Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, August 30, 1918, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE KAISER AS I KNEW
HIM FOR FOURTEEN YEARS
By ARTHUR X. DAMS, D. D. S,
(Copyright, 1918, by the McClurc Newspaper Syndicate)
(Continued.)
Later on, when 1 read of the in
tercepted note from von Zimmer
man to von Eekhardt in which the
Foreign Secretary declared that "the
employment of ruthless submarine
warfare now promises to compel
England to make peace in a few I
months," I realized how high in the
councils of the nation this optim-;
istic Prince was, but whether he
got his optimism from the Kaiser or
imparted some of his own to that j
arrogant monarch, I don't know. It j
was quite evident, though, that!
they were of the same mind on most i
ot' the questions of the day. and the
interesting part about it was (hat
they were both almost invariably
wrong! i
From the beginning of 1916 until j
about the middle of 191" the great
army headquarters was located in
the Prince's palace at Pless, and j
during most of that period he was,
there, too. Naturally he came in j
contact with the Kaiser and was of
the high command, and I felt that i
at this time anything he said was
merely an echo of what he had
heard in the army councils.
After the Kaiser issued his first
peace note, which, because of its
obvious purpose was summarily;
turned down by the Allies, von Pless!
called to see me, and our conversa-j
tion naturally drifted to that devel- |
opment. 1
"Of course, they refused it!' he j
declared, in the most satisfied man
ner. "We KNEW they would re- [
fuse it. We WANTED them to re-1
fuse it. If they hadn't refused it.,
we would have made our terms so ;
harsh that they would have had to i
jefuse it. But it accomplished its
purpose just the same; it got the
French and English into hot water 1
trying to explain to their people
why they didn't make peace when
Germany was willing to do so. In j
this way. we may be able to split the;
Allies. Russia is going to quit any
way. There's going to be a revolu-1
tion and we'll be able to throw all j
our forces on the western front and j
crush the enemy there!"
"I always liked England," he add
ed, "but Lloyd George is ruining,
that country and now he'll certainly j
have his hands full explaining why
he doesn't make peace."
Shortly afterwards the Kaiser j
came to me and said practically the ;
same thing. "We've got the English j
and the French governments in a
nice predicament." he said, "trying j
to explain to their people why they |
don't make peace." He laughed hi- j
lariously as he added, "They're wild i
with rage at us for surprising them j
in this way." The Socialist meeting |
which followed at Stockholm was
what Germany wanted, but the allied
governments were clever enough to j
s. e the ruse and prevented the dele- j
gates from leaving their respective!
countries."
After America declared war. j
Trince von Pless readily admitted j
that his prediction in that regard j
had been wrong, but he was never- |
theless bold enough to venture an-;
other one: "We didn't think Amer-1
,oa would do it, I admit," he de- j
dared, with all his old optimism, •
but anyway, America won't fight.
She had to go into this war to pro
tect her honor, and she will avail
herself of the opportunity, perhaps,
to raise an army for use eventually j
against Japan, but she won't fight in
Europe—you may depend on that.
She hasn't the boats to carry the:
men, and boats can't be built over- j
night, you know!"
Since then, of course, the Prince
has been shown again how unrelia
ble his prognostications seem to be.
but fortunately I am not on hand
to crow over him. The day I left
Berlin, I received a telegram from
him asking me to reserve time for
him on January 2 4—two days later
—when no doubt I would have heard
some additional prophecies.
Referring to the Prince's optimism
reminds me of an epigram that be
came current in Berlin during the |
war and which may not, perhaps, j
have made its way across: "The Ber
liners are optimistic and gloomy; i
the Viennese are pessimistic and i
gay!"
There was one point upon which
the Prince von Pless was more hon
est in his statements than the
Kaiser. I refer to the Kaiser's
complaints against America for sup
plying munitions and money to the
Allies.
"V.'e haven't a leg to stand on,"
he frankly admitted when we dis
cussed that question. "Why, in the
last twenty years we have supplied
more munitions to warring nations \
than any other four countries in
the world put together!"
Despite his overweening confi
dence. which at times approached j
braggadocio, the Prince was sports- i
man enough to admit his miscalcu- \
lations, and while he was German!
through and through. In his convlc- j
tions that might makes right and !
that "Deutschland ueber alles" was j
a most worthy sentiment, he .had i
much in him that distinguished him
from the rest of his kind.
