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STOMACH SUFFERERS
A Avoid Dangerous Operations. Let Me Send You a A
m n*l nn n OfMy Wonderful STOMACH REMEDY j
I 1111 Uk I 41j9 suffering from STOMACH, LIVES OR IN- H
MM IHM • Eli ■H■ 1 M TEBTIMAL TROUBLES and BALL STONES to-wend at once!
& all- UUllJu
jH ■ is a marvelous remedv f or
Don't allow yon r Stomach Trouble to become so bad that an operation
is neoeeoery. Don’t permit an operation until you have at least tried
this TREE BotUe.
K’Mra® fir Vy
lj i 1 W
,m\® KSSlbmi
READ THESE LETTERS
WHAT A PROMINENT PHYSI
CIAN HAS TO SAY OF MY
WONDERFUL STOMACH
REMEDY
Sept. JXth, 1011.
Mr Geo. H. Matt. Chicago. 111.
Desr Sir: My wife received your let
ter and treatment a few days ago.
She took the toedxctneu ae per dlroc
tfaaa Satuntoy with wonderful results,
as she passed a large quantity at gall
at vartooo Urea. 1 wIU aend
you a money order herewith for bal
ance of treatment, nave recommended
sou tn oerernl that I knew need your
treatment I bam practiced medicine
20 years and hare used Olive Oil
treatments for a teg time for my
wife, and I can assure you that your
mmMnatlva greatly surprised me. You
afcaU hear from me again anon.
Yarn gratefully,
ERNTSTT -VTSCKNT. M. D.
WHAT A TRAINED NURSE HAS TO
SAY.
August 24th, mi.
Mr. Go*. H. Mayr. Chicago, 11l-
Dear Sir: To begin with 1 am a
trained nurse and I had two patients
that the doctors seemed unable to
reach with their medicines and were
trying to persuade the patient tn sub
mit to the knife. A friend who has
tried yw Wonderful medictoe proponed
that 1 recommend It to my patient,
no I did. They agreed to try the
medicine if I srauld try the aaaae on
myself. Tb please my patients was
wks I sent for the sample. I know
that your medictoe tn wonderful be
cause It has cured Mrs. Clark nusim
Toom of Ortflno. Idaho, and Mrs Char
ier Freer of the same place. 1 am very
giad that I was able to recommend your
modtclm- to them.
UENNETTE HAVEL. Trained Nurse.
Box 2M. Orofino. Idaho.
CTTRED AFTER FTVE YEARS SICK
NESS
Mr. George H. Mayr. Chicago. 111.
I am pleased to Inform you that I
ordered a fnll treatment the tetter
an* tkte FBEE e<n®o» new •»< m*U to The full fl.oo bottle will be eent
™ -
>4 yr. it TODAY—WUTI PLAINLY.
GEO H. MAYE. MFG CHEMIST. 6M Mayr Bldg.. ISO Whitin* St.. Chicago.
«end tne absolutely FREE. SI.OO treatment of Mayr'e Wonderful Stomach
Rem edy.
AjMtmb CM,>
Cbnnty „....State Express Office
GOOD HEALTH, SUCCESS
AND PROSPERITY GO
HAND IN HAND
Good health is * blessing. the greatest
that can be given to mankind to enjoy.
It has a value which can hardly be cal*
cuiated. for there Is nothing by which
it can be compared. It cannot be
judged by price or money, for without
it, the value of all things else is cbang*
ed. There can be no real happiness, no
perfect peace, no true content in life,
where health is absent, and neither mon
ey nor the comforts which money buys
can compensate for its lack. Health is
necessary for the proper enjoyment of
life and right performance of life’s du
ties. and doubly necessary to every man
and woman who seeks success and pros
perity, for Health. Success and Prosper
ity go hand in hand.
■tops sad Breakdowns Are
Dragt Which Pull Backwards
The entire bodily machinery must be
strong and well regulated to withstand
H™ w^W hi skeg
yon should order “OLD AREY” because the same
fT® 1 ” Heel Arey who made North Carolina Whiskey famous
thirty years ago is at the wheel producing the same whiskey
THE AREY distillery for you today that he made for your old granddad.
IW d of to-day — Why be deceived by I7VPRI7QQ PATTI
4n ~ -x.i_._- r , n. youngsters who try to ± xATU
get rich quick, when J B r h ’ B K St # ’
c MM liffl OLD is here i g.Hob fkij 2.75
- WBl* VTtif **Of ' Wl ‘h honest goods at 2 Gallons 1/1(1 /Arey 5.00
JOJL £ Mm, the right price? SEND YOUR ORDER IN TO-DAY
—' hl Yon be the judge— ls not entirely satisfied with any pur-
y 5! v 1 ! Yls ITT **l chase from us we pav all charges and refund your money.
