The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, December 04, 1924, Image 2
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PAGE TWO
THE BARNWELL PEOPLE, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROLINA.
©The •
American
legion
(Copy for This Department Supplied by the
American l.eglon Kewe Herylce.)
“FIGHTING JOE” IS
NATIONAL CHAPLAIN
■-w
r~
“riKhUng Joe” Is the title which
ha» been bestowed by general consent
on Rev. Joseph I.onergun of Itunind,
111., recently elected national chaplain
of the American Legion. And the title
Is not airy tinsel, either. It has a
background.
For It harks hack to kid days when
as a boy with two fists who knew
how to use them and Father Joe
some! lutes found employment for
them in ways other than earning
money by working on railroad tracks
to go to <miege. The story goes back
to the time when he was a famous
•totball star, “the miracle halfback*
el St. Viator’s college.
The nickname recalls a baseball ca
reer culminating iifc a batting average
for his last year of .44#, rather a big
league average. It carries a picture
of Father Joe, the ecclesiastical stu
dent at Montreal, tying up his priest
ly soutane above his knees and slid
ing bases like Ty Cobb. It Is remi-
nlscent of the young priest at Aurora,
111., who appeared In the pulpit one
day with a bulging black eye—fruit
of too strenuous endeavors to show
SUNDAY THRONGS WITNESS
FATAL CRASH IN MID-AIR.
•Santa Monica, CaliL—A man ami
a woman were killed and two other
persons were seriously injured hero
when the airplanes in which they
were .r&eriopsly injured here when
the airplanes -jn which they were
flying collided in mid air.
The dead: Ralph Hugh Jennison
and Miss Ruth G. Wilson, both of
Pasadene, were about to make a
landing in their commercial piano
when it collided with another ma
chine. piloted by Leslie K. Traugh-
ber. a lieutenant in the army air
reserve. Traughther and hi* pas
senger. Sergeant Gilbert R MoMur-
rin. of the army air service, were
taken to a-hospital in Sawtelie,
near here, where surgeons said they
had a fair chance to recover,
Spectators said the two planes ap
peared to sidle into each other and
then fell 200 feet to earth with
wings locked. Both machines were
completely wrecked.
SORRAT SOUNDS .WARNING
DECLARES FUTURE MENACE NON
WHITE RACES; FEARS ASIA
TIC BLOC.
BANKERS EXTEND
! AMERICANS AND BRITISH UNDER
WRITE $15,00T000 FOR THE
RAILWAY.
New York.—Financing German's
'railways reconstituted under the
! Dawes plan, were taken by American
and Hritish hankers, who placed a
credit of $15,000,000 at the disposal
<jf the German State- Railway company.
One-third of the- loan will he in
pounds sterling and will he under-
! written by a London hanking group,
headed by J. Henry Schrocder and
e^mpany. The New York banking
sydicate, headed by Speyer and c orn-
pauy, includes the Equitable Trust
company, the Chase Securities corpor
ation. Blair and company, 'the Hank
of the Manhattan company, and J.
Henry Sc hroeder Ranking corporation.
Organized in accordance with the
Dawes plan to take over the opera
tion of German railroads under pri-
j vate management, the German State
I Railw ay c ompany constitutes what is
| said to be the largest railway system,
in the world, having 23,000 miles of
read. Two-thirds of the equipment,
THREE MEN KILLED IN
AN AIRPLANE ACCIDENT.
. Greenfield. Ills. Three men were
killed when an aeroplane from St.
Louis fcdl into a bac kyard garden
two blocks from the town square.
An examination revealed that the
gasoline tank was empty and it
was believed the plane fell when
the, engine was stopped by the lack
of fuel.
The victims: George Walker. 43,
a newspaperman, of Jerseyville,
Ills., and two fliers from St. Louis,
said to he H. G. Tilley, 22. and Ole
Hagen, 25. The three fliers had
hern hired by a Jerseyville mer
chant to distribute advertising pur
poses and were returning to St.
Louis when the crash came.
GIANT ZEPPEUN
'THrHMDAY, DKC. 4,
iHeadNoisesandDeafnessI
1 PrMuentlg go together. Some people
only suffer from Heed Noises.