I complained to him on one occa
sion of the manner in which the;
royal family played havoc with my
practice by upsetting the routine of
the day, sometimes without much ;
previous notice.
"Davis," he said, "you are foolish
to tolerate it. It's all right, of
course, to accommodate the Kaiser
and the Kaiserin. and the Crown;
Prince and the Crown Princess are
perhaps entitled to similar consid
eration, but as far as the other
princes and the nobility are con
cerned, if I were you I certainly
wouldn't allow it. They may object
terribly at first, but they will soon
fall into line!"
That was about as democratic a
viewpoint as I had ever heard from
a German prince. He was a nice
fellow but a poor guesser, and must
have proven a poor adviser on dip
lomatic questions for the Kaiser.
Despite the fact that the Prince
was so thoroughly trusted by the
Kaiser, the Princess was the subject
of the most alarming rumors which,
because of her English birth and as
sociations, were not difficult to
spread. It was remembered that j
when King Edward visited Berlin
in 1910, shortly before his death, j
and was taken sick suddenly while i
attending a reception, it was the;
Princess von Pless who ran to his
aid. She had studied nursing and
knew Just what to do In the emer- j
gency. She recognized the monarch's
ailment, tore open his collar and j
administered first aid, and it was
said that her presence of mind saved
the King's life. Incidentally, it was
commonly reported at that time that!
had King Edward died on that oc-,
casion, war between England and ]
Germany would have been inevtta-;
ble, because Berlin would have been I
blamed for the tragedy, but as the |
King's illness occurred in the Eng- I
•<h embassy such an accusation j
FRIDAY EVENING.
could hardly have been made.
At any rate, the Princess was re
ported to be a spy, and it was said
she had been arrested. In corrob
oration of these stories it was
pointed out that she was no longer
seen at the palace. The truth was
that she was serving in hospitals as
a Red Cross nurse.
She came to nie in her Red Cross
costume one day and I told her of
the rumors I had heard. They
seemed to amuse her very much and
she asked me to repeat the stories
to her husband when he came to
see me.
"It will amuse him immensely,"
she declared. '
Later on a rumor gained ground
that the Prince himself had caught
her with incriminating "papers" and
had murdered her with his own
hands!
These rumors about the Princess
von Pless gained ground the more
readily because it was well known
throughout Germany that the Eng
lish wives of even the most promi
nent Germans could not repress
their pro-Ally leanings. I ani sorry
I cannot say the same thing of the
American wives ot' German nobility.
There may have been exceptions. I
sincerely hope there were. But it is
a sad commentary that not a single
American wife of a German noble
man ever aroused the slightest sus
picion because of anti-German ten
dencies. and most of those with
whom I came in contact were with
out doubt more pro-German than
their husbands!
CHAPTER XII
The Kaiser's Appraisal of Public j
Men.
No one ever speaks to the Kaiser
until addressed. As that monarch's I
opinions on most subjects are firmly j
fixed and he will stand no opposi-1
tion. any erroneous idea he may i
entertain is very apt to remain with i
him. His advisers were apt to leave ;
him in error rather than arouse his
ire by attempting to set him right. ■
But for the fact that he was very
fond of asking innumerable ques- j
tions. his store of information might j
have been extremely scanty.
In the course of my conversations
with him, he frequently expressed!
his views of men who were in the
public eye. Upon what basis they |
were founded he did not always en- j
lighten me. but even when I knew!
them to be erroneous I realized it j
was useless to try to change them j
and I did not aften take issue with j
him. When I did, his eyes would j
flash fire, but I had expected that \
and I continued just the same.
Before the war, even when his i
criticisms of public men were ad- ]
verse, he usually clothed them in;
temperate language. After the war, i
however, he sometimes became vi-1
tuperative and abusive and made'
little effort to restrain himself. j
There was no question of the Kai-!
set 's familiarity with current affairs j
and his broad knowledge of indi- j
viduals who occupied important j
places the world over. I asked him I
once what papers he read that he;
kept so well posted upon what wasi
going on in the world, and he told
me that one of his secretaries !
clipped most of the important news- r
papers and magazines and laid j
everything of interest before him. j
(To Be Continued.)