Write lor handsome FREE SOUVENIR.
- L
pert of March. It cured me after a
five years’ spell of sickness. I ordered
a free bottle for a neighbor. Now I
must tel! you It is through me you
are getting so many orders from Wil
lard and Veitou Poet Offices. I so
journed through Eastern Colorado and
sang your praises and left your ad
dress wherever I went. I have not
written you at an earlier date ns I
have just waited to see If I stayed
cured before I let you know. Your
remedy Is surely a wonder. The doc
tors told me I had appendicitis and
would soon die if I were not operated
on. 1 was lying In bed about al!
the time with misery most of the time
for fire years. I took treatment dur
ing March, have been busy ever since.
It Is the only medicine that hit the
sore spot.—L. C. Morehead. Willard,
Oklahoma.
DOCTOR BAID CANCER OF THE
STOMACH
Inly 22, 1011.
Mr. Geo. H. Mayr. Chicago. 111.
Dear Str: I write you this morning
that I took my last drop of medicine
yesterday morning and am now free
from gall stdnes. It baa made a new
man of me. Sleep well, eat what I
want and feel fine. No soreness left
but T hare some large boils. I think
It drove them out. The Doctors said
I had cancer of the stomach, and
nothing would do but to be operated
on, but they were mistaken. 1 have
spent lots of money before and only
rt temporary relief, but I assure yon
feel all right now. Passed about 400
gall atones.
Years truly,
WM. CAMPBELL.
Denver. Missouri.
MORE BENEFIT THAN FROM SIOO
TREATMENT.
May SI, 1010.
Mr. Geo. H. Mayr. Chicago; HI.
I received the treatment you sent
and can truthfully say I got more
benefit from it than from a hundred
dollar treatment I took last winter.
Very respectfully,
MISS »/ A. HARNESS.
Yean Pacific Ave., Bremerton, Wash.
the constant effort, steady strain and
perpetual grind of the struggle to win.
The stops and breakdowns of sickness
are drags which pull backwards. In the
race for success the sick body goes to
the wall and Is brushed aside by the
bodies of the strong and healthy, bodies
which awake each morning with rich,
red blood coursing through the veins,
wtth vitality tingling in every nerve,
with energy swelling every muscle, with
effort a pleasure and work a Joy. The
modern hustle and bustle of life, now
existing on the farms and ranches as
well as in cities and towns, makes good
health an absolute necessity to avoid
failure and achieve prosperity. Only the
strong swimmers breast life's current
and make headway, while the weak ones,
with ability dulled and stunted by the
Iron grip of disease, are tossed pitiably
about on the waves, like a ship whose
power has failed. •
The Spirit May Be Strong,
But The Flesh Is Weak
The story of the sick body is the same
the world over. The spirit may be
strong, but the flesh is weak, a weakness
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1912.
1 Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Trouble, Gastritis, Indigestion, Dyspep
-1 sia, Pressure of Gas around the Heart, Sour Stomach, Distress after
eating, Nervousness, Dizziness, Fainting Spells, Constipation, Conges
ted and Torpid Liver, Yellow Jaundice, Sick Headache, Appendicitis
land Gall Stones.
Tbe above ailments are mainly caused by the cloggin g of the Intestinal tract with mucoold ami c*-
arrhral eeorotiona, backing up poisonous fluids into the stomach and otherwise deranging tbe digestive
system. I want every sufferer of any of these diseases to test this wonderful treatment. You are not
asked to take this tr*atmeat for a week or two before you feel its great benefits—only one dose is
nanally required. I say emphatically it is a positive, permanent remedy and I will prove it to you if
yon will allow me tn. and I again repeat I will send the complete |I.OO treatment to you absolutely
Free so you can try it in your own home at my expense.
Tbe most eminent specialists declare that a big per cent of the people who suAer from Stomach Trou
bfe are suffering from Gall Stones. I firmly believe that this remedy is the only one tn tbe world
that will eure this disease. Sufferers of Stomach and Liver troubles and Gall Stones should not besltato
a moment hut send for this Free treatment nt once.
I have watched sick people for years and have reached my hands out to thousands in the great depth
of the Valley of Despair and brought them into the light of life and happiness. I want you, and
each one suffering to know the full Joys of living with every part of your system in beautiful acconl
aad la absolutely perfect harmony. This i« possible if yo will take this wonderful remedy. A FREE BOT
TLE will positively prove it.
