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| ANNOUNCEMENT. I
To the People of Georgia and the South:
On Wednesday morning, October 15, we opened branch offices, shipping depot and retail salesroom at 51 Decatur street, Atlanta, for the sale of HAYNER WHISKEY by ' .4
the bottle. This will enable us to give the thousands of our customers in Georgia and throughout the South much quicker and better service. It will also enable those whe <,
, pi » have not vet tried HAYNER WHISKEY to do so; to purchase absolutely pure whiskey direct from our distillery at first cost. Please bear in mind that this store IS NOT A S
SALOON* AS POSITIVELY NO DRINKING WILL BE ALLOWED ON THE PREMISES. We sell HAYNER WHISKEY by the bottle only, in original packages, direct
from our distillery, thus insuring genuineness and absolute purity. J
Every quart of whiskey we sell is made at our distillery, under the direct supervision of the U. S. Government, and our entire product is sold direct to consumers. Therefore, fW
when you buy HAYNER WHISKEY, you are assured of its perfect purity and save the big profits of the wholesale and retail dealers.
HAYNER’S SEVEN-YEAR-OLD RYE or BOURBON is pure and unadulterated in any way, has no superior at any price, and yet it costs only $3.20 for 4 full quart hot
ties, express charges paid bv us. ' HH
If we sold our wjiiskey to dealers they would charge you at least double what we ask, and then you would not be sure of its purity, for after whiskey once leaves the distiller’s ■ | 4
■ hands the dealer can “doctor” it as much as he likes. “Uncle Sam,” however, absolutely controls the distilleries and will not allow any adulteration, so if you want pure whiskey, buy
direct from the distiller —COME TO I S. j *
H DIRECT FROM OUR DISTILLERY TO YOU—. M
Saves Dealers’ Profits. Prevents Adulteration. IflH
J HAYNER WHISKEY J|k
PURE SEVEN-YEAR-OLD RYE OR BOURBON
Hi Only $3.20 for 4 Full Quarts W
J EXPRESS CHARGES PAID BY US.
/i OXX e von FOUR FULL QUART BOTTLES OF HAYNER’S SEVEN-YEAR-OLD RYE FOR $3.20 and we will pay the express charges. Try it and if
II OUT Oft er vou don’t find it all right and as good as you ever drank or can buy from anybody else at any price, then send it back at our expense and your $3.20 will be re- ; s
ffl turned to vou bv next mail. Just think that offer over. How could it be fairer? If you are not perfectly satisfied, you are not out a cent. Better let us send you a trial order. We BW tO-II
I| nt HAYNER 6hip in a J p i ain 7 gealed case, no marks to show what’s inside. • / s K HERDISTIUJ* 0 W
BEWARE OF OUR IMITATORS. .
. yy WE ARE THE ONLY DISTILLERS IN THIS COUNTRY SELLING DIRECT TO CONSUMERS. Like every success, we have imitators who “claim’ to be distillers. They ST
are not distillers and have no connection with a distillery. For proof, you need not take our word. Just see government reports. They are simply dealers, and can “doctor” their
whiskey as much as they like and call it anv age. for unfortunately the government does not control dealers as ‘it does distillers. Now, these dealers are in business for profit, so |||
when they offer eight to twelve-'ear-old whiskev lor the same or less money than we. as distillers, can sell seven-year-old. the inference is plain. THEIR WHISKEY IS NOT THE
if-WB L AGE THEY CLAIM AND IS ADULTERATED AND WATERED. ’ The cheaper they sell, the more water and adulteration you get. Beware of imitators. If you want honest ■■
whiskey, direct from our own distillerv to you, with all its original strength, richness and flavor, carrying a UNITED STATES REGISTERED DISTILLER’S GUARANTEE of PUR-
JTY and AGE and saving the dealers’ enormous profits, then accept our offer, which is backed by a company with a capital of $500,000.00 paid in full, and the proud reputation of thir- |j
It ty-six years of continuous success. We have over a quarter of a million satisfied customers. Your money back if you’re not satisfied. H
THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY
I 51 DECATUR STREET, ATLANTA, CA. I I
J Established 1866. Capital $500,000.00 paid in full. Distillerv, Troy, Ohip. Main offices and shipping depot, Dayton, Ohio. Branch offices and shipping depots, St. Louis, Mo., St. Papl, Minn., and Atlanta, Ga. |||
SAM JONES SPEAKS IN PRAISE '
OF BOOKER WASHINGTON’S WORK
To The Atlanta Journal:
l have been preaching, peregrin
ating. lecturing around over the
United States for thirty years,
but I think the biggest, broadest,
highest thing I have struck in all my
rounds I hit last Saturday night at
the Booker Washington Normal insti
tute of Tuskegee, Ala. I arrived at
Tuskegee on the evening train, and
about a o’clock, in carriages, with
Congressman Thompson. Rev. Mr.
