable.
What lime they are not flooded in
these days with crime news, they are
whelmed with accidents.
Newspapers are very much like a
department atore in one respect. They
must carry a customary line of staple
goods, but they must also specialize
on the seasonals.
Crime and fatalities are the seasonal*.
They muat be printed when
they happen or not at all, and the
newspapers will be delighted to omit
their publication just the moment the
public makes up Its mind it Is not
going to create auch news.?Julian
8. Miller in Charlotte (N. C.) Observer.
WHKItK IX) JOBS COMB FROM?
In a recent newspaper article, Richard
Washburn Child, former Ambassador
to Italy, and a noted author,
pointed out that there are only two
sources of jobs and payrolls:
One source is government. The
other is industry.
Jobs can be provided by government
in but two ways. Either all
businesses must /be nationalized and
operated by a bureaucracy, or government
must continually borrow more
money, raising taxes all the while, in
order to put idle people to work.
Under the first, government will
inevitably become communistic in
principle. The worker is a tool of
the state?.he lives solely to advance
the interst of political ruling class.
H is regarded Ifs a machine, to be
worked as cheaply as possible until
he wears out?and then he is thrown
into a human scrap heap.
Under the second, all m:.y be merry
for /a while?until government's
.source of credit dries up. It becomes
impossible to raise more money
through taxes- businesses and indi- j
viduals have already been bled white, i
Obligations cannot be met?and gov- i
eminent goes into bankruptcy.
One of these plans must inevitably !
be followed if we depend upon govern- 1
ment to permanently provide us with
work and livelihood. But it seems
impossible that the American people
will pursue that Utopian will-o'-thowisp.
It's more likely that they know, as
'Mr. Child says: "The steady job will
come from American enterprise?im- |
proved?with a new breath of life, i
Nowhere else!"?.Industrial'News Review.
WHEN THE FTREENGINBS GO BY
Most of us have never outgrown
h thrill of excitement at seeing the
fire engines roar by. The hurtling
red apparatus, the scream of the siren,
and the sight of the gleaming
equipment, is the stuff that makes
for vivid drama.
We might enjoy the spectacle less,
however, if we stopped to realize that
we are paying the bill for that engine
iind for the fire it is going to. The j
cost of maintaining and operating fire
departments is an essential and major j
item in every municipal budget?and j
the more prevalent tires are, the j
more '.he department eosts.
And here's a fact that may come as j
a surprise u> the bulk <>f citizens? !
we all must chip in to pay for the
property which is destroyed or damaged
when tire sweeps through it.
We pay our share in a number of
ways. One of the ways is through
higher insurance costs?the rate in
any community, over a period of time,
is based upon the amount of fire loss.
If the fire happens to affect a factory,
men are thrown out of work, investments
arc lost or impaired, and
the entire community feels the adverse
effect of lost purchasing power
ar.d destroyed opportunity. Again, in
the case of any firo of substantial
size, taxable property is eliminated
from the tax rolls, and the revenue
lost to the 'community must be made
up by higher taxes on all other property.
Fire prevention is both a duty and
an obligation which every citizen owes
his neighbor and his community. It
is in the interest of everyone?it
means actual cash savings to us all.
It's fun to watch the fire engines go
by?but it isn't so ifTUeh fun to pay
the bill.?Industrial News Review.
Ar. Italian company building airplanes,
will make a determined effort
to drive United States builders of the
machines out of the Chinese market.
With government support Italian
builders will try to sell China airplanes
at cost.
Ambassador Tsuneo Matsudairi of
Japan, told Great Britian's foreign
secretary this week, that unless England
and the United States grant Japan
full equality in a naval limitation
treaty, that Japan will assume that
status without a treaty.
THE TWO GREAT EMANCIPATORS
In spite of turmoil, strife, turncoatings,
and trickery, there U a fascination
about national political history
leading up to, and after the Civil
War. The hand of fate aeems to have
been In U. all, and accidents were frequent
The Whig party died in 1853.
The slavery issue was already accute.
The Kansas-Nebraska bill by Steve
Douglas, practically repealed the Wilmot
Proviso, and fired the Southern
beaut against Douglas. In 1854 the
Republican party, composed of antislavery
Whigs, Free Soilers, and disgruntled
Democrats, was launched.