Why suffer with stomach trouble’ Why
give up hope—and despair of ever being
cured’ If other treatments have failed and
you feel disheartened, don't allow it to
discourage you from sending for this Free
bottle. Don’t say to yourself that it will
not help you, before you have tried it, as
it costs you nothing to take this wonderful
remedy and Judge for yourself Its marvelous
powers. You will, like the thousands of
others who have been cured, bless tbe
hour and offer fervent thanks for this won
derful remedy that has brought bsck your
health. ,
Why suffer with those horrid griping
pains that cut like a knife? They rob yon
of all the sweets of happiness. Each morn
ing means another day of torture and ago
ny: each meal is looked forward to with
pain. No matter wbat you eat. you suffer.
Life Is one continual round of “Don’t eat
thia and don’t eat that.” Yon can't sit
down to a table, spread with necessities of
life and know that you are going to enjoy
them; that fhey are going to be turned into
rich, red blood and strength which will
give you vitality, health and happiness.
Almost every one wbo takes it declares
that they have not felt so we’l In years
since they have taken tke first bottle, and
this benefit is an entirely natural one, as
tbe remedy contains no opiate, stimulant
or any poisonous or injurious ingredients
whatever. They are able to eat anything
they want—even forget they have such a
thing as a stomach. No more of the gnaw
ing, aching dull sensations, no more parox
ysms of pain, belching of gases, and other
symptoms of indigestion that stomach trou
ble produces.
A few names of people who have taken
my wonderful Stomach Remedy—-and who
state they have been CURED of various
Stomach. Liver and Intestinal Ailments and
Gall Stones.
Phil Strain, Bloomington, Hl. A
Alma Loving, Rnisellville, Mlns.
Mrs. Tboma« Mulvihill. Detroit. Mich. MEW
Mattle Kirkham, Fonntaln Head. Tenn. ISm
W. G. Riddell, Burlington, Ky., Rd. No. 9.
Mm. F. P. Cady, Auburn, N. Y |Bj|
H. D. Chappell, Agt. Amer. Exp. Cb., Sc<Kl
land. Archer Cd.. Tex. MB
W. H. Kingsley, Beulah, Miss.
J. W. Blackburn. Fryatt. Ark. Ml
Henry Oakes, New River, I>nn. Hl
Henry Thomas. Mahrud, Miss. Mil
Mr. M. A. McCann, Norwalk, Ohio. ftCj
Ralph Johnson, McComb, Miss.
Mrs. Elijah Jody. Landes. W. Va.
Mrs. Carrie Weils. 1123 Harrison St.. Guth Md
rie, Okla.
S. K. Allen. Buckeye, W. Va. Bm
Chav. L. Morse, 8 Pearl St., Middieboro, W
Man.
W p. Cole, Medina, Tenn. 109
Fred Zwicke. Grand Rapids, Win. 1
Estelle McAllister, Ludlow, 8. D.
B. A. Dooley, P 2 Union St., Clinton. Mass. M
Mrs. E. C. Daughter?, Conway, Pa.,
ver Co. BB
Sarah E. Johnson, 1107 Bell St., Mt. Ver-Rs
non. 111.
Mrs. D. Burgbdnff, 75 Walnut St., Auburn,
N. Y.
John Driver, Dunkirk, Ind.
W. D. Barr, 601 Walnut St., Irwin, Pa.
Mr. W. E. Cobb. Wichita Falls, Kans.
My laal word to you—Don’t permit a danger
ous operation. X ears not how long you have
FREE BOTTLE. I oars not how long you have
suffered or how severs your oaae may bo, I am
confident my wonderful and harmless remedy
will entirely and quickly restore you to perfect
health without any ill effect. It has saved
thousands from operations. It should you. I
believe that eighty per cent of the operatacns
are unnecessary and the knife oould be avoided
If the proper method of treatment waa admin
istered. Quite often sufferers of Stomach and
Intestinal ailments er Gall Stones are told they
have cancer of the stomach and other rare
diseases.
GEO. H. MAYR, Mf*. Chemist,
653 Mayr Building, 156 Whiting Street, Chicago
Hefareaoes: Mercantile Agencies or State Bank of Chicago.
which takes the "heart” from men and
women and makes it impossible for them
to do good work. To the sick workman
In shop or store, every hour’s work is art
hour of discomfort. Often, though
willing to work, duties are shirked, for
the physical strength Is not equal to the
work’s demand. On the farm or ranch/
nothing can handicap the tiller of the
soil like personal bodily 111-health. Ev
ery farmer has natural troubles about
the place, which he overcomes by the or
dinary methods of good farming, but
when personal 111-health Is joined to
these troubles, success takes wings and
flies far in front. The fields may be
calling for the plow, or crying for the
seed or the cultivator, but how can good
work be done when every move of the
body may be a torment. The housewife,
too, needs health If the home is to be a
success, the family circle happy and the
children brought up In the way they
should go.
