Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, June 25, 1918, Night Extra, Image 5

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Gr fXTBlilO; rLErKERpAlL'ADELPpiI TtJESDAXp JUNE
25, ; 1918 - ' ; " rkZ?$
BEOWAWAITED
BY LLOYD GEORGE
w Premier
Tells Commons
Allied Man-Power Soon
Will Be Superior
RAISES U. S. SPEED
Voices Confidence in,Outcomc
of Approaching Big
Struggle
Special Cable to Evening Public Ledger
: Cor-jrliltt, Wit, hj .Veto York Times Co.
London, June 2j.
Premier IJoyd George in the House
of Commons this afternoon paid trib
ute to the speed with which American
troops hid been 6ipatched to Trance
and Vnade an impprtant statement on
the relative strength of the Allied
s'nnd German armies. lie said he ex
pected that In a comparatively short
time the Allies would be stronger than
the Germans, and he voiced the confl
uence of the Allied commanders in tile
outcome of the approaching struggle.
Referring to the American troops,
he said:
"There is no doiibt that the num
bers that have come in since March
21 Have been satisfactoiy. 1 oould go
bejond that. It Is an amazing piece,
of organization which has enabled the
United States to bilng vast numbers
of flrst-rate American troops to
France."
J. M. Hogge, a Labor member, in
terrupted the Premier by saying:
"The figures are in the papers.
Mr. Lloyd George remarked:
"Oh, all right, Trien mere is noin
4 lng more to -state, it my honorable
"friend Is satisfied with them. I hope
the Germans are also satisfied. But
I cannot give you any more figures.
All I can say is that they are sum
, clent to encourage the Allies and I
think they will be quite sufficient, to
disappoint and ultimately to defeat our
foe. The troops are of the best qual
ity. Some of them are already in the
fljhtin line and I hope to see many
more; of them there In a very short
time."
Referring to the numbers of the Al
lied foices the Premier said he had
already discussed them in his speech
on the Maurice affair, and went on:
Maurice Figures Accurate.
"I think the relative strength of
the contending forces Is very accu
rately presented by General Maurice
himself In the document from which
I quoted when he said they were as
nearly equal as they could be, Since
the time when I made my statement In
a secret session there has undoubtedly
been an enormous addition of strength
n thn German army from Russia.
"I quoted of the House statement
made by General Maurice, which, I
should think, accurately represented
the relative strength of the two forces
on March 21. The Germans themselves
are claiming tint they are inferior in
numbers. They have done so repeat-
,-v cdly. That doe3 not alter my view in
the least ot wnat mo position ivaa
" then. They probably do so In order
to exaggerate their prowess afid they
clalm that the defeats which they say
they inflicted upon our armies ana
up'on the l-rencn were noi in me iqpsi
r auriDuiaDio iu amicnui uuiuucid.
Uncertain of Io
"clnrtA thnt date there are a cood
J manv facts which, are not ascertainable
and which are elementary In computa
tion of the relative strength of the two
forces for Instance, losses We know
our own losses The Germans exag
gerate the enormous losses they have In
flicted on all our allies that wo know.
It Is Just possible that we may be ex
aggerating the losses Inflicted upon the
v Germans, but It Is quite Impossible to
Nell what the real losses are, except that
undoubtedly the losses Inflicted on the
Germans have been very heavy, and
that they have drawn upon their re-
hcrvts Until you know exactly what
they are, It Is Impossible to make com
putation up to date.
"We know what accessions the Ger
i.ians have had from other spheres Of
course we know the accessions of
strength that have come to us. But,
there are so many elements which" can
L not bo computed. You can not say at
present precisely what the relative
strength of the forces on both sides Is at
the present moment. The American
troops are coming at a great rate, and
I should not be very much surprised If
. In a rnmnaratlvelv short time tne Aiuea,
1 strength on the western front would not
be greater than the German.
. Germans Ue East Reserves
" "They are in the position of ha lng to
IV draw on their last reSeres, which may
Vbe thrown in In the course of the next
I) month or two, ana mey nae nu iuiu"
M ...... AH . nll unnn avPOnl hV the lllOSt
.Incites) IU ..C1I I' - wv
Iramatlc combing out of men of military
age from essential Industries. There Is
Fom Indication that they are resorting
.-.to that. All this is proof ot tne very
' in the course of this campaign
"The next couple of months the posi
tion must naturally be a very anxious
one: but the position Is gradually Im
proving from the Allies' point ot view,
and all I can say is, without any ap
pearance of boasting which, of course,
would be folly In a strugglo of this kino,
that the Allied generals feel confident
as to the issue.