The split in the famous 1850 Charleston
Convention, not only hilled
Douglas, politically, but, with the aid
of the split in the triumphirate of
Greeley, .Seward and Thuriow Weed,
gave Abe Lincoln his chance. A regular
thedley of accidents. Abe polled
onljf;40 per cent of the popular vote,
but, i/? view of the democratic rumpus,
got the electoral votes. His election
brought on the war, and all its
woes. It did more. It mounted the
new Republican party into the aaddle
for a long and happy continuous ride
of 24 years. During that struggle,
Abe unconstitutionally freed the negro,
and became the gTeat Emancipator.
/Naturallly that act tied the
colored vote to the coat-tails of the
Republican party. (Not until 1884
was there a break. And that was
another accident. Because of the
Mulligan letters. The Burchard
charge of "Rum, Romanism, and Rebellion"
which sent practically every
Catholic into the arms of the Democratic
party, Grover Cleveland broke
the long Democratic drought. After
4 years he was defeated by Benjamin
Harrison, a slow, old glacial coach,
whom Cleveland defeated in 1802 by I
the strange aid of the Populist party.
After 1806 there was another Democratic
hunger period of 14 years,
when the feud between Teddy Roosevelt
and Taft opened the door of the
public crib to Woodraw Wilson, Democrat.
Another of those accidents.
Wilson was reelected, by the skin of
the teeth in 1016, on the slogan: "He
kept us out of war."
From 1020 to 1932 there were 12
more lean years for the Democrats.
The poorest president (Hoover) and
the greatest depression since the aftermath
of the Civil War, hoisted
1 ranklin D. Roosevelt to the Presidential
throne. In the meantime thi
colored brother, through all the years,
was clinging to the rails of the old
Republican boat.
From 1032 on, the manna from the
Democratic heaven began to fall into
the mouths of Hani's sons and daughters,
as never before, in the history
of the world. That "40 acres and a
mule" never did materialize. The
Republican crumbs that dropped on
the colored man's table were soon
gobbled up by the ringed and streaked
leaders of the tieless Joe Tolbert
Stripe. This was all changed after
1032. The good old mirage of getting
something for nothing had come at
last in reality. The colored brethern,
over the south especially, were being
deluged with the bulk of free rations,
free treatment, and sundry other
blessings.
The millenium had dawned. Another
Emancipator had appeared on
the scene. After 75 long years,
P ranklin D. Roosevelt emancipated
the negro from the clutches of the
Republican %political slavery. Thus
does history repeat itself. The negro,
in the hands of Abe Lincoln,
killed the Democratic party. In 193-f,'
in the hands of Franklin Roosevelt,
trie negro killed the Republican party.
Through all the decaying Democratic
years there were signs of life
in the old Donkey. On the other hand
the Republican Elephant is stone dead
and dragged to the boneyard for a
long and needed rest.?Calhoun
Times.
Mary Grady, negress, is credited
with killing a deer with a rake, when
she found the animal asleep in her
back yard at Castle Hayne, N. C.
The municipality of Decatur, Ga.,
doesn't owe any money except current
months bijls, and has $10,448.61 to
its credit.
Miss Josephine A. Roche, Colorado
mine owner, has been appointed an
assistant secretary of the treasury, a
new post and one that concerns solely
the public health and the welfare of
the treasury department's 15,000 employes.
General Denain, minister of air for
France, is asking the parliament air
committeo for approximately $230,000,000
to modernize the French air
' eet so as to outstrip Germany's
'formidable" force of "swifter and
more modern planes."
An eight-ton tank, capable of making
50 to 60 miies over rough country
roads, is the newest monster of
war developed and tested by the war
department thru Washington streets
and over the Memorial highway this
week.
Vice President Garner, while hunting
deer in the wilds of southwest
Texas, became lost. He climbed &
tree to try to see where he was. He
/ell out of the tree when a limb broke
And wrenched his knee. He was not
more than 300 yards from his camp.
Also he killed a ten point bock during
the hunt.
,
Eligibility To Vote
On Bankhead Act
Kights of individuals to vote in
the Bankhead Act referendum which
will be held in l>ecember will be determined
in accordance with the provisions
of the act itself, according
to County Agent Green, who explains
the provisions of the act which govern
eligibility to vote.