Saturday,
August 31st
Face Powders
Coty's Face Powder $1.75
Laßlache Face Powder 39c
Hudnut's Sweet Orchid Face Pow
der ...... 83c
Hudnut's Violet Sec Face Powder,
43c
Sanitol Face Powder 23c
Carmen Face Powder 36c
S.wansdown Face Powder .... 13c
Colgate Charmis Face Powder 25c
Freeman's Face Powder 19c
Attar Tropical Face Powder ... 45c
Toilet Creams
Hind's Honey & Almond Cream, 36c
Stillman's Freckle Cream 34c
Frostilla 19c
Orchard White ... • 28c
Oriental Cream $1.17
Pompeian Night Cream 28c
Hudnut's Cold Cream 43c
Hudnut's Cream Violet Sec ... 49c
Pond's Cold Cream • 30c
Pond's Vanishing Cream 30c
Palmolive Vanishing Cream .. 37c
Palmolive Cold Cream 37c
Sempre Giovine 39c
Ammonized Cocoa 53c
Mercolized Wax • 69c
Sanitol Cold Cream 23c
Ingram Milkweek Cream 79c
Othene (Double Strength) ... 79c
Ken Klay (Double Strength) .. 79c
Kintho Cream 83c
De Meridor Cream • 33c
Lady Betty Cream 45c
Tooth Preparations
Pebeco Tooth Paste 36c
Kolynos Tooth Paste 21c
Forhan's Tooth Paste 20c
Graves Tooth Paste 17c
Senreco Tooth Paste 21c
Lyon's Tooth Powder • 18c
Graves Tooth Powder 17c
Euthymol Tooth Powder 17c
Colgates Tooth Powder 15c and 25c
Pyrrocide Powder • 75c
Manicuring Preparations
Cutex Outfits, complete 79c
Cutex Cuticle Remover 21c
Cutex Nail White 21c
Cutex Cuticle Comfort ....... 21c
Ongaline 43c
Hudnut's Cuticle Remover 23c
Hudnut's Nail Cake •.23c
Nail Files 10c to 30cI
| A GIVING OR A GETTING WAR
By WILLIAM T. ELLIS
By William T. Ellis ,
Recently there befell ail incident
in a street car running from Phila- .
delphia to the neighborhood of the j
munition plants on the Delaware
river that portrays two attitudes ■
concerning the war. A loud-voiced I
woman was talking across the aisle j
of the car to an acquaintance, re- j
counting the prosperity that has!
come to her since her husband went!
to work in a munition factory, at
high wages. She wound up smugly
with. "So I don't care how long this
war lasts!"
"You don't? don't you!" exclaimed !
a woman in the seat behind, sudden- ]
ly rising and bringing her umbrella
down upon the other's bonnet. "Well. ■
1 do. for I have three sons in the !
army! So take that!— and that!—
and that!" whacking the astonished
profiteer at every phrase. The other
women in the car, moved in their
elemental impulses, applauded the !
mother.
Crass, but real, the incident sug- j
gests the line of division that the |
war has drawn between two major i
classes of people. To some it is a
getting war. a time for money-mak- |
ing and for enhanced social position,
and for improved worldly estate, j
This "profiteering" class Includes a
wide variety of persons, from the 1
craven, calculating "slacker" who gets !
the job or the business of the real i
man who has gone to France to fight, I
to the businessman whose war profits
have added millions to his assets;
from the social climber who has used
Red Cross work to improve her social
position and to get l?er name into the
papers, to the parasite who has made
this upheaval an occasion for preying
upon men
Stigma deep and lasting, is attach
ed to all who construe this greatest
of mankind's tragedies as an occa
sion for personal advantage. There
is something instinctive in whole
some human nature which revolts
against this vulture quality. "Blood
money!" we murmur, as we watch
the ostentation of the war-enriched
ghouls. Legislation and common
sentiment are growing stronger
against all forms of war profiteering.
The person who has merely made j
money out of humanity's Calvary is |
like unto a Jerusalem Jew who ped- j
died stools to spectators for witness- j
ing the Crucifixion of Jesus. Unless j
I am very much mistaken, these prof- j
iteers are not incurring personal j
odium themselves, but they are also j
selling their sons and daughters to |
the shame ot the years. The next !
generation will be pointing the finger 1
of scorn at certain families, crying j
"They made their money out of the
war for the world's liberty."
The Glory of the Trenches
We are testing our time by the :
T-square of the Cross. The glory of |
our land is that our best are meeting ]
the divine measure. "For God so
loved * • * that He gave." This is
the proof of the presence of the j
spark. Kinship to the Creator is re- i
vea'.ed (it is the family blood show-1
ing itself) by the way in which our !
people are giving—parents giving
their sons, wives and sweethearts giv- !
ing their beloved, young men giving J
themselves, kept-at-homes giving !
their services and substance and sac
rifice. Thank God, the heart of the
nation bears the brand of the Cross.
