Newspaper Page Text
March 4, 1915
try this for your health.
Foi diseases which do not readily
yield to drug treatment, such as
chronic dyspepsia, indigestion, rheu
matism, Eright’s disease, gall stones,
uric acid poisoning, and diseases of
the kidney and liver, the best physi
cians send their wealthy patieati, io
the famous mineral springs. Some
even tprnu months at the Spas of Eu
rope and were almost invariably cured
or greaJy Lene&tted.
I believe that, the Shivar Spring is
th e greatest mineral spring ever dis
covered and I believe it so firmly chat
I offer to send you enough water for a
three weeks’ treatment (two five-gallon
demijohns on rny guarantee that if it
fails to benefit your case I will refund
the price. You would hardly believe
me if I told you that only about two
out of a hundred, on the average, say
that they have received no benefit.
The water is restoring thousands. It
restored my health when my friends
and physicians thought my case was
incurable and I am willing and anxious
for you to match your faith in the
Spring' against my pocketbook. If I
win you become a life-friend of the
Spring. If I lose I will be sorry for
you, but I will appreciate your
courtesy in giving the water a trial
and test. Sign the following letter:
Box 1-C, Shelton, S. C.
Gentlemen:
I accept your guarantee offer and
enclose herewith two dollars for ten
gallons of Shivar Mineral Spring
Water. I agree to give it a fair trial,
in accordance with instructions con
tained in booklet you will send, and if
it fails to benefit my case you agree
to refund the price in full upon receipt
of the two empty demijohns which 1
agree to return promptly.
Name
Address
Shpping Point
(Please write distinctly )
Note: —-The Advertising Manager of the
Golden Age is personally acquainted with
Mr. Shivar. You run no risk whatever in
accepting his offer. I have personally wit
nessed the remarkable curative effects of
this water in a very serious case.
Save Halt
On Your
Machine WStS;
Km ® L
f
I Buy your sewing
machine now, save half, and get it on easy
terms, through the Religious Press Co-Oper
ative Club. We have engaged a large num
ber from a leading American manufacturer,
securing prices very little above actual cost.
By buying from us you become a member of
a big buying club; you get your machine at |
carload-lot prices, plus the small expense of B
operating the Club. You save all middle-
I men’s profits, agents’ commissions, salaries, |
| etc.
We Give Yow Tfairty Days Trial on g
| any of these machines. If you are not en- B
| tirely satisfied that it is the equal of any ma- E
| chine regularly sold at double the price, re- 1
| turn it to us, -and the trial costs you nothing. |
| Easy monthly payments if you keep it. |
I Six Superb Sewing M'aelsiixe Bar- |
| gains are shown in the Club catalogue, a
Prices range from $12.95 to $27.80. Latent g
model—the best that can be manufactured |
at the price. All fully warranted for ten I
years. 5
Sign and Mail This Coupon Today. Get our 3
catalogue and investigate the Club plan that saves ft
you half on your Sewing Machine.
Religious Press Co-Operative Club
102 E. Carolina Ave. :: Clinton, S. C. 8
FREE CATALOGUE COUPON.
Religious Press Co-Operative Club.
102 E. Carolina Ave. Clinton, S. C.
Please send me your catalogue, and full details
of the Co-Operative Club Plan that will save me
half the price on a high quality sewing machine.
Name
cl Address
Warner’s Pile Remedy
Relieves Piles in 24 hours or money
refunded. Made from pure oils. Con
tains no nacrotics or alcohol. Price
50c the bottle. By parcel post.