"An eligible voter," he says, "is
any person who signed a 1934 and
1935 cotton acreage reduction contract,
any person who is or was eligible
for tax-exemption certificates in
1934, any person who presents proof
that he owns and has a right to produce
cotton on a cotton farm, or any
person who signs and files a witnessed,
written statement that he has
made arrangements to produce cotton
on a cotton farm in 1935 by entering
into a lease or share-cropping agreement."
In case ownership and the right
to produce cotton on a cotton farm
are held jointly by two or more persons,
all such persons are entitled to
vote. The terip "cotton farm" means
any farm on which cotton has been;
produced commercially one or more
years since 1927. Individuals who
are in doubt about their eligibility to
vote can obtain information from the,
community committee, which have a
list of eligible voters.
Individuals not listed as eligible
voters muy be permitted to vote, but
ballots cast by such individuals will
be placed in sealed envelopes bearing
the name of the voter and the notation,
"Challenged." Final determine-!
tion of eligibility will then be made
by the county committee without opening
the envelopes containing challenged
votes. If it is found that a
challenged vote has been cast by an
eligible voter the envelope will be
opened and the vote counted; otherwise,
the envelope will remain sealed
but will be preserved along with all
other records of the referendum.
No individual will be allowed more
than one vote even though he may be
eligible in more than one community
or more than one county.
Many Farms Being
Saved For Owners
Columbia, S. C., Nov. 26.?Thousands
of farmers in North Carolina,
South Carolina, Georgia and Florida
will spend Thanksgiving Day on their
own farms and under the roofs of
their own homes, who have been enabled
to do so by the refinancing
program of the Federal I>and Bank
of Columbia, according, to Julian H.
Scarborough, general agent of the
Farm Credit Administration of Columbia.
"Two years ago," said Mr. Scarborough,
"these farmers faced what
appeared to them to be a hopeless'
situation. Loss of their farms, on
which some of them had lived their
whole lives, seemed inevitable. They
appeared to be helpless victims of an
economic depression unparalled in the
history of this country and from
which the farmers have been among
the greatest sufferers.
"Over 50,000 farmers in the four
states comprising this district have
secured loans from the Federal i*and
Bank of Columbia and the Land Bank
Commissioner since June 1, 1033, totaling
over $80,000,000. They used
83 cents out of every dollar they borrowed
to repay old creditors. In many
cases the loans provided farmers with
means to repaf such creditors and to
avoid foreclosure.
"The bank not only made new loans
to farmers to enable them to refinance
their debts at a lower rate of interest
on terms extending over a long period
of years but also extended past due
debts to it to thousands of them who
were unable to meet their payments,
and reduced rates of interest on mortgages
already held to 4 1-2 per cent
per annum for a 5-year period ending
July 11, 1938.
J. R. McCarl, federal comptroller
general, has made a ruling that relief
funds cannot be used for the purchase
of home sites or the construction of
dwellings. His ruling has blocked
a relief grant for low cost housing
in the District of Columbia.
Striking New York City college
students, numbering 500, after engaging
in noting with police, on Tuesday
burned the figure of President Frederick
B. Robinson in effigy at the base
of the campus flagpole. The noting
had its inception when a month ago
21 students were expelled for staging
an anti-fascist demonstration during
a visit of Italian students.
The Georgia supreme court has
ruled that alimony is an obligation
that cannot be discharged by bankruptcy.
Dr. Samuel Green, former
KKK. official, sought to obtain an injunction
to prevent enforcement of a
judgment for $1,450, representing
past due alimony claimed by his divorced
wife. The doctor's move was
not successful. ?
The Carnegie Corporation has donated
$50,000 to the American Bar association,
to the end that the association's
three-year crusade for a unified
national bar and ultimately the improvement
of the nation's laws and
their administration.
Many Attended Meeting
At a meeting called by Henry D.
Green, County Agent, for the farmer*
of Kertihaw county to asaemble in the
Court House in Camden on Friday,
November 16, there was a very large
and representative body of the formers
over the codnty present. The pur-:
pose of the nteeting was to discue*
the Bankhead Act and cotton situation
generally and to elect delegates to the
state convention in Columbia called
by the governor.