Soldiers show this spirit. They
are not reluctant slaves to a system,
dragged unwillingly into the war.
They rejoice in the service, and deem
it the proof of their manhood. They I
Kennedy's Cut-Rate Medicine Store
321 MARKET STREET
Talcum Powders
Colgate's Talcum 18c
Jess Talcum (Glass) 19c
Jess Talcum (Tins) 15c
Rosary Talcum 15c
Hudnut's Talcum (Tins) 19c
Palmolive Talcum 21c
Ven Dome Talcum (Pound) 23c
Sterate Zinc Powder 19c
Babcock's Corylopsis Talcum... 16c
Babcock's Cut Rose Talcum ... 15c
Garden of Allah ... •.,. 23c
Toilet Soap Specials
Hudnut's Violet Sec Soap, 3 for 25c
Physician's and Surgeon's Soap 3
for • 25c
Saymon's Soap, 3 for • 27c
Kewpie Soap Dolls, 3 for 25c
HarfinS Soap, 2 for 25c
Colgate Big Bath Soap, 2 for .. 25c
Colgate Elder Flower Soap, 2 for
25c
Packer's Tar Soap 17c
Poslam Soap 18c
Johnson's Foot Soap •., 19c
Ivory Soap, 2 for 13c
4 oz. pure Castile Soap 10c
Toilet Water Specials
Pinaud's Lilac •.. 79c
Hudnut's Toilet Waters 79c
Djer-Kiss Vegetal 98c
Houbigant Toilet Water $2.19
Garden Allah Toilet Water
55c and 98c
Violet Simplicity Toilet Water
55c and 98c
Jess Toilet Water . •... 55c and 98c
Rouges and Face Tints
Pyramid Rouge 39c
Ideal Rouge • 43c
Garden Allah Rouge 29c
Dorin's Liquid Rouge 21c
Aubry Sister's Tint •.... 28c
HAJRRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH
share themselves with the world, and
offer up their all upon the high al
tar of sacrifice, Kvery record of the
trenches' is a record of self-surren
der, of holy giving. I found the
thirsty Massachusetts boys in action
without water, because they had
given their canteens to the wounded.
Of course: that is what being a sol
dier and a comrade means.
Nobody should pity our men in the
trenches; they are to be envied. They
have drawn the sting from life and
won to the grandeur of vicarious ex
istence. They have achieved the
heights of audacious, self-spending
experience, following in the train of
the Saviour who "emptied himself."
and "gave His life a ransom."
They alone live
Who greatly love
And greatly give.
Millionaire Puupers
In contrast with those royal giv
ers, the soldiers, and the like-minded
folk at home who are their stay and
support, we behold the getters, the
men who have only money;—or, rath
er. whom money has. There are such
beings who are starving in spirit
while their bodies are surrounded by
abundance. They have money, but
have not life. Their capacity for lav
ishness in love has been lost; and if
a celestial surgeon were to operate it
would be discovered that their souls
have become shrivelled and weazened
little organs, like their appendixes.
Their generous impulses have been
atrophied. The grace of giving has
departed from them. True, they make
contributions—which they term ex
tortions —to public charity lists; but
this they regard as a penalty impos
ed upon them by society, a refined
sort of tax. and an essential business
expenditure. Of cheerful giving, hil
arious giving, adventurous giving,
they know nothing whatever.
"That man may last, but never lives.
Who much receives, but never gives;
Whom none can love, whom none
can thank.
Creation's' blot, creation's blank."
These jaded men with tired eyes
and worried lines, who have plenty
of servants and sychophants, but
few friends, are a pitiable spectacle,
as they lounge, overful and gouty,
in the luxurious chairs of exclusive
clubs. Existence has no real sweet
ness for them. The glow of vital im
pulses has departed forever from their
lives. Money and its affairs engross
them. Instead of devising ways for
giving money, they petulantly com
plain that everybody is trying to get
it away from them. They resent the
stern mandate of civilization that
they shall at least make public be
quests in their wills. A rich man ir
reparably disgraces his family if he
leaves nothing to charity.