On Eto of Great Eients
"Wo are on the eve of lery treat
events. There may be a great blow
romliig, perhaps within the next few
hours rcrtalnly within the next few
'lays and 'the Usuo of the campaign
mav drnend unon it. The Allies never
felt better prepared to meet It."
I Mr. Lloyd George liau no lmormauon
fe e1o on Kussla One gathered from
his speech that Russia's disintegration
xjas complete and, with the utmost good
will, tne urmsn uovernnicni yu
fcled as to the best method of helping the
people In the chaotic conditions, that
rir.iaiwi in that country. 'As to Japw.
& ihe .only Allied country that has access
-4 in Russia, he was markedly noncommlt-
la) and spoke with the greatest clrcum-
apeciiuii.
Tho difficulty, as regarucu jiussia, no
sald. was that it had not one govern-
T muni, but many. There were ae facto
. irnwrnments everywhere, and a foreign
t-1 power could not deal with any one body
tit persons in any pan oi jiyBia mm
m av that It -represented Russia' as a
M, whole. It would be to the interests oi
England, he said, and also Just and
Oenuitable. that the Governinent should
IV stand by Russia, If Russia Bvanted it.
.? f Russia had been treated' brutally b
UerniUiljr. raw in w, u.o.,.w.,.v.u,
,i and the treaties entered intfi with her
t ) had not been -respected by the Germans
twenty-four hours afterward.
1" Russia aettlnc Rlfbt View
IT These facts, he said, were getting well
U into the minds of the Russian popula,-
-, tlotl, anu ine lepung uim an mo mucs
tn satisfy ineir
ig
rcillsq wh.tt
f-OfcrmiiU militarism meant; their hatred
deeper, and Russia was readier now than
she had been for many months to tak
part In any movo wTilch would drive the
Germans tiut. The difficulty which the
Tremler saw was one or access The
only power, he said, which had access
In Russia wag Japan.
London, June 25.
In the course of his address to the
House of Commons, Preml-r Llod
George referred to the Italian vlctbry
as follows'
Terhnps t, ought to say a word on
Italy The ifallin victory Is one of the
most portentous events of the jcar and
It may have Infinitely greater results
than other victories which look bigger
It s a defest Inflicted on a Power not
in the best condition to sustain It
"Here a great encounter within the
Austrian empire Is being held. All the
strength she has been nblo to gather
Is being held, because for this attack
she brought up every avallablo man.
Considerably more than 60 per cent of
the Austrian effectives were cpgaged In
this attack. Had they captured the
Montollo position they might have got
behind the whole Allied position, and It,
might have been disastrous
"But they were held by the Itallin
army The pressure against them In
creased dally, and now the'Austrlans arc
In full retreat, and the only question
Is, whether they will bo able to effect
trfelr retreat
"The Italians have recaptured Mon-4
tello, and are now for the first time In
months on the left side of the Plave.
They have captured a number of guns
and recaptured half the guns, lost In the
first offensive.
Austrian Defeat Disastrous
"The Austrian army committed
Its
whole strength to this great offensKe,
and had Inflicted upon It one of the
greatest disasters In the war. This 'at
a time of serious discontent In Aus
tria, when three-fifths of the population
are completely out of sympathy with
the objects ot the war. As a matter of
fact, they are far more In sympathy with
the alms of the Allies, and vyjien three
fifths of the population are well aware
that their only chance of achieving
an) thing In the nature of freedom for
themselves was to secure n great Alfled
victory, and at a time when the whole
of the Austrian prisoners belonging to
one great and powerful race InAift.
trla were actually congreaUng In order
lo come oier and ffght on the Allied
side in Siberia. I refer to the Oiecho.
Slovaks. This Is a matter of great slg
nlfleance and hope.