Trawick and other gentlemen. I drove
out to the chapel or auditorium of
the school and we walked in and took
our seats on the platform. There
were twenty-four hundred students
sitting before me and a choir of two
hundred behind us. It was a marvel
ous sight to look upon. They gave us
three songs; two of classical music
and one alone the line of the old-fash
ioned negro melodies, and with this
one they well night lifted the roof
from the great building. I was then
introduced te the audience and spoke
for an hour and a half. I am sure
I never spoke to a more respectful, at
tentive. appreciative audience. After
the lecture we had other songs, and
the entertainment, not including my
lecture, was Immense.
I talked witn several of the leading
citizens of Tuskegee and questioned
them closely as to the nature, influ
< nee and efficiency of that school. They
spoke uniformly in the highest terms
of Booker Washington and the great
work he eras doing. The Institute is a
city in itself, with Its electric lights,
its many buildings, and the auditorium
in which I spoke is one of the finest
in America. This school not only has
its literary features, but it is a bee
hive in itself. AH the great build
ings on the premises, the artisans of
the school molded the brick in each
building, did the carpenter and stone
mason work, and everything was done
there by ue school that could be done
in Alabama by skilled workmen. I
think there are 2,400 students present
now, and I learned that there were
1.300 additional applicants who had to
be turned away. Rev. Mr. Trawick
told me that on some occasion at the
college some weeks ago. Congressman
Thompson made a few remarks on the
platform, and Booker Washington got
up and in his remarks said that he had
kept close record of all his students
and graduates of the normal Institute
of Tuskegee, and not a single student
or graduate had*ever broken into the
penitentiary or into be United states
congress. I asked Booker Washing
ton the nest morning In reference to
the latter point. I said. "Tell me.
A Book Free!!
The Story of My Life and WorK
MPS ~ IB AN AUTOBIOGRAPHY BY BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. Principal of g
‘ B* Tuskegee Normal and Industr.al Institute, and the gre.ite. t living (
H Negroofoor times. The bok Is pul.lishtd in one large volume of over g
Mj* *” pages and beautifully illus’ratcd with over s>» photi-engrarings g
g»gw ■ sth** and originaldrawing* by FYankßeard. Biae,txßS inches; retail price g
in clrth. 51.50. Here indeed is a lifcvstory stranger than fiction, g
It is a recital «'t the most thrilling experience, heroic struggle and re- g
• wfWa markable achievement ever written. Ask for a free enpyof our booklet g
•X.lbaxisgs’’which tells all abwit Mr. Washington’s autobiography. g
\ -iflliJWW r»rr__t Stitd >-e«rr none and address and we will framed!- g
YMCMHr ” ree atelv forward our free offer of a volume of the $1.50 g
bnek. We want you to have a copy to introduce it in your community, g
We also want Agents in every county and district in the country to sell g
ft. If yea win encfcse only ce*ts us stamps we will also send our magnificent agents’ can- g
vaaauag took. We alto* highest commission*, pay freight and Ml orders on thirty days* credit. 0
k ~ . , 9. L. NICHOLS A CO.. No. 11 Forsyth Street, Atlanta, G*.
have you kept record of your students,
and is it a fact that not one of them
has ever been convicted of crime?”
He said: “Those are the facts." I
said: "It is generally said that when
you educate a negro he is headed for
the ehaingang, but" I said. “you
make a marvelous statement tn the
thousands and thousands of students
who have attended your school that
not one of them had ever been convict
ed of crime.” I said: “Facts are
facts, and stand out a complete refuta
tio* of all bare assertions on any
line.”