At this meeting Hon, John G, Richards,
of Liberty Hill was elected
chairman and H. L. Green waa elected
secretary. There was a full end
free discussion of the subject under
consideration. There was some opposition
to the Bankhead Act in ita entirety,
but a resolution was introduced
by L. O. Funderburke to this effect:
"Resolved, that we adopt the
principals of the 'Bankhead Act, and
resolved further, that we call upon
Congress to make such amendments i
as will more equitably distribute the (
gin allotment so that release may be
given to the small farmers." This
resolution after thorough discussion
as has already been stated, was adopted
without a dissenting vote. Mr.
Funderburke and Mr. Richards were
elected delegates to the convention
to be held in Columbia, and L. P.
Thompson and H. D. Green as alternates.
After a very enthusiastic meeting,
before adjournment the following
resolution was adopted with reference
to the passing of Dr. W. W. Long:
"We the farmers of Kershaw County
in convention assembled desire to
express to Mrs. W. W. Long, our
sincere sympathy in the passing of
her distinguished husband. We realize
as farmers that Dr. Long has
been untiring in his efforts to promote
our best interest and we feel
that through his wise direction and
untiring efforts that the Agriculture
of South Carolina has been improved
and the interest of our people generally
have been promoted.
Committee:
John G. Richards, Cahirman
H. D. Green, Secretary.
ODD ACCIDENTS
When Wallett Conley, a District of
Columbia blind man, stumbled against
a gas jet he didn't know he had turned
it on. So unaware of his danger
he remained in the room and was overcome
by escaping gas.
A Michigan man, Chester Edson,
went to his doctor to have a fractured
heel X-rayed. He also fractured
a collar bone during the examination
when a short developed in the apparatus
and caused him to be thrown
against the wall.
His fruit truck caught on fire while
he was driving along the streets of
New York City and Isaac Horowitz 1
became too excited to stop it. But it
needed no stopping. It crashed into
a firebox pole, set off at alarm and
brought the fire laddies in time to
rescue Isaac.
Sandor Fabian waa attempting to
haul a big fish from the "Blue" Danube
river which runs close to his home
in Hungary. His foot slipped and he ]
fell into and became entangled in his
own net where he drowned before
help could reach hrm.
As an airplane from a Mexican airport
landed on a California field, Fred
Brown, mechanic, heard a peculiar
noise. When he investigated he found
a six-foot rattlesnake unwinding itself
from the retractable landing
gear.
A French train crew had stopped
and sat down under a shade tree tc
eat their lunch (we always wondered
why those^trains were behind time).
The throttle worked open and the
locomotive set out for Parish several
miles away where it crashed into a
standing train and injured several
people.?Pathfinder.
SUMMONS FOR RELIEF
State of South Carolina,
County of Kershaw,
Court of Common Pleas.
The Enterprise Building and Loan
Association of Camden, South Carolina,
Plaintiff
&^dinst
T. E. Goodale, W. D. Goodale, N.
R. Goodale, R. T. Goodale, Tom Shiver,
Sallie G. Crane, James T. Ballard,
Inc., and Reed Manufacturing Co.
Defendant.
To the Defendant above named:
You are hereby summoned and required
to answer the complaint in
this action, of which a copy is herewith
served upon you, and to serve
a copy of your answer to the said
complaint on the subscriber at his
office in Camden South Carolina,
within twenty days after the service
hereof, exclusive of the day of such
service; and if you fail to answer
the complaint within the time aforesaid,
the plaintiff in this action will
apply to the Court for the relief demanded
in the complaint.
To the Non-resident Defendants,
Tom Shiver, Sallie G. Crane, James
T. Ballard, Inc., and Reed Manufacturing
Co.:
?You will take notice, that the summons
in this action of which the foregoing
is a copy, together with the
complaint, were filed in the office of
the Clerk of Court for Kershaw
County on the 27th day of November,
HENRY SAVAGE, JR^
Plaintiff's Attorney.
Dated November 27th, A. D. 1924.
~ , , ' . , J
The name of Secretary of State'
Cordell Hull is being put forward asJ
a possible candidate for the Nobel
peace prize, to be awarded December
10 by the Norwegian parliament.