WARNER MEDICINE COMPANY
3642 N. Grand Ave. St. Louis, Mo.
Ihe importance of a main artery
from the central west into the South
has not been over-estimated. On the
other hand, it has been under-esti
mated. The vastness of its possibili
ties is presented when we look back
at the first attempt of our forefathers
to open up the West. Hubert Howe
Bancroft in “Retrospection” dealing
with the first National Road, paints a
picture well worth looking at by the
South. He says in part, ‘‘Over this
thoroughfare poured a stream of pop
ulation, thousands from Europe, as
well as those from the Atlantic
states, which percolating through the
minor channels of inter-communica
tion, multiplied the mid-continent in
habitants, and, overspreading the
plains beyond, crossing the moun
tains and deserts, finally debouching
upon the golden shores of the Pacific.
“All along the line of it, like the
paved street of a city cut through
the wilds of country, were seen fam
ilies and associations rolling their
great wagons westward with ease and
comfort, the men attended by women
and children, mounted and on foot,
with cows and sheep and chickens,
and all the concomitants of settle
ment and civilization, meeting on the
way droves of fat cattle, and wagons
piled high with food products for
the market of the East. For this
highway of happiness, the medium of
wealth and progress at a critical
juncture in the development of the
country, thanks are due in greater
Dart to Henry Clay and Albert Gal
latin.”
Those were poor people, those ear
ly settlers, and it only requires a mo
ment’s thought to construct a picture
fitting to the present time. Has the
government of the United States
been paid? Have the States through
which this road wended its way. and
who contributed their share, been
paid? Our growth and the present
wealth is the answer.
Why should some of our farmers
be induced to go to Canada? Here
at home we have the country, not
only for them, but for the investor,
the man who has the means ami is
looking for the way to reach fields
for investment. The tourist is the
prospector; furthermore he is an ad
vertisement, his good words scatter
like wildfire, and in his train comes
the homeseeker and investor. Pro
vide the inducement for him to leis
urely look over the host of good
things in scenery and business possi
bilities and he will spread broadcast
the good news, which will start this
magnificent stream flowing.
Consider the tourist from the mon
etary standpoint. We hardly realize
that the State of Maine, with all her
beauty and resources, ranks her tour
ist trade as second in the list of her
industries; first comes her lumber
industry, then her hotels and board
ing houses. We are going back to
the days of the wayside inn. The au
tomobile has made this possible, and
this very travel is the most valuable,
as it stays longer and distributes
more widely the money it has to
spend, thus benefitting a greater num
ber. The Manufacturers’ Record of
THE GOLDEN AGE
DIXIE HIGHWAY
December 17th, echoes this in the
article entitled "The Call of the South
to the Winter Tourist,” wherein they
say "The splendid resort hotels that
add to the wealth of the whole
South are made possible only by this
winter travel. The thousands thus
employed and the great home market
thus created are but a very small part
of the value of the tourist to the
South. Ihe tourist is more than a
mere traveler for health or pleasure,
more than a liberal money spender.
He is a country up-builder.”
So today the tourist is doing just
what our forefathers did when the
government built the road west for
them; as it paid an hundred fold then,
so will it do now, and is doing. Henry
Flagler, as a tourist, came to spend
more than $50,000,000 in the South.
I here are others who need but the
opportunity, thousands whose wealth
is not so great as Flagler’s, yet theirs
is all New Money to the South, and
the aggregate would be many times
what he has spent.
A continuous, connected improved
highway, as is proposed in the Dixie
Highway, tapping the very heart of
the country through which it passes,
would draw like a magnet the mil
lion and more tourists whose eyes
have been gazing longingly as toward
a promised land. The Lincoln High
way is a wonderful example, since the
marking, and the connecting up of
missing links in this road, the entire
population along its route near and
far have reaped benefits. Cities in
Northern Indiana along its route
have kept account, as nearly as pos
sible, of the touring; parties passing
through. At South Bend, the aver
age during the summer was more
than two hundred per day. It was
impossible to get all of . them, but a
great majority of these stopped over.
The average was four people to the
car, meaning very close to one thou
sand people, al 1 of whom had to be
fed and some clothed. Think of the
possibilities ! Every man, woman and
child is interested—Hoosier Motor
Club, W. S. Gilbreath, Secretary.