I have believed for years that Book
( er JT- Washington was the leading col
ored man of the world, and’l have al
ways believed that he was leading his
people right. I heard that he said to
his students tome weeks ago: "Now,
don’t any of you cherish the idea of
social equality. It will be a thousand
years.” he said, "before you can think
and talk along that line. You have got
to put a thousand years of Industry, of
history, of poetry, of science, of
achievements behind you before you
can dare think of social equality, much
less talk about it, aAd,” said he, "if you
get an Idea like that into your head I
can discover it very soon, and you will
have to emigrate from here.” He said:
"You do not need to think of how so
cial equality can be brought about, but
you need to think, ‘How can I make an
leanest living and provide meat and
bread and clothes and home?’ ” Booker
Washington is a general. He is more
than that, he is a king. He rules with
absolyte authority the thousands who
attend his school; his word is law. The
discipline of the school is magnificent,
and it ta-es great generalship to put
twelve hundred girls and twelve hun
dred boys in the same great buildings
as pupils and run them with so little
friction.
Young Roscoe Conklin Bruce was in
the audience that night. I did not meet
him. I was anxious to meet him and
shake hanus witn a colored boy who
had led the two thousand students at
Harvard college, who had captured the
first honor and the oratorical prize in a
race with more than two thousand
white boys. I don't know whether he
will take position there as a profes
sor or not. I understand he is a young
fellow of fine moral character nnd mag
nificent brain force. He is the son of
ex-Senator Bruce.
Last Saturday night, as I looked up
on that great audience of colored stu
dents I wished the great world of men
could look and see what I feaw and
hear what I heard. I wish the world
understood Booker Washington and
the great work he is doing for his race.
I am told it takes $1 v.OOO a year to pay
THE SEMI-WEEKLY JOUKNAL, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16. 1902,
the running expenses of that school,
and his broad brain must not only run
that school but raise that money, and
he is doing both, and I verily believe
that as Moses was a leader to the Is
raelites of pld, so Booker Washington,
by the providence of God, has been
raised up as the great leader of his
race.
I found Booker Washington, socially,
to be a modest, retiring and, I might
say, humble gentleman. He thrusts
himself upon nobody. He knows his
place, and in his place he Is king, n is
biography is o revelation, his work is
an inspiration and his success is mar
velous. I believe that no man can' do
these things except God be with him.
I was asked while discussing the mat
ter with a fr.end coming away from
there, whether these trained artisans
from Washington’s school would not
come in competition with white labor,
and thereby hurt the Anglo-Saxon,
bald he, “The negro will work cheaper
than the white man.” I told him that
was another assertion going around
that was not true. I said, "On the
building that I am now erecting in
Cartersville the white man and the
colored man. both artisans, work side
by side; their wages are me same, and
you try to hire the skilled negro for
less than the wn.ee man works and
you will get left every Jirne.” The ne
gro knows a thing or two himself, and
he is governed largely by what he
knows, like the' balance of us poor
mortals.
I say these things about that great
institution and .ts president. I am
perfectly candid in what I have said,
and if any man feels otherwise, let him
go down there and see -he thing for
, himself and look at the facts as they
are. and I have no question in my mind
that he will come away like I have
come, saying The half has never yet
been told.”
Brother Stuart and myself begin
meetings in Paducah, Ky., October 8.
They tyave seated : g jat warehouse
and we will be there, perhaps, ten days
or more. Yours,
SAM P. JONES.
Cartersville, Oct. 8, 1902.
IN THE TREASURE ROOM.
I
Chicago News.
Years ago the directors of the Bank of Eng
land were startled by an invitation sent by
mail to meet an unknown man in the strong
room of the bank at midnight among the
money chests. “1 have been inside the bank
the last two nights,” wrote the man, “but
I am not a thief; so meet me in the great
square room with all the money at 12 to
night.” Though the letter was regarded as a
hoax, the police were notified and they guarded
the strong room that night. Nothing hap
pened. A few days later a heavy chest of
paiwrs and securities taken from the strong
room arrived at the bank, with a letter com
plaining that the directors had set the police
upon the writer and that therefore he had not
appeared as he promised; but to prove that he
was neither a thief nor a fool he sent a chest
of papers he had taken from the bank. Let
a few gentlemen be alone in the room and he
would join them kt midnight, said the writer.
This time his instructions were obeyed. Then
a man with a dark lantern burst Into the
strong room of the bank at midnight after call
ing from behind the stone walls for the di
rectors to put out the lights. He was one of
a strange class gs men who gained a living
by searching the w sewers at night and through
an opening from a sewer he had found his
way into the richest room in the world.
Might Not Bother Him.
Phlladelnhla Press.