The Disease-Driven Man Is
A Prisoner to Xis Sickness
The disease-driven man is a prisoner
Don’t Lose Hope
Don't suffer all this pain; don't dose
yourself with every medicine and try every
treatment, when Mayr's Wonderful Stom
ach Remedy, which has cured and made
thousands and thousands of sufferers happy
is offered to you. Mayr’s Wonderful Stom
ach Remedy is absolutely pure and harm
less. It is guaranteed under thd Pure Food
and Drug Act—Serial No. 25792. This
medicine has been successfully taken by
children of nine years of age, and by old
people of eighty-eight years, and will not
harm you in any way.
Below we show a* exact Th<>-
'ogmph—actual also of Poisonous
Mucoid Accretions removed by
my remedy. They are the causes
of about 99 per ceut of all Stom
ach, Liver and Intestinal Ail
ments.
jfes Z&T
fg j f js /ti*-t /w in
OlM ' I rlMllllnil ill
Bilik W Yon are not
■*JV\ \l •’"•‘•d to take
■\wvAll tljis treatment
■ \\\\\ nil for * w ««k or
■\Wnttll two De,ore ? on
MlWluul ttß K rea t
U \\WIW benefits. One
■AIWW <loße 18 ***
■Lh 11 that 18 n€Ceß_
JKCj H sary tb prove
QTYtt J its wonderful
■I.UI II powers to
CURE.
to his sickness. His hands are tied as
tightly as if bound With a rope of steel.
Hft./s, prevented from doing the things
he wants to do, prevented from grasp
ing the opportunities that fleet before
him. The Ranker at his desk, the Judge
on his bench, the Mill-Owner among his
looms and the Merchant behind his
counter feel its oppression as keenly as
does the farmer, mechanic or wage-earn
er. Disease kills hope and ambition,
stifles progress and halts the worker
on the road to prosperity.
There is no nobler work than that of
healing the sick, of making the body a
thing to depend upon, ready and able to
obey every impulse. Such work is Bodi-
Tone’s work. It unties the hands of
the worker and puts him back In the
fields, shop, store, mine or mill, no long
er sick, no longer weak, unable and un
certain, but well, strong, able and sure,
ready, willing and physically compe
tent to fight the battle of life. It re
stores the sick woman to her rightful
place in the home, happy, peaceful, con
tented, serene, with body and mind in
comfort, able to master each and every
household problem.
Bodi-Tone makes up and repays for
past sickness with a strong and virile
health that Is often better than the
sufferer knew for a long time before
sickness began to trouble. It makes
the body right, which it may not have
been for years before the ailment be
came deep-rooted. Health through Bodi-
Tone means health in every sense.—(Ad-
vertisement).
MANY EXHIBITS SHOWN
AT WHITFIELD FAIR
DALTON, Ga., Oct. 7.—The Whitfield
county fair opened Monday, and the ag
ricultural building Is filled wtih excel
lent farm exhibits. Numerous shows
and other amusement features have
taken up all available room within the
grounds, and the week promises many
interesting days.
On Wednesday, Educational day will
occupy the main Interest. Thursday is
Boys’ Corn Club day, and Friday the
singers of the county will participate
In a big contest
Gov.-elect John M. Slaton has been
Invited and may be here. If he can so
arrange his engagements he will spend
one day at the fair. Congressman Gor
don Lee will be a visitor on Thursday.
Cynthia-of-the-M inute
Coby right 1911 By Louis Joseph Vance
(Continuation of Chapter XIX.)
His pensive silence endured so long
that Crittenden’s impatience moved him
to break (n upon it.
“Madame Savaran said you had some
thing to tell me?" he suggested.
“Yes.” The Red Man swung round
again, settling comfortably into his chair
"I’m coming to that." he said. But Crit
tenden thought he was going in a singu
lar route toward it, Whatever it might
prove to be.
"You’re klnda all in - about Miss Cyn
thia, ain't you?" Rhode demanded sud
denly. “Excuse me if I seem to butt in.
but I gotta nobject.”
“Wel-1," Crittenden laughed a trifle
uneasily, “I don't know that I really
mind telling you what Madame Savaran
has probably told you already. Yes, I'm
In love with Miss Grayce."
“Want to marry her, of course?"