"With regard to the western front It
would be a mistake to think that the
danger Is over. But whatever our dif
ficulties may be. the Central Powers'
difficulties are infinitely grcAter, with
populations driven by hunger to some
thing In the nature not merely of dis
content and sedition, but even In some
Important cities In Austria to revolt,
and with more than half the Austrian
army svmpathlzlng with the objects of
the country with which they are fighting
"The Ceritral Powers also have dif
ficulties In other countries In Bulgaria
and Turkey I point these things out
not to raise false hopes, but to show
that all we nerd Is to keep steady, en
dure and stand fast There Is not the
faintest doubt In my mind, surveying
the whole position and looking at the
whole facts, that our victory will be
complete "
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DR. WILLIAM M. PbLK,
NOTED SURGEON, DIES
Was Dean of Cornell Medical
College Prominent Con
federate Veteran
vROTARlANS IN SESSION
Expect 6000 Delegate to Reg
ister at Kansas City
Kansas Cltv. Mo, June 26 Dele
gates tr the ninth annual convention
of the International Association of Ro
tary Clubs came Into Kansas CUy on
1 every train today It was expected 6000
'would register before tonight
Many of tho ' big" men of rotary are
New York. June 25 already herc f mrst lnlcrcst' rcr
Dr William Mecklenburg Polk, a "P. "as 'no a"al of the Brltlsh "p"
noted surgean and g necologl.t. former resentatlvcs Andrew Home-Morton.
president of the New York Academy of President of theBrltlsh Absoclatlon of
Medicine and Dean of Cornell Medical Notary Club-, and Thomas Stephenson.
School, died vestcrday. In a sanitarium I "" Kdlhburgh editor, who Is the secrc
In Atlantic City In hlsseventy-fourth " f l10 nrltlsh clubs came
ear. Doctor Polk was also a dlstln- to this country especially to attend the
gulshed Confederate veteran of the , Kan-aB City convention
At his bedside when he ex- lne " lorn"1 meeting in connrewn
with tne international gatnermr was n
BELLEAU WOOD TAKEN
BY SKILLFUL TACTICS
AMERICANS OCCUPY
GERMAN TERRITORY
LIEUT. FREDERIC WHITAKER
Son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Whitaker,
Glenside, who lias been made officer
in charge of solo fljinp at the
United Slates aviation field, Lake
Charles) La. He is a West Point
graduate and was formerly attached
to the United States aviation field
at Wichita Falls, Tex., where lie
received his commission
JERSEY MILITIA PLANS HIKE
Gettinc Down to Real Soldier
Life at Camp Edge
Camp Edge, Sea C.lrt, June 25 A big
hike Is planned for tho latter part of this
week for the New Jersey militiamen w ho
are In camp herc. It Is planned to stay
out all night If weather conaitions per
mltj The militiamen have passed the first
stages, and are getting down to real
work on this their sixth day In camp
Two more companies went to the rifle
ranee for target nractlce vesterday.
Companies C, of the first battalion, from
Atlantic City, and n, of the third bat
talion, of New Brunswick. The militia
men are taking the regular organized
militia course, which Includes shooting
for record at 300, BOO and 600 yards slow
fire and 200 and 300 yards rapid fire In
addition, they are being given special In
struction In slow -fire shooting at 200
jards.
For three dajs the soldiers have felt
tho discomforts of cold weather Al
though they were provided with the
usual quota of blankets, the weather has
been so extremely unseasonable that
overcoats have been worn throughout the
day.
Civil War.
plred were his wife, his son. Frank L.
Polk, former corporation counsel of
New York city and now counsellor o: (h Hot,, Baltimore This was followed
the State Department nt W ashlngton, . wjtj, a luncheon at 1 o'clock nt the Hotet
and Mrs Frank L.Polk Muchlebach At 2 o'clock the directors
Doctor Poik reccntlj went to Atlantic' met with the district govcrnora at the
City from his home because members Biltlmorc At 7 o'clock tonight a dinner
of his famllv had become worried about was given at the Muehlbach for the In-
hls continued 111 health Ail" a raiiy. tcmatlonai oincers anu iamiucs wno are
he suffered a heart attack wh ch caused guests of tho convention
his death. ,
William Mecklenburg Polk, son of
nuhnn and Lieutenant General I.eonldas
and Frances Devcreux Polk, was born In
Ashwood, Maury County, Tenn. August .