“Well ” said the cheerful wife, who thought
she had a soprano voice, “if the worst comes
to the worst, I could keep the wolf from the
door by singing."
“I don’t doubt that would do it,” replied
her pessimistic husband, "but suppose the
wolf should happen to be deaf?”
Says President Didn’t
Dodge Georgia Relatives
Columbia (8. C.) State.
To the Editor of The State:
I WISH to make a few remarks upon
an article published In your paper
on Monday, the 22d Inst., copied from
The Atlanta Journal and written by
Dr. M. B. Wharton. D.D.
I am totally unacquainted with Dr.
Wharton, but that one signing himself
a doctor of divinity, whose mission it
should be to infuse a harmonious spirit
of peace and good will into the nation’s
life becomes the author of such an attack
upon the president is surprising indeed.
The article appears to me unclerical and
undignified; in fact, that last would-be
witty allusion to "lamp-black" is posi
tively childishly spiteful!
The president’s "mother’s people” do
not need to be championed by Mr. Whar
ton, neither have they the slightest desire
to persecute him with the claims of kin
ship. On the contrary, so far from seek
ing the eclat attendant upon the rela
tionship one branch of the family at least
has been annoyed by the intrusiveness of
an enterprising public. Its members are
quite contented in the possession of a
Revolutionary ancestry, whose honest.
God-fearing men and women were distin
guished for faithful service to their coun
try, many of the descendants of whom,
later down the march of years, became
members of the immortal band of heroes
who fought and died for our “Lost
Cause."
During his entire life as a private citizen
President Roosevelt never visited his
southern relations. Why should it now
be insisted upon by this same over-zealous
public, when he bears the burdens and
responsibilities of a great nation? If I
remember correctly, it was not his “moth
er’s people," but a delegation of citizens
who cordially invited him to visit, her
Georgia house. The president strikes me
as being a very practical man, and I can
not imagine his turning out of his pre
scribed course to sentimentalize over his
mother’s ancestral dwelling, especially as
it has passed out of the family, and there
would not have been one of those near
relatives to welcome him. It is also bare
ly possible that to one of true refinement
it is not desirable to have the searchlight
of public curiosity unnecessarily turned
upon his most sacred emotions. To me
even the president of the United States
is responsible to the nation only in his
public, capacity and not when he enters
the sanctuary of his family relations.
The touching allusion to President Gar
field’s “old humble mother” falls short of
its Implied significance, since it is well
known that Mrs. Roosevelt was a beauti
ful, high-born southern woman, who
graced any society, one who reigned a
queen in the northern home of her adop
tion and especially in the hearts of her
devoted husband and children.
Touching that telling comparison with
Mr. McKinley, "who seemed to be no
where so much at home as on ‘the red old
hills of Georgia,’ ” the writer forgets
that within less than a year of his acces
sion to the presidency. Mr. Roosevelt has
made two friendly trips to the southern
states, an unprecedented record in the
history of the union, certainly since the
civil war! And on both occasions, so far
from being ashamed or “shy" of his
"mother’s people,” he publicly spoke of
his “mother’s state of Georgia," his pride
in the south and his southern ancestors.
It would take more, much more, than
the vile political insinuations of the day,
the publication of which is a stigma upon
the American press, to make me believe
Mr. Roosevelt other than a hlgh-souled,
fearless man, whose glowing enthusiasm
and generous, warm-hearted impulsive
ness are characteristics too familiar to
me, as descending to him from our com- .
pion southern ancestors, to doubt that
they are genuine and sincere.
A GEORGIA RELATIVE.
Something for the ‘‘All-Home Prints"
to Digest.
From Homerville. Ga„ Journal.
In these days of rapid strides of ad
vancement in every line of Industry, it
is simply foolishness for the publisher
outside of large cities to try to print
his paper all at home, as his forefathers
used to do, when no other way was open
to them.
The principal and legitimate field of the
country weekly is first its town, county
and state, and then the outside world.
It is now possible for the country pub
lisher to secure in some of the large cities
paper partly printed, which contains the
news of the day from all over the world,
as well as the state news of his own
state. Owing to superior facilities and
machinery this central office can supply
these partly printed sheets made up of the
very latest and up to date matter, in
cluding telegraphic news of all Important
events, illustrated articles on topics which
are engaging the world’s attention, popu
lar sermons and letters, and in fact
every attraction that is calculated to
make the country publisher a strong com
petitor of the city paper w’hich becomes
his opponent to an extent when it reaches
out to the country towns for subscribers.