LEONARD EAR OIL
relieves both Deelinees_ end Heed
PROHIBITION HELP TO NATION
—consisting of 31.000 locomotives. 70,000
Paris. Albert Surraut, former min- passenger cars, and 750,000 freight
istcr of the- colonies, former governor cars, is less than 10 years old. The
general of Indo-China and a member original cost of the system, whose
of the French delegation at the* Wash- lines extend into every part of Oer-
ington arms conference in 1021, sound- many, was $6,200,000.(»00. Present
ed-a note af alarm before a distinguish- capitalization consist of 3.095.000,000
ed audience in Paris, declaring that common stock, issued to the German
the real menace of the future lay in government or the German states and
the non white third of the world's 2,620.000,000 first mortgage reparation
population. bonds, guaranteed the German govern-
“No one eo nthink without misgiv- men which have been issued to a
ing,” he said, “of the preparations trustee appointed by the reparations
Japan is making to head an Asiatic commission. The company also is au-
block against the European bloc*.” thorized to issue $476,000,000 in pre-
He hoped that the leading spirits ferred stock and $22,500,000 second
of Japan and the United States would mortgage bonds,
avoid a conflict, "far more* terrible in —
Rev. Joecph Lonergan.
his eighth-graders in the school longue
he organized how to take ’em he»t (iff
the hat. ,
Then comes the time when Father
Joe took up his work with the Eighty-
sixth divisWtn organizing at Gamp
Grant. He was without military
status and without salary, but he car
ried on. While there he lectured to
all officers at Gamp Grant cm the ne
cessity of religion. Shortly afterward
be got a commission as tirst lieuten- I
ant chaplain, and began his extraordi
nary activity In the fighting game. It ;
was lie who spoke at Gamp Grant's
greatest day, July 4, IfilS, when lie
addressed '41,000 of the division gatli-
ered there. A sentence stood out, |
which was flashed over the country; I
“A man never became a man until
he got a gcvocl punch on the nose.”
Then the Argonne and the Vosges.
Father Jop says that when the* shoot- j
ing was close* he became Dugout Joe,
but the boys don't, say that. They j
think he's aI) man. The chaplain re
organized a hand fop the Twelfth c-n-
--glugmcv—Thc band with a pcTsonaHty.-”-
choseh by the* French mission to ac
company them when they took over
Alsace and Strassburg from the Ger
mans. He was transferred, to the
Ninetieth division and remained
with them until he* was disehargeel.
Membership in the American Legion
followed soon and then his election
as department chaplain for Illinois in
Ifi'J'J. in l'.t'_*| he* was unanimously
named national chaplain That's the
More of '‘T ightin’ Joe' Lonergan.
whose- record at the* front with the
men endeared him to all veterans and
makes him a very popular “padre."
effect on the world than the w ar of I 17 Drowned When Freighter Sinks.
1924.” 1 London Much damage was done
The steady increase in the colored ‘ by a furious gale which swept both
peoples had located the center of the the east and south coasts of England
world's importance somewhere in the and inland points. Seventeen persons
Pacific ocean, he continued, and a were drowned when the freight steam-
colossal struggle between Japan and i er Hartley, a vessel of 2,000 tons, sank
the United States was going, on for toff Portland. Only two men of the
control of that ocean. ‘ ‘ crew were rescued. There were many
The colored element in the w oriel's minor casualties to toast wist shi/
population he placed at 550,000.000 of ping
a total of 1.750,000,000 and described The c hannel steamer Dieppe ground
them as having been taught their pow- ed at the* mouth of New Haven harbor
er by the World war. in addition to an da lug which attempted to rescue
being worked by religious hatred and her .was smashed againsj the hreak-
Russian Bolshevism. water. The Dieppe was refloated
— after her 66 passengers frani France
Paris Prepares to Refund Debt. had spent five hours of misery on
Washington. — Reports that tho hoard. The cruiser Galliope. was sent
French government might initiate pro- from Portland to assist vessels in dis-
ceedings before long looking to a re tress in the English channel
funding of that nation's debt to the ‘At Southampton, the Royal mail
United States, were received here, de- liner Almazcra. of the Buenos Aires
spite that members of the American service, broke her moorings and swung
debt commission declared they had no about dangerously. She narrowly
definite information that Paris officials escaped smashing a naval transport,
were moving definitely toward such The* vessel was eventually warped into
negotiations. * her berth again after three hours of
Secretary Mellon, discussing this hard work by tug boats.