15 i84t. His early education was oh-. v ar Department Declares JMen
tal'ned In Marlon. Ala . and at St James I Afc Necle(1 ,Q pr0luce Coal
College, rvvnerc nc prepaid .
-i . viri-lnln Mflltarv Institute at . Scranton,
Lexington,
th nerftnni
Thomas A. Stonewall) Jackson There war Department, telegraphed Instruc
h. .,rr.,,i th mathematical and rclen- tlons notlfj lng the local army recruit
German Cunning Outmatched
by AmericQn Cleverness
in Strange Fight ,
VAIth the merlrans on the Marne,
June 25
The fight In which the Americans com
pleted their conquest of Belleau wood
was one of the strangest of the war
German machine guns, cunningly hid
den In trees and on pullcss between
trees, were fired from different points
Most of these enemy weapons were en
sconced behind rocks, however, from
meeting of the International bonrd of! where they spat contlnuonslj
The A
forward, dropping with the aid of roots
and branches into declivities where tl
would lie motionless for a moment
Then they would resume their stealthy
progress
Kventuallv they swarmed over manv
emplacements only to find that the
Bodies had fled with their guns, leaving
tho ammunition behind A e-les of
such evacuations resulted In an ap
preciable advance of the American Hue.
STOP RECRUITING MINERS
Pa, June 25 Declaring
niii. .""' ",: ,. that tho production of coke of anthra-,-a.
then conducted under, cUe coa) houd hc ln no av interfer(.d
il direction of deneral umii Adjutant General McCain of the
Jtonewall) Jackson There war Department, telegraphed Instruc-
i.- .,ii,mitlri.l mid Felon- tlnns notlfv Inc the local army recrult-
tlflc course preparatory to admission to mg officers not to enlist applicants w ho
tine course '""J-l,1",l"' ' ,h q,a.0, ' arc employed about the mines Similar
West Point. The war between the State, n,truct',0I;,f ,t ,, understood, have been
nterferea vuin nis pians, m- " -.!,... received by recruiting stations in tne
service In 1861 under General Jackon , nnthracite region
n nichmond ns drill master of the Vlr- Vdjutant General McCain declares
I
.Tinln statn troons Trom April. 1861, to
May. 1805, Doctor Polk was continually
In active service ,
In May, 1863, he was appointed as
sistant chief of artillery. In Polk's
Corps, and subsequently captain In the
Adjutant General s Department A large
part of his experience In the Confederate
army Is Interestingly recnaeo, m a i"j
volume work which he wrote and pub
lished ln memory of his father.
PRODUCE MARKET GROWS
Waf Workers Create Demand on
Jersey Farms
Bridgeport, N J., June 25 Although
the best of markets are offered for their
products nt Wilmington, Chester and
other places across the Delaware River,
Jersey river-front farmers will be unable
to supply all the demands for fresh vege
tables this summer, as the same Indus
trial boom tint has made business so
brisk on the Pennsylvania and Delaware
shores has also set down thousands of
workmen and their families at the very
front doors of the Jersey farmers
In tho stretch between Pennsvllle and
Gloucester it Is estimated that there
are now from 10,000 to 40,000 more per
sons, mostly shipbuilders and muntlon
workers, to buy farm produce than there
were two years ago.
tint every pound of loal is needed to
win tho war and that hereafter no
miners, laborers or other persons en
gaged In the Industry will be eligible
for enlistment In the regular services of
tho United States army.
CARMAN QUITS ON TIME
Desert9 Trolley, Full of Passen
gers, in Chester Street
riienter. m . June 25 Better trollev
service was assured CheMers' council b
General Superintendent William A
llelndle, who declared that the shortage
of motormeti and conductors was respon
sible for Inefficient sen Ice complained
of
An Illustration wbr observed when a
wntorman left a car filled with passen
gers ln the middle of a block hecause
Ills time was up. and a long -alat fol
lowed until another motorman was obtained
Hold Trenches Southeast of
St. Die, Where Battlelinc
Crosses Lorraine Limit
With the American Armies ln France,
June 25 American troops are holding
a mountainous sector southeast of St.