A Aew 1,000 piece set of ivory
American china, trimmed in gold and]
blue, and bearing the presidential
coat of arms, has been purchased for1
the White House at a cost of $9,301.21.
Wants?For Sale
FOR SALE?-One Frigidaire in excellent
condition. Seven foot capacity. I
Very reasonably priced for cash. I
Address R. B. Pitts, Camden, S. C.1
36-38 sb.!
LOST?Silver pin somewhere between
DeKalb street and HaigLer Theatre,
on Monday night. Reward if returned
to Chronicle office, Camden,
S- C. 36 sb.
FOR RENT?On the Mobley place,
-West Wateree, 850 acres, Splendid '
farming land. Apply Miss Annie"!
Mobley, Route 1, Lugoff, S. C., Care:
E. B. Barfield. 36-38 pd. I
WANTED TO BUY ? "Historic '
Houses of South Carolina," by Har-!
riette Kershaw Laiding, Philadelphia
& London, 1921. Address!
"Bodk" P. O. Box 267, Camden,'
S. C. 36 sb. i
BOOK WANTED?Want to buy a1
copy of "The Dwelfing Houses of
Charleston, South Carolina, by Alice
R. Huger Smith and D. E. Huger !
Smith, Philadelphia & London, 1917.
Address "Book" P. O. Box 267,1
Camden, S. C. 36 sb. i
STAR DOG RATION?100 pounds
$5.00 delivered in South Carolina. '
Guaranteed food. Sample on re-'
quest. Address Mixson-Williamson >
Seed Company, Columbia, S. C.'
36 sb I
FOR RENT?'Six room house on'
West side of Highland Avenue.
House in good condition. Price
$17.50 per month. Telephone 193, 1
or 136, William L. Goodale, Cam-!
den, S. C. 36 sb. I
TO THE LADIES?'For individually {
designed Spencer corsets or a po-'
sition to represent our Company.'
Address Mrs. E. C. Chapman, I
106 1-2 Guthrey Apt., Charlotte,
N. C. 36-38 pd.
FOR SALE?Tomato pickle, pumpkin
chips; also five pair goose feather
pillows. Address Miss Jennie C.
Whitaker, 441 Hampton Street.
Camden, S. C. 36 sb.
LOST--On Tuesday, a pair of tortoise
shell rimmed, child's eye glasses,
in case. Lost between City School
and Wateree Mill. Finder please
notify E. L. Moore, Wateree Mill,
Camden, S. C. 36-38 nd
WANT YOU TO KNOW also that
Uncle Sam has shown his interest
ih your community and faith in this
Association by subscribing and paying
for 60 shares of our Full Paid '
Income stock and is now waiting
to see what you will do. It's up
to you good citizens. First Federal
Savings & Loan Ass'n., Camden,
33 tf
FOR SALE?75 cords 4-ft. Pine
wood, 9 miles from Camden (Sumter
road). Apply to Jonnie Goodwin,
Camden, S. C., R. F. D. 4.
,,, . 35-38 pd.
W ANTED?Constructive citizens to
realize that for every dollar they
invest in our Savings Thrift Shares,
the U. S. Treasurer is ready to
cover it with three dollars thus
making four dollars available for
home building and improvements in
our City and vicinity for every
8"b8crib*?J and paid for locally.
Meanwhile your investment
s safe and shares in earnings from
loans made with the funds. Call
FvJi^?rcdeUils and Iet'8 *?- First
nwlnl ^ & Ix)an Ass'n.
(Locally organized and managed)
(Under Government supervision.)
TABLE FASHIONS OF 3,TODAY
W??tULIJfW ?afdl^i^ht and Aristocrat
patterns by Towle and Rose
Point pattern by Wallace, p. d.
Po?t r>fTi ?alb, Stre?t, Opposite
i ost Office, Camden S C qj q^k
HIGH GRADE NARCISSI BULBS?