possibility, said frankly that he be- *—^
lieved thf French government would Hoover Reports Big Progress,
take such 0 step, but he hesitated to' Washington -RecommendatUms con-
suggest when their action might becoming legislation for, t^he reorganiza
expected. Mr. Mellon's view appear- tion of the commerce department, for
ed to he based largely, on the recent the control and development of radio
callfication of the European situation and aircraft, and for p revision of the
The French have made several ges- navigation laws, were submitted to
tures toward opening funding negotia- Ptesident Coolidgo by Secretary Hoov-
tions. but treasury officials hardly ex er in the annual report of his depart-
pcct a definite proposition until after fnent. The sec retary also recommend
the New Year. ed that Congress appropriate funds
— — for’n department of commerce build
iug of sufficient size* to house all
branches of the organization, which
at present are scattered through a
half dozen buildings in Washington.
Mr. Hoover's reporj defined the
economic progress of the country for
Cleveland Cabinet Member is Dead.
Cazenovia, N. Y. Charles Stebins
Fairchild, S2, secretary of the treasury
under President 4'leveland, died sud
denly at his home here.
Death resulted froth infirmities due the past year setting out as outstand-
to old age. it was announced.
Legion Posts Aim to
Cut Down Fire Loss
"The* source of America's largest and
most preventable waste is tires, and
American Legion posts and depart
ments throughout the country are tak- 1
Ing up the* problem with an aim to
appreciably cut down the* loss annuaIh
of millions of dollars from fire,” do
dared Legionnaire J. H. Dulaney. He
and W. S. Atkinson are heading the
department of Oklahoma's move for:
fire prevention. Roth are leaders in !
the Oklahoma Fin* Prevention asso-,
elation. The American Legion, de
partment of California, lias been ac- |
five in fire prevention in the redwood
forests on the coast the past year.
Mr Fairchiid hud been a life long
resident of Cazenovia with the excep-
tion of the years which lie spent /*
Albany as defhity attorney and attor
ney-general of New York State and in
■ Washington as assistant secretary and
6c< rotary' of the treasury.
Hi* served as president of tin* V
lanta and Charlotte Air Line Railroad
Company and director of tlv* Eric.
Fire Destroys Kinston School.
Kinst n Fire of undetermined oric
in destroyed the Cra;ng< rll.ah School
of this city causing an esti/mated loss
of over COO. Insurance cover d
ing features the advance of agricul-
wl-.iib hail lagged' behin'd
llllv ur.i-r-.S-
EXHAUSTIVE SURVEY SHOWS AN
NUAL SAVINGS NEARLY 200
MILLION.
New York ('rime in the United
States, in proportion to the popula
tion. has decreased, rather than in
creased since prohibition went into ef-
feet, according to a report made pub
lic by the World League Against Alco
holism. Savings to the states as a
result of the decrease in crime exceed
the amount formerly paid as revenue
by the liquor interests, the report sets
forth, the savings bc;ng "c onsorvatlvV
ly estimated” at approximately $200.-
000.000 annually
The survey, which the league de
clares is the most txntesive ever made
on the subject, is based on figures
from tht* police departments from 300
of the country's leading cities, and the
District of Columbia, every state ex
cept North (terolina and Oklahoma be-
I ing represented. It covers the total
number of arrests for all causes in the
last four years prior to prohibition and
the first four years of prohibition.
“It is true that the number of ar
rests of the 'dry' period in the 300
cities is greater than the number for
the 'wot..'' it is stated in the report
“but when analyzed in connection with
the increase in population, which is
five million, the findings are contrary
to the accepted belief that . wx--are
growing more criminaL-
"The actual decrease in arrests for
drunkenness, since the Yolstead act
f went into effect, is 42.3 per cent for
the 300 c ities, or a million less cases
I of drunkenness each year than there
were in the '.wet' period, for the whole
riation. Where formerly drunk cases
j marie up 32.5 per c ent of the total ar
rests of the country they now have
been cut to IS.8 per cent.
-"From 1913 to 1516. there was a
yearly average of 58.946 people arrest-
ed for all causes out of every million
' of population. The total for 300 cities
was 1.756.078. During the first four
years of prohibition, arrests for all
causes were 2.040.700. or 58,859 per
million popujation. The population in
these cities have increased 5.000,000
• during the four years.