Die. where the hattlellne crosses lrom
Lorraine Into German territory, It Is now
permissible to announce
Our men have been ln the trenches
herc since the first of June, hut no men
tion of their presence was allowed until
the Germans had made the discovery
themselves This occurred Sundav. when
an enemy raid on this sector resulted In
two Americans being captured
Another boche raid near Baccarat,
between St Die and Luncvllle, resulted
In the capture of other American pris
oners German artillery was quite active
north of Tout last night, probable In
retaliation for the shelling our gunners
gave thflr rear areas a few hours be
fore An air battle occurred over Thlau
court (behind the German lines on the
Toul front) without losses by either
side
SOLDIER TAKES BRIDE
CTMM
fowdeiTbeats
Plant at
Nashville Awiy
Schedule
"its."
Afc
, ' i
Wilmington. Del.. June 25. "Old HM
ory." the Government area! smolufc
po-nder plant near Nashville, Tenn. hM.
begun the manufacture of euncottoa.
This Insures the production of smoJKKA,
ahead of" the original contract time. li.v
ficlals of the du Pont Engineering Com gi
paiiy. milieu is uuiiuiiis nun pjani ivry ' t
UIB uui ci mucin Hi (Jtuui ui uu U9llrw;,C' M
announced today that an entire trait," iJW
seu-BUBiaimng, uning u own steam, t f
water, electrical current ana raw mate-
rials produced in tne ground, is in oper'Jj
atlon readv to turn out virtually 1U fuHi
capacity of 100,000 pounds per day CJjr"
guncotton "sfWf
This achievement Insure steady flow q
ot powder for the American army' ill P.;
France and completes one ot the men.
.ntw n1n kin ah rrti unfltlir l si rl AAnkt1til4ljtBt.
feat In the history of American war hKsV
dustry. f
ly
M
Edwarrl-Forner Nuptials Are Held at
Allentown
Mlrnloirn, Pn . June 25. A mllltarv
wedding was solemnized at the home of
Mr and Mrs John E Edwards. In the
fashionable West End, when their son.
Sergeant J Beaumont Edwards, a con
struction engineer of the Quartermaster's
Department at Cnmp Meade, took as his
bride Miss Blanche Forner, known as
the beauty of her clv when she was
graduated from tho Nurses' College of
the Allentown Hospital last lear
The ceremonv was performed by the
Bev Dr J. T Sa'chell
mM&
Big bugs
a Little Buos
That Dettroy Garden
Crop
Can be controlled by using
modern Insecticides
Arsenate of Lead (Faate).
40c lb., S Ihs. (1.75.
Hendeana (the rose bng
rintrnver), 25c, 60c, $1.00
per bottle.
nordeaax Mixture (for
blight , 30e lb., a lb Il.IS.
Xknteen (for plant llea)
:5c bottle, (1.50 pt. -
TRKB TANt.LEFOOT
A htlrkr nubstance that
will prerent caterplllara
rleNtrovIng trees, 1 lb. SOe
3 lb. S1.45 J4 SO for 10 lbs.
Vecetabte rianta, all
klndR, fresti from our Nur
eerlea every mornlnr.
Catalog Free
M.M
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This Week Only A Free Tube
This Offer on Pepsodent Ends Saturday Night
Present This Coupon Today '
43
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As a Courtesy to the New
Residents of Philadelphia
this Store will be open every evening this week,
that they may have an idea of the first of Amer
ican stores.
A 'special deputation of our clerks and their
officers, who come on duty only in the afternoon,
are fresh in the evenings to welcome strangers
and visitors. '
m
The Furniture, Housefurnishings, ChinaVCut
Glass, Carpets, Kugs and Bedding are having
their August Sale, which is one of the great
events of the City and of the Country.
: The Dairy Restaurant is open for the con
venience of those who come without having had
their dinner.
The Grand'Court is a public rendezvous, and
the greatest organ in the world is being played.
A novel, nw kind of store is on the Lower
Floor, called the Down Stairs Store. Those who
have not seen it will be surprised. '
Try Brushing Teeth
JVith This New Film-Remover
All Statements Approved by High Dental Authorities
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4vVV 4iaHBaLTTBaBaBr A y-
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Signed',
June 25, 1918.
t
Tooth Troubles Come
From Film
Your teeth are coated with a slimy film. You can
feel it with your tongue. It is ever-present. However
well or often you brush teeth in the old ways, they are
inadequate. And it is the cause of nearly all tooth
troubles.