"I trust you don’t spend all your
wages.” “That I don’t. I only spend
two-frhirds. Two-thirds is all.”
“And the other third—you bank
that. I suppose?
“No, I do better than that with it.
I give it to the wife to run the house.”
—London Evening Standard.
FORTUNATE FOR THE SOUTH.
Skin diseases seem most prevalent in the
warmer climates, which makes it fortunate
for the South that it has such an excep
tionally fine remedy in Tetterine for Ecze
ma, Tetter, Itch, Acme, Salt Rheum, etc.
Every skin trouble from a simple chafe or
insect bite to the worst case of Tetter is
quickly relieved by Tetterine. Applied ex
ternally, harmless and fragrant. 50c at
druggist’s or by mail from Shuptrine Co.,
Savannah, Ga.
STEPHENSON STUDIO
PHOTOGRAPHERS
38 y 2 Whitehall St., Over Kutz.
We do more work for the students of Atlanta and adjacent
colleges than any studio in Atlanta.
We Guarantee Our Work Bell Phone Main 255
>
QU ICKLY R ELI EYED BY TH E OLD I
I DR. MARfHALLi’J* I
| CATARRH JNUFF I
Rrt AT ALL DRy G STORES OR SENT PRE-M
I <£; / I PAID BY C.H. KEITH Mfr. CLEVELAND,QHIO[
FRECKLES
February and March Worst Months For
This Trouble—Howto Remove
Easily.
There’s a reason why nearly every
body freckles in February and March,
but happily there is also a remedy for
these ugly blemishes, and no one need
stay freckled.
Simply get an ounce of othine,
double strength, from your druggist
and apply a little of it night and morn
ing, and in a few days you should see
that even the worst freckles have begun
to disappear, while the light ones have
vanished entirely. Now is the time to
rid yourself of freckles, for if not
removed now they will stay all Summer,
and spoil an otherwise beautiful com
plexion. Your money back if othine
fails.
Posse Gymnasium and
Normal School of Gymnastics
77!) Beacon Street, Boston, Mass.
27th year. New building. Courses of one,
two and three years. Position for grad
uates. Similar courses in Medical Gym
nastics. Apply to
THE SECRETARY.
POTATO PLANTS
Genuine Nancy Hall and Porto Rico,
from prize winning stock, also Triumph,
ami Red Providence. Price 500 for $1.25;
1,00 at $2.45, postpaid. By express, not
postpaid, 500 for $1.00; 1,00 to 4,00 at $1.75
per 1,000 ; 5.000 to 10,000 at $1.60 per 1,000.
Special prices on large lots.
Tomato Plants ready March 15th. Va
rieties : Ear liana, Globe, Truckers’ Favorite,
and Stone. Price, 500 for $1.75. postpaid.
By express, 5<M) for $1.25; 1,000 at $2.00.
Write for a descriptive price list.
PIEDMONT PLANT CO.,
Albany, Ga., and Greenville, S. C.
RHEUMATISM
is a disease of the blood. Medical authori
ties have so proclaimed it for years. It
must therefore be treated through the
blood. CAR-DA-RUMA is a scientific prep
aration of a well known southern physi
cian who used it in Ills private practice
many years with marked success. It con
tains nothing of an injurious character
but eradicates the disease through na
ture’s channels. Its ingredients are ex
pensive, but in order to introduce it in
your locality we will on receipt of fifty
cents send you, post-paid, a regular two
dollar size bottle with a coupon entitling
you to a rebate of fifty cents on your
subsequent purchase in case you require
more than one bottle. CAR-DA-RUMA is
not a cure-a.ll, but a prescription for Rheu
matism, Gout, Neuralgia, Sciatica, and Lum
bago. It is positive in its effects and has
many remarkable cures to its credit. If
it was not as we represent it we could not
afford to make you this offer.
Sole Manufacturers
JOHN W* CARROLL & SON
308 N. Sixth St., St. Louis, Mo.
11