"Applying this ratio of increase to
the entire population we have a yearly
.total of nearly 1.000.000 less arrests
during the dry' period than during the
‘wet,’ ”
System to Dodge Coal Famines.
New York. A report of the coal
storage committee of the American
engineering council: made public by
| James Hartness. president of the or
ganization, outlines a series of com
munity plans by which the principal
cities of the country, may. through a
system of uniform monthly shipments
avoid coal famines Mr. Hartness
said the* survey rfn which the report is
based has repealed that storage is the
ZR-3 IS DISPLACED WITH LOS
ANGELES AS OFFICIAL
LABEL.
Washington— A vast gray hulk,
roaring northward through the dark
ness, the United States air liner Los
Angeles, sped to take her appointed
station as a commissioned ship of the
na\y. but none the less a ship of
peace.
Somewhere ahead of her in the
darkness fled a half score of homing
pigeons carrying word tb the Lake-
hurst station that, with full pomp and
ceremony, the name'of the California
city ha dbeen bestowed upon the ship
by Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, wife of the
nation's President. With that act. the
designation of ZR-3 which she has car
ried so long, passed off the navy's rolls
the name Los Angeles, signifying
DON'T
DO
THIS.
I of Dr. J. B. BergMon for care 01
| Hawing,” end o«od in each package.,
ILeonard Bar OU iafor Bale everywhere
I r Intenttini d^chptirmfokSmr I
USE
■0NARDI
m
mi
Behind the Scenes
A certain actor-manager, notorious
for his overbearing, blustering manner,
was bullying Ills, property man about
gome property bricks required in one
of tho scenes in a pantomime.
“Sir,” bellowed the tragedian, “do
you tl^nk any sane man would'be rie-
uch ti palpable immitation
eeiveri by
the peaceful mission she* has been as- of a brick as that'?” at the same time
signed by international agreement, | giving the on** indicated a tremendous
blossoms in its place.
It was almost a perfect day for the
christening. By the time the air giant
came nosing out of the blue-gray haze
to northward, the sun had itroken
through the banking clouds of the
morning and was sweeping the sky
clear moment by moment. The trip
south from laikehurst was made
swiftly and the ZR-3. as she then
still was, found herself with more
than two hours of aerial loafing to
do before she came down at the naval
air station at AnacostfaT since the
President and Mrs. Coolidge* were not"
due to arrive before 2:45 p. in.
kick.
A howl of mingled rage and pain
follow ed.
He had kick'd a real one.
burgh Chronicle-Telegram.
Pitt«-
MOTHER!
L
Clean Child’s Bowels with
"California Fig Syrup”
U. S. Revenue Shows a Loss.
Washington With all phases of
the tax reduction carried hy the new
lew in full force, a decrease of $79
3773,465 was shown ’in internal reve
nue collections from July 1 to October
31, the first four months of the cur- ;
rent fiscal year.
The princ ipai decreases include a
loss as compared to the same period j
last year of $22,267,692 in income
taxes. ,|
statement from theogveBbfixfkbgqjfk
Total internal revenue collections
for the four months covered by a state- ;
ment from the internal revenue bu
reau were $736,167,423 as compared
with $815,540,988 for the period from
July 1 to October 31 last year. In
come taxes for the last four months
were $430,119,549 while for the corres
ponding period in 1923 the collections
were $452,387,241.
Taxes from miscellaneous sources .n
the four months beginning July 1 this
below the same period las (year. This
sharp decrease resulted largel from
the repeal of some of the miscellan
eous taxes.
• Tobacco taxes again showed an in
crease collections between July 1 and
October 31 being $120,696,495 as com
pared with $114,492.0880 for the same
period of 1923. - v
inchtstrv since the* slump of 1922. the
beginning of “sound'^ policies in Ger
man rej arafions leading to hopeful
:iT asvire of . ecrmcnnic recovery in
Eut'cpe; and the complete recovery"
1 f the nation's own inchtstrv and com
merce, aside from agriculture. The
; pa>t year, the sec retary reported, has
seen great stability of -prices: . high
production, full employment, expand
ing foreign trade, and prosperity
throughout the busini>ss woi'jd There
wen* some mode rat* decre ases in act
ivity of some lines during the latter
Prize for Student
•v
It’s time to reward the studious lad j
with the bulging cerebrum, as well us
the campus hero of bulging biceps, de
cided the A. A. Mountain post of the 1
American Legion of McMechen, W. Vn.