- This ready printed paper, while it does
all the above, also gives the publisher
more time to attend to other matters
from which money can be made, and to
neglect which causes a loss. We refer, for
instance, to job printing, collection of
bills, securing new subscribers and ad
vertisers, and a number of other import
ant and profitable occupations.
Any publisher who advertises that he
prints his paper all at home is making a
very shallow boast, if he really does so,
since he cannot give his readers nearly as
good service as otherwise. If he is making
the claim while using plates to fill out
with, he is misrepresenting the facts,
because the setting up of the type to make
the plates which he uses is a part of
the printing of his paper, and the matter
is edited, set in type and stereotyped
away from home.
There are few, if any. country week
lies in this state, or any other state,
which do not use either ready prints or
plates—consequently the really all-home
print paper is. out of date—almost ob
solete—a thing of the past—and surely
nothing to boast of!
Oven ten thousand publications in the
United States are at present being partly
printed away from home, and we are
pleased to say that ours is one of this
number. We have found the plan a ma
terial help in many ways. Our work is
half done for us every week when we re
ceive our paper; and the rapid growth of
our. subscription list and our advertising
columns since we adopted it form the
best proof of its popularity with both
readers and advertisers.
Political Pull of a Convict.
From the Autobiography of a Thief, in Leslie’s
Monthly for October.
The pull of the professional thieves with out
side politicians often procures for them the
respect and consideration of the keepers. One
day a convict named “Ed" Whitt was chinning
with an Irish keeper. Jokes in stir lead to
friendship, and when the screw told Ed that he
wanted a job for his daughter, Ed said that
he thought he could place her in a good posi
tion. The old screw laughed and said, “You
loafer, if you were made to carry a hod you
wouldn’t be splitting matches.” But Ed meant
what he had said and wrote to a famous New
York politician. Mr. Wet Coin, I will call him,
and Mr. Wet Coin gave her a position as type
writer and stenographer at sl4 a week. The
old screw took his daughter to New York and
when he returned ho began to “Mister” Ed.
“I ’clare to Heaven,” he said, "I don’t know
what to make of you. Here you are eating rot
ten hash, cooped up like a wild animal, with
stripes, when you might be on the outside mak
ing sl3 or sls a week.” Ed replied sarcasti
cally: “That would about keep mo in cigar
money.”
SHE TRAVELED 14,000 fl
MILES AS A BOY
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Garbed In boy’s clothing, Mrs. James M.
Smith, a pale, slender woman of 19. has I
traveled 14,000 miles during the past year. 1
In overalls, heavy shoes, a blue shirt ;
and a felt hat she traveled as a !‘hobo” !
from Chicago’to Honolulu and back from ’
Honolulu to St. Louis, and was arrested ■
19 times for masquerading in masculine |
attire.
At least, that is the story told to> the |
Post-Dispatch by her’husband and her-i
self after they aligted from a Missouri
Pacific boxcar in the St. Louis railroad
yards Tuesday morning.
To substantiate one portion of his story,
Smith has clippings from newspapers in !
Cheyenne, Wyo„ Denver and Kansas I
City, telling of their arrest in each of
those places because Mrs. Smith appeared
on the street in masculine attire.
While Mrs. Smith appears heartily dis
gusted with the mode of travel which she
has been experiencing, her husband seems
proud of his achievement in making so
long a journey without funds.
“I only paid 70 cents for railroad fare on
the whole trip,” he declared Tuesday
morning, "and that was in crossing the
Yuma desert."
The only motive given by Smith for his
wife’s willingness to undergo the excep
tional hardships incident to a journey of
this kind is that he decided to go to Hon
olulu, that she wanted to be with him and
that they didn’t have any money to trav
el there in conventional fashion.
A marriage license figured in the story
of their travels. They were married in
Chicago on Sept. 2. 1901, but lost their
certificate en route to the coast.
They were arrested at Ogden, Utah, on
their way back, he explains, and held
there two days while their story was be
ing Investigated. Smith says the Ogden
police demanded their marriage license,
and when it was not produced wired to
Chicago to find if there was any record
of it.
When they received an affirmative an
swer the Smiths were released. Then the
husband says he concluded to get married
again, and in Denver they were reunited
in matrimony by Justice W. F. Hynes
and secured a new certificate which they
now carry with them. Mrs. Smith was
remarried in her boyish raiment, and it
was with some difficulty that the justice
was convinced that she was a woman.