“When I’m able. I believe you under
stand I’m not free, precisely."
“Uh-huh; I heard somethin’ about that,
oncet.”
"But why—"
"Now, listen: I wanta tell you about
my own matrimonial experience. P’rhaps
It’ll help you some. This ain’t none of
my business, I know; and yet, on the
other hand, In away it is."
He gnawed his cigar thoughtfully for
some moments ere proceeding. "It comes
down to a sorta history of my life," he
said apologetically at length. “I was In
the th’atrical bus’ness In them days—
partner in a good firm. You've heard of
Sterner & Rhode? Well, we done well
for a good while. . . » One day a
young woman fluffed into the offis and
said she wanted to be a nactress. Be
the moment I lamped that dame. She
had me goin’ from start to finish. We
got married, on the quiet, and I put all
I had into maltin' her happy—l mean,
makin’ her what she wanted to be, a
star. I done It, too; but by that time
she had me runnln’ round in circles and
foamin’ at the mouth every time another
man took a squint at her. And then we
had a coupla failures and my money
gave out, and she chucked me cold."
Hj rolled his great head to and fro in
mournful wonder. “It beats me what
dubs we men are about women. Now I
just told you how this dame treated me,
but It’s the God’s honest truth I’d come
right to heel and charge like a good
dawg If she was ever to give me the
whistle. That’s what egged me on to
try a turn at this plant- I figured It out
I stood to make a killin’ if we could put
MR. ROOSEVELT IS
NEITHER WILLING
NOR COMPETENT
(Continued From Page 1.)
have some Idea of what was the scene
that the governor viewed last night.
The turnout was a tribute to Tag
gart’s organisation. He was there,
proud of the "boys” and being hailed
on all sides as "Tom." Everybody called
him "Tom.”
AU the cops on the Job could not still
that crowd until Taggart held up his In
dex finger and bade them be quiet The
word passed around and In three min
utes there was order. Taggart intro
duced Senator Kern as chairman and
when he referred to ’The Marching Host
of Indiana,” some wit shouted: “Three
cheers for Texas and California.”
Kern had a hard time holding the
crowd in check and was repeatedly inter
rupted. Governor Wilson got a respect
ful hearing from those who could hear
him, but In the rest of the crowd there
was frequent noise that caused the gov
ernor much annoyance.
INDIANA BETTING.
Here Is a good way of gauging the po
litical sentiment in this state: In Tom
Taggart’s Indianapolis hotel, the Denni
son, they act as stakeholder for elec
tion bets, with the betters fixing the odds.
The first thing that hits your eye when
you go to the buffet saloon, is a large
blackboard setting forth betting offers
and this Is the way the chalkings read
yesterday: $5,000 to $2,500 Wilson is
elected, $5,000 to $2,500 Wilson carries
Indiana, SI,OOO to SSOO Ralston (Demo
cratic gubernatorial nominee) carries the
state, SI,OOO even Beveridge (Progressive
gubernatorial nominee) gets more votes
than Roosevelt, SI,OOO even that Bever
idge beats Durbin (Republican candidate
for governor.) Apparently there are no
takers
DEEP-ROOTED BELIEF.
It Is not to be inferred that a wave
of enthusiasm for Wilson Is sweeping
the state. There is no enthusiasm, as a
matter of fact, but there is a deep-rooted
belief that the Democrats are going to
get the state by substantial plurally,
say 20,000 to 40,000. There is a straight
out fight between the three parties from
president down to state and local offices.
Beveridge is going to get a big vote
and will probably beat former Governor
Durbin for second place.
Democrats feel sure that Wilson will
carry Ralston through, despite the slash
ing campaign taht Beveridge Is making.
THE MACHINE.
The regular machine, headed by Fair
banks, Jim Watson and former Senator
Hemingway, are making a violent ef
fort to head off Beveridge, and they are
using every possible Issue, however
small, to discredit Roosevelt's lieuten
ant. They have former Governor Hanly
on the stump attacking him for being
an Inconsistent Methodist because of his
stand in liquor matters. Hanly Is talk
ing to the churCTi folks, while Durbin
is walloping Beveridge's record as a
party man before organisation crowds.
Then there is a labor issue. It seems
that Beveridge is so unfortunate as to
have a 10-cent cigar named after him
and that cigar, although they say it's a
good smoke, is turned out by a non
union firm. That Is being used for all
it’s worth and more.
Nevertheless, Democrats admit that
Beveridge is going to get many Demo
cratic votes and that a favorite com
bination irj going to be Wilson and
Beveridge. There is a wellnigh unani
mous opinion that Beveridge will run
stronger than Roosevelt.