In contrast to these dwarfed spir
its consider that splendid Adventur
er, who was lavish with his life to
the limit of the hill-top and its cross:
and who. although he made his cli
materic gift when still a young man,
is the world's most conspicuous Suc
cess. His philosophy of giving, and
His great gift of himself, are the
eternal condemnation of selfishness.
What the "Drives" Uncover
War loan and Red Cross and Y. M.
C. A. "drives" have uncovered many
depressing instances of men and wo
men who are sordidly self-centered
and small-conceptioned. But why
dwell upon these? For the inextin"-
guishable glory of all these patriotic
and public-spirited efforts is their
Hospital Gillette Hospital
Borden's Horlick's
Malted Razors Malted
Milk Milk
$2.79 $3.98 $2.79
Carnation Dutch Pluto
Milk Cleanser Water
11c 8c 29c
Candy Specials
Wallace's Candies of Character 89c
Wallace's Minuet 89c
Wallace's Chocolate Covered Fruits 98c
Wallace's 36 Kinds of Chocolate 98c
Wallace's Chocolate Dainties 45c
(All Candies We Buy From Factory and Are Fresh)
Cigars and Cigarette Specials
We expect Cigars and Cigarettes to advance
any day. Provide for the future.
Counsellor I Camel Cigarettes
50 SHw'o $2.29 Lcky Strike
"I Cigarette,
[°# J 2 for 25c
Handsomely Boxed Stationery
Empress Linen 43c
Runwick Linen 39c
Dorchester Linen .' 29c
Khaki Linen 48c
KENNEDY'S
revelation of how rich and poor have
given of their abundance and of their
poverty. The most daring dreamer
of the possibility of beneficence never
imagined that such stores of wealth
could be outpoured at the call of al
truism. Belgium, Armenia, Serbia.
France—all have become symbols of
the open-heartedness and open
handedness of the world. Old stan
dards of charity have been so far
surpassed that henceforth we must
do our thinking in new and larger
terms. We have tapped unsuspected
reservoirs of good will and generos
ity. This Is the war of the merciful
heart. A mood of ministry to men
has accompanied all the hurt of the
battlefield.
These "drives" have burst the l
bonds and barriers of human hearts.
Myriads have come for the first time, ;
byway of experience, to an under- ]
standing of the mind of Christ. They j
have learned how to spell "sacrifice." I
deeming it a luxury to be permitted .
to share the hardships of the fighting
men. Audacious spirits have got only
welcomed privation in order to give,
but some have even gone into debt in
order to do so.
"Give as you would If an angel
Awaited your gift at the door;
Give as you would if to-morrow
Found you where waiting was o'er; |
Give as you would to the Master
If you met His searching look;
Give as you would of your substance i
If His hand your offering took,"
The Paradox of Plenty-
Great Britain has not for centur-
DandYLine Shoes j
202 Market Street
Growing Girls' Tan Medi
um High Cut Lace Shoes.
$4.95 j
Misses' Good Strong School
Shoes, belt and lace; all sizes
to 2.
$2.95
Children's Extra Wear, all
Leather Shoes.
$2 , 45_ • '
Boys' and Youths' Extra
Heavy Leather School Shoes.
$2,95
DandYLine Store
Devine & Yungel, Props.
ies been so fat In soul as she has
grown during war's lean days of ra
tioning. She has been stripped to
strength. That is the paradox of the
war. Sacrifice has meant real at
tainment. Self-denial has proved to
be acquisition. The givers have been
the real getters. In the school of
material adversity, the world has
come to spiritual prosperity. All the
loving and serving and self-forget
ting which have followed in the train
of the great struggle have produced
nobler, wiser, stronger and more fra
ternal men and Women.
It seems as if there Is an eternal
process of equity at work whereby
IMPORTANT
ANNOUNCEMENT
I take pleasure in informing my friends
and the public that I have purchased the
ENTIRE STOCK
of the well-known
E. L. Rinkenbach
Jewelry Store, 1215 North Third Street
Consisting of Large and Well-Selected Lines of
DIAMONDS—WA TCHES-—CLOCKS— -SILVERWARE—-
JEWELRY-CUT GLASS—NOVELTIES—ART GOODS, Etc.