Smith, who is 27 years old. fairly good
looking, of medium height, with a sun
burned face and a slight brown mustache,
tells the story this way:
“I was working in Chicago as a teamster
when I got married. My wife’s name was
Mattie Lee. She was an orphan and a
working girl. 1 knew a man named Frank
Reilly who went to Honolulu and got a
job as a foreman oft the Spreckles sugar
plantation.
"I thought it would be better for me if I
could get the same kind of a job. I told my
wife I was going and she agreed to go
with me. We had no money and decided
to beat our way.’
“We were Arrested soon after we start
ed out. We were first taken up at Mason
City. Hl. But when we told our story we
were always released. My wife carried a
woman’s hat. skirt, underskirt and waist
with her and would put them on when the
authorities Insisted.
"We got to San Francisco all right and
went as stowaways on a steamer for Hon
olulu. After we were 10 hours out we were
discovered £ .id worked for our passage the
rest of the trip. Arriving at Honolulu, I
found that Reilly had left his job and that
I couldn’t get what I wanted. So I decided
to come back. The United States consul
put us on an army transport and after we
gpt back to San Francisco we ’hoboed’
our way east again. We are going back to
(Chicago now and then I will go to work
as a teamster again.”
In her masculine garb, Mrs. Smith looks
I the part of a boy exceptionally well. The
disguise is not easily detected. Her hair is * •
j cropped short and her features are those
• of a boy of 16 or 17. Bhe is not as willing
’ as her husband to discuss her travels,
• assenting to all he says in monosyllables
Jack Cade’s Castle.
New York Times.
A historical “monument” in the form of |
“Jack Cade’s Castle" in the Sussex was
offered for sale at Tokenhouse yard, Lon
j don, the other day, but the eloquence of
I the auctioneer failed to draw a larger bid t
than £5.900, at which price the property
was withdrawn. The 15th century rising
instigated by Cade was at one time of
sufficient dimensions to threaten, the
throne of Henry VI., but his followers ,
gradually dropped away, and eventually,
after being refused an asylum at Queens
borough castle, the notorious rebel fled
into Sussex in disguise, and took refuge '
at “Cade’s Castle," or Newlck, as its
proper name is. In the garden of
house tradition says Cade was killed by
the sheriff of Kent.
Blue Peter, the flag shown on ships about
to sail. Is derived from the French word partir,
to leave.
BARRELS OF SAMPLES.
Over Two Hundred Thousand Trial
Bottles Sent Free by flail.
By special arrangement with the man-,
ufactures of that justly famous kidney
medicine. Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorita
Remedy, the readers of The Journal are
enabled to obtain a trial bottle and pam
phlet of valuable medical advice abso-,
lutely free, by simply sending their full
name and postoffice address to the DR
DAVID KENNEDY CORPORATION.
Rondout. N. Y., and mentioning this pa
per. •
The doctor has received so many grate
ful letters from those who have been
benefited and cured of the various dis
eases of the Kidneys, Liver, Bladder and
Blood. Rheumatism. Dyspepsia and Chron
ic Constipation, and all weaknesses pe
culiar to women, that they willingly send
trial bottles to all sufferers.
Investigation found that 91 per cent of
those who had used the trial bottle had
received benefit and cure from Its use ana
that they purchased large size bottle*
of their druggists.
It matters not how sick you are or how
many physicians have failed to help you,.
it costs you but a postal card, and ’
benefit and cure will most certainly be
the result.
Put some urine in a glass tumbler and
let it stand 24 hours; if it has a sediment,
is pale, discolored, milky or cloudy,
stringy or ropy, your Kidney’ B or Bladder
are in a bad condition. Dr. David Ken
nedy’s Favorite Remedy speedily cures
such dangerous symptoms as pain in ths
back. Inability to hold urine, a burning,-
scalding pain in passing it, frequent desire'
to urinate, especially at night, the stain
ing of linen and al! the unpleasant and
dangerous effects on the system produc- i
ed by the use of whiskey, wine or beer.
Dr. David Kennedy’s Favorite Remedy I* 1
sold at all drug stores in two sizes at 50c
and SI.OO per bottle.
DR. DAVID KENNEDY’S SALT
RHEUM CREAM cures Old Sores, Skin
and Scrofulous Diseases. 50c.
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