That film is what discolors not your teeth. -It
hardens into tartar. It holds food which ferments and
forms acid. It holds the acid in contact with the teeth
to cause decay. '
Millions of germs breed in it. They, with tartar, are
the chief cause of pyorrhea. Many other troubles are
now traced to them.
It gets into crevices, hardens and stays, and resists
the tooth brush. The ordinary dentifrice does not fill the
bill. Many forms of tooth paste even help it to become
more resistant to the brush.
So millions find that brushing fails to save their
teeth. Teeth still discolor, still decay. Tartar forms,
and pyorrhea oftei gets a start. All because your way
of brushing fails to end that film.
Dentists long have known this. They have watched
tooth troubles increase despite the wide use of the tooth
brush. And dental science long has sought a way to
combat that film. t
That way has now been found. Able authorities
have for four years proved its efficiency. It is today
embodied in a dentifrice
called Pepsodent.
It quickly proves it
self. The results can be
seen and felt. So we urge
you to try a One-Week
tube which we ' offer
free and see what it
means to you.
Now They Apply
a Digestant
This new method Pepsodent is based on pepsin la
inc uigcsiant oi aiDumin. ine mm is aiDummous matrer.
The object of Pepsodent is to dissolve it, then to aon
stantly prevent its accumulation.
The great problem has been to activate pepsin with-j
out using harmful acid. It must be activated, else it Ii.pc
inert. The usual activator is an acid, harmful to enamel. A
w
But PeDSodent embodies a harmless activatirirtM!
tiMtm4 Y?itr Drnu.rtim.ntc faatr alrjiarlvr ori-dnjkrf naLnlft V.Jfl
4.,..WU. A T W W ..& ......... fck .MV. ... .11 W ..V.A U..MI,
That discovery has made possible this efficient applica-ra
tion. ' ;,
Dental authorities have for years watched the Pepsw j
dent results. They have proved the value of the product.-
Now it is felt that everyone should know it. It dcit
WUdl nuuililg cisc lias uuuc, anu wuai mu uc uuuc 11 -,---
teeth are to be kept clean. & $
Sn vwts sunnlv a One-Week tube to evervone WMfl
--- rr-j - --,.- ,. ,'; r'f?.
qeirc anri irt ifr tnar runi rtvt3i to vnii wnar tnm-f'?v
dent can do. ' $$
Present the coupon for the tube. Use it like any.
tooth paste and watch the results. TJote how clean tljji
teetn reel aiier using. iviarK inc uuscntc oi xnc nun,- am
fiow teeth whiten as the fixed film disappears. ifQ
. ... TK"?
Then you will know wnat clean teetn reauy iimmmU
You will know how to combat tooth troubles as t
else has done. And w
T" PAT. OFF.
BEG.U.S
The New-Day Dentifrice
not believe that vou
ever return1 to any
method ot tooth cl-
r. . ,. ' VL
yv c urge y w.
your teeth's sake! t
cept thisoffer, 1
cut out tnv
now, - - t r;..
'-t . $'.
.
M
Ji
Present Free Tube Coupon to
nontrlt Teller & Co , Che.tuut at 13th St.
Caballero Drur Co., R, W. Cor. SZd and Walnut
Etana'a Drue Storea 1106 Cliettnut St.
12:i Market St.
10 IS Market St.
, 1638 Cliettnot St.
732 Market St.
r.lmbel Brethen, Market, Chettnut, Eighth and Ninth Stt. '
Jacob Bros., 1015 Chettnut St.
Llccett-Riker.ltcceman 1332 Chestnut St.
16th and Chestnut 8ts.
1210 Market St.
206 Market St. '
(lermantonrn and Chelten Atcs.
llroad and Erie At.
X. Knellenbur Co.. Market, lllh and 12th Sts,
Mrawbridca Clothier, Market ft.. Eighth ht., rilbsrt St. ,
ONE-WEEK TUBEaFj
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Present this couoon. with your
An, to the druggist named. It t t94f1n
Tube of Pepsodent. , ,4.;
V - '. ft! ,
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Your sNsrnc t) -!st j
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Address ,J.
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Out-of-town MUswnta i
PeptodcRt ComMMr. 1M
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