These goods will be removed as soon as pbssible to my stores 302
Market Street and 1 North Third Street, where they will be
arranged and marked down in price preparatory for a
BIG SPECIAL SALE
DUE NOTICE OF WHICH WILL BE GIVEN LATER
WATCH THE PAPERS FOR DAY AND DATE
H. C. CLASTER
GEMS JEWELS SILVERWARE
302 MARKET STREET 1 NORTH THIRD STREET
Patent Medicines
$l.OO Father John's 81c
$1.25 Peplogenic Milk Powder 95c
85c Jad's Salts •.... 53c
$l.OO Listerine . 79c
Liquid Veneer ... • 39c
$l.OO Lysol 79c
$l.OO Ovoferrin • 79c
$l.OO Miles Nervine 79c
50c Phillips Milk Magnesia .... 34c
$l.OO Hood's Sarsaparilla 79c
$l.OO Quaker Herb Extract •... 79c
50c Regulol 37c
$l.OO S. S. S. (Swift's Specific), 79c
$l.OO Swamp Root ..• 79c
$1.50 Scott's Emulsion 89c
$l.OO Sloan's Liniment 79c
50c Shiloh's (For Cough) ... •. 38c
$1.25 Pierce's Discovery 81c
$1.25 Pierce's Prescription 81c
$1.25 Anuric Tablets ...• 81c
$l.OO Caldwell Syrup Pepsin... .79c
$1.25 Varnesis (Green) 83c
$l.OO Park Davis American Oil 65c
$1.20 Brorpo-Seltzer 79c
25c Energine 21c
$1.25 Pinkham's Compound 81c
$l.OO Tanlac 79c
50c Usoline (pint) .. • 39c
$1.25 Pinaud's Hair Tonic 89c
$l.OO Hay's Hair Health ...... 69c
$l.OO Wyeth Sage and Sulphur 73c
$l.OO Danderine • 69c
$l.OO Herpicide 79c
50c Parisian Sage 39c
50c Q-Ban Tonic • 39c
$l.OO Resinol Ointment 75c
60c Musterole ... • 39c
75c Analgic Baume •. 48c
60c Doan's Kidney Pills 43c
50c Williams' Pink Pills ...... 34c
50c Vick's Vapo-Rub 38c
AUGUST 30, 1918.
lavish lives are made rich. God does
not let himself get Into debt to any
man. His old word is true, "The
liberal soul shall be made fat"—
and fat souls are the most desirable
possession of the race."
"A rich woman dreamed that she
was In heaven and saw a fine man
sion being built.
" 'Whom Is that for?' she asked
her guide.
" 'For your gardener.'
" 'But lie lives in the tiniest cot
tage on earth, with barely room
enough for his family. He might live
better if he did not give away so
much to the miserable poor folks."
"Further on she saw a tiny cot
tage being built. "And whom la that
for?'
" 'That ia for you."
'But I have lived in a m ana lon
on earth. I should not know how to
live in a cottage.'
"The answer waa full of meanin*:
The Master Builder is doing his beat
with the material that is being sent
up.' "
"The weak are enouraged to be
strong by the player piano."
SPANGLER MUSIC HOUSE.
2112 North Sixth street, adv.
NOTICE
Hours of this store —9 a.
m. until 9 p. m. —Satur-
day's 9 a. m. until 1 0 p. m.
Household Needs
100 5 gr. Cascara Tablets 35c
100 Calomel Tablets 19c
100 5 gr. Aspirin Tablets 98c
100 Bicarbonate Soda Tablets . 23c
100 Rhinitis Tablets •.... 35c
100 Bell-Ans 53c
200 Bliss Native Herbs 73c
50c Pape's Diapepsin 33c
35c Freezone • 28c
30c James' Headache Powders . 19c
2 Cakes Soap Dye 1 25c
Full Pound Absorbent Cotton . 59c
Full Pound Borax 13c
Full Pound Boric Acid* 21c
Full Pound Bi-Carbonate Soda 15c
Full Pint Grape Juice 24c
Rubber Gloves 29c
Syringe Tubing 29c
Rubber Sponge 10c
Infant Syringe 18c
Nipples (Cure Kolic) 6 for .... 25c
Formaldehyde Candles 23c
Full Pint Peroxide 27c
Roach Salts .. •.. 10c and 19c
20-Mule Team Borax 13c
Automobile Supplies
Prepared Wax 69c
Cleaner 39c
Prepared Wax 39c
Auto Lak 49c
Black Lac 49c
Stop Squeak Oil .... 49c
Chamois Skins, All Prices.
Sponges, Selected Forms.
Sheeps' Wool, All Prices.
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