Accordingly, they offered a substantial j
cash prize to the high school student (
whose scholarship record Is best during
tha rear.
* i
the praptiiy to the amount of $vV"0u
and c ft rials state that approximately
Smntine will he requred t 1 replace* tin
school building, erected a year ago.
The' destruction of the building
throws 4d0 students out of school and
efforts are being made to provide tem
porary quarters far them in various
buildings of the city The sc hool board
will moot to decide what defifiite step;
a:c* to he taken to care for the children
while the* building is being rebuilt.
Johns Hopkins Has Big Endowment.
Raltimony Dr. Frank J. Goodnow.
president of Johns Hopkins uni vet-
I -
sity .announced that the general edu
cational board has offered to gi4L>
$1,500,000 for the proposed Wilmcr
institute, treatm*>^4-of diseases of the
eye, which is to-be established as part
of Johns Hopkins medical kchool.
President Golhdnow said the remain
der of the $3,000,000 needed for found
ing the institute would have to lie rais
ed in order to take advantage of the
$1,500,000 offer.
parr of the fiscal year. h< added, but
since its close, there has been genera!
recovery in these lines.
remedy for the nations coal troubles
The committee recommends, accord
ing to . the report that all consumers
purc hase their coal on an annual con
tract for .yearly requirements with a
provision that the cotH-b^ delivered
monthly in equal allotments. Con
sumers are urged to provide storage
facilities to,meet the t<*nns of such a
i-ontract. Tho recommendations tire.*
based on the finding that the purchases
of coal on a monthly delivery basis
will enable coal miners to inaugurate
.end maintain a regular production
sc hedule and make it possible for c:ar-
rii*rs to plafi definitely both schedules
md equipment for a uniform move
ment of coal.
Finally Sunk; Officers Silent.
Norfolk. Ya - The battleship Wash
ington was sunk off the Yirginia ('apes
Beyond the terse confirmation of
the jinking and the time, nothing of
ficial as to the manner in which the
United States carried out the last act
of its "scrapping program under the
naval armament limitation agreement
could be learned here. Any informa
tion as to the destruction of the ship,
authorities at the Hampton Roads
naval base said, would have to come
from Washington.
Naval officers ashore were inclined
to the belief that the Washington's
final plunge came"much quicker than
was expected and mav have been due
i
to previous halt ring rather than to.
any gun fire planned. She was re-
"pi.fTerreery lowTn the water and the
Doctors Close Anr.ual Parley.
N w Oric'aiis. . Dr. SU*-w ;,re ._L^ob-
f rts, of Atlanta was ejected president
of the Scnthern Medical a^.-oeiation
at the concluding session of the* asso
ciativa s annual c invention here. Dr.
R. H. McGinnis, of Jacksonville, was
chosen first vie* president, and Dr.
Homer Dupuy. of New Orleans, second
•> ice president. |
Man Kills Wife's Employer.
—Los Angeles. R. D. Mack, president
of the Gold u State Vaudeville ex-
chance. was shot to death in Ipis offiefe
here in the presence of tfve persons.
S R. Southern surrendered to
Fee and said that he fired tin* shots.
Southern's wife was employed as a
stenographer for Mack tint! was in his
office at the time of the shooting.
theory ashore is that if the ship did
not. go down unexpectedly the Texas
had little time for carrying out final
ex pc rim' nts
T ^
Mid-West Paper Indicted.
Washington. Indictment in Kansas
City of the owner and managing edi
tor of The Kansas City Journal-Post
is the only one of the three federal
proceedings thus far initiated which
involves individuals, in the effort to
clear up through court action the con
flicting provisions of the revenue act
affecting publication of income tax re
turns. *
The indictment of The New York
T^rilmne company, and that several
day4 ago involving The
Daily Post, both named the publishing
ccrpc rations themselves as defendants,
'n each case, it is understood, the pur- 1
pose has been .to develop a different
the tax publication question
to .bring about a complete test of the
law', which opens tax returns to public
ispection in one section and prohibits
their ( publication in another.
"“V.