King Alfred $3.00 per 100- Fm
1^00 Pnpr F'eno Odorata
Clkro n + *n,; Darwin tulips,
Pride ? 50c *>er dozen;
rriae of Harlem, ?corie+
d?a"yn:FoSrT^Gi"nt ~ ***
Candy tuft, blue Phlor ^nd Wv d
o'7.r0M Ph,ox Pw dol
the Club Market
0^t Cp?ic'S~"^' bur * lln<i
B?n* m y?ur old gold
them""'
den S C Company, CamRADl'o
REPAIRING?-Done^on^mV
^ GE'SEimfW* *
Natl
Three email children werebgr3
to death in the destruction of a hoal
at North Cambridge, Mass. The f*tl?
er and mother of the children hi?
narrow escapes in the early morn J
blaze. ~
iBank burglars spent eeveral hour?
burning a hole into a bank vault ??
Athens, Tex., only to find that th?
vault was empty. A sign on the do J
said the bank had been liquidated?'
several months ago. ,
The British parliament was open J
with formal ceremonies by Kim?
George V on Tuesday. The king j?
the Usual speech from the throneH
dealing with state matters, the mod?
important of which was the affairs o?
India.
Russia has joined the United Stats?
and most other countries represented,?
in a conference at Budapest, to ex?
tend the wheat advisory committee i?
asking for a two-year extension of?
the world wheat pact expiring next?
August.
Moonshiners in the area of Harri?
sonburg, Va., have joined forces wit?
Federal agents to smash a grei?j
moonshine whisky ring operatinf?
there, which is said to hold the moun?;
taineers in virtual peonage makin?!
them do what they wish in the mat?!
ter of making and running liquor. ?
NOTICE 'I
To whom it may concern: This islj
to give notice of my intention to ap-K
peal for Executive Clemency. |
Henry Ballard. I
November 16, 1934. 34 pd.
FINAL DISCHARGE
Notice is hereby given that one?
month from this date, on the 4th day I
of December, 1934, at 11 o'clcok a. m., I
I will make to the Probate Court of I
Kershaw County my final return as I!
Executor of the estate of John Micklc, IJ
deceased, and on the same date I will I
apply to the said Court for a final I
discharge as said executor. I
J. H. McLEOD, ! I
Executor of the Estate of
John Mickle ;
Camden, S. C., November 8, 1984.
14 1? III k i (II hi 111 c ? DeKalb
Pharmacy !
Phone 95 Wo Deliver -?
Haigler Theatre I
Corner Broad and Rut ledge Sts.
FIRDAY, NOVEMBER 30th I j
Katharine Hepburn, Joan Bennett
and Paul Lukas in i
"LITTLE WOMEN" ?
The year's outstanding picture.
Also Amos and Andy. ?~ SATURDAY,"
December lit _
Big Boy Williams with Marion
Shillings in
"THUNDER OVER TEXAS"
A brilliant, exciting Western.
Also a Musical Comedy "Well, By
And Buck Jones Serial .
The Red Ranger." . ^
MONDAY and TUESDAY j
December 3rd-4th - Joan
Crawford with Clark Gable in j
"CHAINED"
Elaborate and colorfully presented
with two of the screen's most
popular stars.
1 A|so Selected shorts. |
WEDNESDAY, December's !
Adapted from the Michael Arlen I .
novel The Green Hat" with Cons-1
tance Bennett and Herbert 1
... Marshall in ^ II
"THE OUTCAST LADY"
Also jnrin S. Cobb in "Nosed Oat." I 1
THURSDAY, December $? l
Prank Book's 1
"WILD CARGO" I
CHRISTMAS SIFT GOODS IN ABUNDANCE*
-More attractive than ever before?
Gibson's Cards, Boxed ' Stationery, Whitman's
Candies, Waterman's Pens, Shaeffer's Life-time Pen*
The leading brands of TOILET GOODS, Fine Cigars
and Cigarettes, Electric Household Appliance*
CHRISTMAS TREES, TREE LIGHTS and DECORA.
TIONS. In fact just the place to shop FIRST.
?FIRE WORKS?
-CRAZY WATER CRYSTALS, now only $1.00, and ?>.
Wi?l package for 60c.
Zemp'g Drug Store City Drug Co.
Broad Street DeKalb Street
Phone 30 ' Phone 130
If you would like to have a Walnut Inlay Plaque,
made from any kodak picture and tinted-~?or only
$1.00 aak for 4a card at either of our stores, and ?ee
the quality ot the work.
c