DEMOCRAT CLAIMS.
/
The Democrats are claiming 20,000
plurality in the face of the fact that
Taft beat Bryan 10,000, while in 1904
•Roosevelt beat Parker 93,000. The
changeability of the vote, however, Is
Indicated by the fact that isovernor Mar
shall, as a Democrat, won by 12,000 In
1910.
Former Vice President Fairbanks sat
on the stage, alongside the governor, at
the Conservation congress. Mr. Fair
banks was seen to applaud Governor
W’llson’s utterances several times.
"You know, we passed a law In New
Jersey eighteen months ago,” said Wil
son, “which had a very interesting ef
fect. It enabled us to find out how
many men long burled In the grave
yards had been voting In New Jersey.
We first had a definite and rigid regis
tration; then we sent out sample bal
lots to all the men who had voted at
the preceding election and in one city
alone 18,000 sample ballots were return
ed, because there were no such persons
residing In the city.
”1 dare say that a great many of them
might have been found If the inscriptions
upon the graveyards had been properly
searched; because we had been largely
governed in New Jersey by a ’spook’
population. And now we have the sat-
I
it through, and all the time I had In the
back of m? mind a picture of me walkin’
up to my wife with a wod of dollars and
sayin’: ‘Kid, take me back.’ . . . You
see, she never wasted any money gettin’
a divorce from me. and there wouldn’t
be nothin' to prevent our beglnnin’ again
where we left off—and no questions
asked. . . . Her right name was Le
titia Savaran,” said the Red Man quietly,
"but I reckon you’d know her better as
Letty Noon.”
After many silent moments, during
which the sunset faded in the darkling
sky and the evening shadows closed
softly about the two men. hiding their
faces from one another, Rhode sat up in
his chair.
"Well," he said, huskily "I guess I
gotta be goln’. Macklin said take my
time, but . . ."
"You understand," said Crittenden,
controlling his voice with difficulty,
“what this means to me—what I am to
infer from what you’ve told me?"
“Well, yes; at least. I think I do. Os
course, since I was Letty Noon’s hus
band when you married her. it follows
that the second marriage wasn’t legal.
That’s all there is to it. You’re as free
as air.”
The speaker laboriously hoisted him
self upon his feet, Crittenden rising to
face him.
"I been meanin’ to tell you this ever
since I seen how things wos with Mia*
Cynthia and you.. Only . . . well,
somehow, I didn’t want to. I guess you
understand how I felt."
“Yes,” Crittenden agreed simply. He
put forth a hand that was promptly en
gulfed In one almost twice its sise. "I
can’t —it doesn’t seem a matter I can
thank you for—”
“Oh, that’s all right," Rhode inter
rupted uncomfortably. "Os course I had
to wise madum up to bow things stood.
She’s on. She never had much use for
Letty—hasn’t seen her in a good many
years. . . . But It begins to look’s if
I wasn’t never goln’ to get over it. . . .
Well, take care of yourself. So long.”
He gave Crittenden’s hand a parting
wrench, dropped it and lumbered hur
riedly away. “G’d night," said he.
CHAPTER XX.
IN A GARDEN.
“Bruce . .
Crittenden suddenly realised that he
had been standing, bareheaded, in spell
bound contemplation of the future’s
glamorous illusion for so long that,
without his knowledge, night had closed
isfactlon of being governed by living
men. Not all of them are a satisfac
tion to us, but most of them are. And
when wo have tested them recently,
most of them knew what they wanted.
I simply cite this as an example so
that you wIU be inspired to enroll
among the living; not be related to the
classification of the dead.”
Governor Wilson said,* In the course
of Ms speech:
"Some time ago during the campaign
which preceded the two Republican po
litical conventions, you remember that
there was a very Interesting campaign
between Mr. Taft and Mr. Roosevelt, and
everything that anybody could say
against Mr. Taft, Mr. Roosevelt said,
and everything that anybody could say
against Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Taft said, and
the Democrats were inclined to believe
both of them, for the truth was that Mr.
Taft was merely the successor of Mr.
Roosevelt In the prosecution of policies
which Mr. Taft did not alter, and merely
sought to confirm and establish.
THEY ARE RESPONSIBLE.
"You have therefore this extraordin
ary spectacle, of two branches of the
Republican party, both of them led by
men clearly responsible for the very
conditions which we are seeking to al
ter, and the reason that some of the In
surgent Republicans are not following
Mr. Roosevelt, the reason that men like
Mr. LaFollette, for example, are not fol
lowing Mr. Roosevelt, is that they al
ready have tested Mr. Roosevelt when
he was president, and have found that
he was not willing to co-operate with
them, along any line that would be ef
ficient In the checking of the evils of
which we complain.