Even if cross, feverish, bilious, con
stipated or full of cold, children hoe
the pleasant last** of "California Fig
Syrup.” A teaspoonful never fails to
clean the liver and bowels.
Ask your druggist for genuine “('all-
year were $306,047,874 or $57,105,772 .fprnla Fig Syrup" which has directions
for babies and children of all ages
printed on bottle. Mother! You must
say “California” or you may get an
Imitation fig syrup.
“Work” in Heaven
Dr. Charles Eliot, president emeritus
of Harvard university, in a recent ad
dress on •Religiort for the Modern
Youth,” said:. “I have never seen any
description of beacon which was even
tolerable." Doctor Eliot intimated
that ho bad no belief whatever in
heaven as a place «.f refuge from pain
or rest from monotonous drudgery
"Joy in work is my ideal of happiness
here or hereafter," he added.’"find r*
peaterily discounted the idea that
heaven and idleness would bine^iny
thing ’in common..
\
Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh
should be in every home. Unexcelled for
Cuts, Rums, Wounds and Sores Heals
qui< Lie. Iltree si/e*-; all stores.— Adv.
Fine Ending
."No one.' declared a high school
miss, "can doubt that this, book br.-
a happx ending.' . ’
TTeF
father picked up tit*' book end
examined it. It was a treatise on
algebra.
Where rioosjJ In happy eii*ltiia come
in':” inquired iTe.
“Look at tlie bail, o, the book."
Ho looked at the hack of the* bool
and there found a-n-we.r> to all tho
problems. ' f
A tori'M livrr prevents po por food nssje.llA-
tl' n Tour up your liv-r v ilh \VrJt'hI'*> fndlnn
Vegetable I'll Is . :c7-2 St. N, V .Vlv.
Dispute Over Seed Wheat
Ft S. Johnston, a fanner at Morton
'Vasli,. is pointing with pride t<> .1
■wheal crop which In* mys originated
from sood taken from a bury ing place
in the* Nib* \ alley He says be >tnri
Raltimore ( .,| | liv experiment four y'ears ago and
that the* grain from Ins present erop
is “white mid' eery hard, .the straw
short arid the heads prolific." Some
scientists dispute* the elaini. saying
that seed so long dormant, as it mu-i
have b****n if it < nine from Hit* tomb,
would n<>t grow.
Three Killed in CracH.
Columbus, nhto. Three people were
killed and one* seriously injured at
-Fleatown, threa miles south of New
ark. when an automobile in which
they were returning- from a party at
Ruckeye Lake skidded and crashed in
to a ditch eight feet deep which was
partially filled with: water. The dead
all from Newark are: Sidney Jones,
32; J J. Speigle. 34 and Harvey
Plummer, 27. Mrs. Katheryn Davis,
28, of Dayton, is in a hospital at New
ark suffering from a crushed foot and
jpossible internal injuries.
Killed in Gun Fight.
Chicago.- One notorius gambling
house and Saloonkeeper was killed,
two other men probably fatally wound
ed and a fourth less seriously hurt fol
lowing a gun fight in Cicero.
Eddie Tanol, known to police as a
power in gambling circles, was slain
in his saloon and gambling place in
Cicero during a revolver fighL, MyJejj'
(Klondyke) O'Donnell and Leo Climax
probably were fatally wounded and
Martin Sinet. a waiter in Tanol's sa
loon, was wounded slightly by a stray
bullet from the gangsters' weapon*.
Yields 100 Indian Skeletons.
Moulton. Ala.— Skeletons of more
than 100 Indians were found in a
found. One tomahawk was pronounced
near here according to Dr. Garard
Fcrwkes, representative of the Smith
sonian institute The intpinri is be
lieved to have been the work of the
Cherokee Indian^. Numerous copper
beads, pottery and other relics were
found. One tomahawk was proncuno-
ed the largest ever unearthed.
Dr. Fewkes has also excavated two
Indian mounds on the Tennessee river
Where valuable relics were sound.
>
Hairs Catarrh
Medicine
Treatment,both
local and internal, and has been success
ful in the treatment of Catarxh for over
forty years. Sold by all druggists.
F. J. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo, Ohio
RESINOL
_ 5oothinq AndHe&linq
for Skin and ScalpTroubles
.4
?arwu.:-„ -c
: .-.a, Z £,„