"So, that the leader of the very move
ment which is proposed for our emanci
pation is a man who has been tried
in this very matter, and not found,
either willing or competent to accom
plish the objects that we now seek. In
order to confirm my view of the matter,
you have only to read Mr. La Follette’s
biography. There, in detail. It is told
how Mr. La Follette and others like him
carried proposals to the then president,
Mr. Roosevelt, which would have made
this campaign Inconceivable, and after
he had, feeling his first generous Im
pulse, consented to co-operate with
them, he subsequently drew back and
refused to co-operate with them, under
what Influences I do not care to con
jecture, because it is not my duty, and it
would be very distasteful to me to call
in question the motives of this gentle
man. That is not my object or my
desire.
POINTING OUT FACTS.
“My object is merely to point out the
facts, that the very conditions we are
trying to remedy were built up under
those two gentlemen who are the op
ponents of the Democratic party. There
fore, to my mind, it is a choice between
Tweedie Dum and Tweedie Dee, to
choose between the leader of the one
branch of the Republican party and the
leader of the other branch of the Re
publican party, because what the whole
country knows to be true, these gentle
men deny. The whole country knows
that special privilege has sprung up
in this land. The whole country knows,
except these gentlemen, that it has been
due chiefly to the protective tariff. These
gentlemen deny that special privilege
has been caused by the administration
of the protective tariff. They deny
what all the rest of the country has
become convinced is true.”
PROHIBITION CANDIDATE
SAYS TAFT IS DEAD ONE
(By Associated Press.)
ST. PAUL, Oct s.—" Theodore Roose
velt and President Taft together will
not carry ten states In the coming elec
tion, and either Wilson or myself will
be elected president” declared Eugene
Chafin, Prohibition candidate for presi
dent in his speech here last night.
Mr. Chafin spent all of today in St
Paul and Minneapolis, making six
speeches in each city. He ended with
an outdoor mass meeting tonight •
Mrs. Leona Watson Dead
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
LAGRANGE, Ga., Oct s.—Funeral of
the late Mrs. Leona Watson, aged sixty
five years, who died Thursday afternoon
at the home of her daughter, Mrs. R.
P. Abraham, in Greenville street, was
held Friday afternoon, and was in
charge of Rev. Samuel Ledbetter, of the
First Methodist church. Interment fol
lowed the services and occurred in Hill
View cemetery. Mra Watson leaves
three daughters, Mrs. Abraham, of this
city; Mrs. William Lycett, of Atlanta,
and Mrs. J. B. Harris, of Pensacola.
Fla. Pallbearers were Messrs. F. P.
Longley, J. E. Dunson, C. V. Truitt, E.
B. Clark, W. L Cleaveland. J. H. Ed
mondson. J. M. Barnard.
By Louis Joseph Vance
Author of **l he Brass Bowl, *'
‘Wo M an's Land, ” Etc.
down over the spreading panorama of
the islands.
Contours and topography alike had
altogether disappeared or were revealed
only as the vaguest masses, in the star
light-tempered darkness. Far below him,
bound in the velvet blackness of their
tree-clad shores, harbor and sound lay
like a sheet of burnished gunmetal,
dully lustrous, borders picked out here,
suggested there, by rows and strings
and dots and groups of lights, from the
glow-worm cluster that marked Hamil
ton, far across the waters on his right,!
to the distant twinkling stars of Ireland!
island straight" ahead, and to his ex-’
treme left where the murky skies were!
being swept continually by great wheel-)
Ing shafts of radiance, from the Gibbs*
Hill lighthouse.
Faintly moved by early puffs of tne
night wind, the air was aromatic with
the fragrant souls of innumerable flow
ers. In a shrouded coppice near him a
night bird was singing, singing as
though its heart wculd break.
And from behind him. In the direction!
of the house, came the sound of his.
name softly fluted—a voice incompar-’
able.
He turned and stumbled blindly to-l
ward.the brightly illuminated verandas,!
guided less by sight than bv instinct. 1
Something moved before him in the
shadows, and then aoruptxy a bright
window in the hotel was unshuttered
andi its wide, warm bar of light, falling
athwart the lawn, discovered the glri
almost within arm’s length of him.
In his bosom his heart checked, then)
hammered madly; In wrists and throat
and temples his pulses raced and!
drummed, like distant thunderinga
Unspeakably bewitching in his vision.i
Cynthia stood waiting for her lover.
*er face soft in shadow, with little
more than her glorious hair, the sweet
line of her cheek, the gracious and deli
cate curve of her slim throat and lifted
chin, etched by the kindly, generous
light.
“Bruce?" Again she called him ini
her voice of gold. "Bruce, are yon,
there?"
“Cynthia!" Her name broke from his|
lips like a sob of happiness.
She started and came quickly to hltn..
her hands light upon his arm. “Bruce.j
has anything happened? .... Tell*
me. dear heart.”
He swung an arm round her andl
■lowly, murmuring, drew her with hlm.j
away Into the scented night of the!
flower-haunted gardens.
(THE END.)
SAVANNAH SCOTTISH RITE
PLANS BIG CONVOCATION!
(Special Dispatch to The Journal)
SAVANNAH. Ga., Oct s.—The Scot-i
tlsh Rite Masonic bodies of Savannah
are planning to enjoy two interesting
events. On Oct 22 and IS, they will
be In Jacksonville, where the Florida
consistory, No. 2, is to hold Its seoond
annual convocation. Last year the Sa
vannah Scottish Rite Masons con
ferred all the degrees at Jacksonville.
This year th« Florida Masons are to
confer al the degrees to the fourteenth
or to the lodge of perfection.
The Savannah Masons will continue
the work through the thirty-second de
gree. There are 100 Masons
In Jacksonville to join this class. A
large crowd will go from Savannah.
The other event will be the fall convo
cation In The Valley of Savannah will
be held Nov. 10 to 21. At that time
there will be a reunion of all of the
classes established since in 1911 and
1912. If Is expected the class will be
the largest in the history of the Scot
tish Rite in Savannah.
Plan Road Work
COMMERCE, Ga., Oct 7.—The local
board of trade has decided to experi
ment in road work. It will bear the
expenses of a force of hands and a
team for two months to repair every
public road emanating from Commerce,
for a distance of six miles. The board
believes that roads should be repaired
as necessity demands it and not follow
the antiquated plan of working them
twice a year.
GOOD NEWS TO
STOMACH SUFFERERS!
A Chicago chemist Is giving away tea|
thousand bottles of a remarkable Stom
ach Remedy that is accomplishing won-»
derful results for all Stomach, Liver!
and Intestinal Ailments, Appendlcitisl
and Gall Stones. In many cases one
dose has accomplished a cure. The dis-’
coverer of this remedy. Geo. H. Mayr,
853 Mayr Bldg., 158 Whiting St, Chi
cago, HL, has been so encouraged by
the good this remedy has been doing
that he is making this most liberal offer
to those who are in need of a cure.
Write him today and he will send you a
full 11.00 bottle free.—(Advertisement)
Troops to Visit Forsyth
FORSYTH, Ga., Oct 3.—Troop B of
the Eleventh Cavalry, U. S. army will
encamp in Forsyth on the night of Fri
day, Oct 11. This troop composed of
some of the most expert horsemen in
the army will give exhibition drills at
the Macon fair, making the trip
through the country, from Fort Ogle
thorpe, Ga., •to Maddn. They will ar
rive in Forsyth on Friday afternoon,
will bivouac here for the night and
leave the next morning for the Central
City.
IT’S THE FOOD
The True Way to Correct Nerv-i
ous Troubles
Nervous troubles are more often caus-i
ed by improper food and indigestion than]
most people Imagine. Even doctors some-|
times overlook this fact. A man says:
"Until two years ago waffles and but
ter with meat and gravy were the main
features of my breakfast. Finally dys
pepsia came on and I found myself In a
bad condition, worse in the morning than
any other time. I would have a full, sick
feeling In my stomach, with pains in my
heart, sides and head.
“At times I would have no appetite for
dayg, then I would feel ravenous, never
satisfied when I did eat and so nervous
I felt like shrieking at the top of my
voice. I lost flesh badly and hafdly
knew which way to turn until one day
I bought a box of Grape-Nuts food to see
if I could eat that. I tried it without
telling the doctor, and liked it fine; made
me feel as if I had something to eat
that was satisfying and still I didn’t
have that heaviness that I had felt after
eating any other food.
“I hadn’t drank any coffee then in five
weeka I kept on with the Grape-Nuts
and in a month and a half I had gained
15 pounds, could eat almost anything I
wanted, didn't feel badly after eating and
my nervousness was all gone. It’s a
pleasure to be well again."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle!
Creek, Mich. Read the book, “The Road
to Wellville,” In pkgs. "There’s a rea
son.”
Ever read the above letter?:
A new one appears from time
to time. They are genuine,!
true, and full of human inter-!
est. —(Advertisement.)