About Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1916)
2 CAPT. JEFF RIGGS GfflS 2$ POUNDS DIH TWO BOTTLES Popular Engineer Says He Would Have Had to Give Up His Run If It Hadn’t Been for Tanlac “Yes. sir, it’s an actual fact. I have gained twenty-five pound* on Tanlac." said Capt. Jeff D. Riggs. popular Y. & M. V. engineer, running between Vicks- * I urg and New Orleans and residing at IMO Pearl street. Vicksburg. Capt. Riggs is a large properly owner, and is well known in railroad circles. “When I began taking the medicine." continued Capt. Riggs. “I was simply A nervous and physical wreck and had dropped down in weight from one hun dred and forty to one hundred and ten pounds. I had absolutely no appetite for anythin? to eat and my stomach was in such a bad condition the little I did eat harmed me in place of doing me good. I don't reckon anybody could suffer from indigestion any worse than I did My system was poisoned with malaria, my skin was yellow and I felt drowsy and sluggish all the time. I was so nervous I couldn't sleep and had become so feeble from loss of strength I 1 could hardly crawl up on my engine, i It was alarming how fast I was going down hill. In fact. I was unfit for work, and tn the shape I was in it was * just a constant mental strain and a struggle for me to properly handle my engine. I hadn't been able to get any kind of medicine to help me and my condition was growing more critical all the time. I was very much worried about myself and I feel I would have been forced to stop off 'from my run in a short time if it hadn't been for Tanlae. “I have just finished my second bottle ot Tanlac. and. as I have already said. I have gained twenty-five pounds, and I feel like a new man. I now feel about as strong and active as I did when I first got my run and I can handle my old engine with as much ease as I ever could. My stomach is now in good shape, my appetite is fine and I can eat anything I want and as much as I wish, and everything agrees with me perfect ly. I'm relieved of the malaria, my skin is clearing up and I don't feel sluggish and drowsy like I did. I'm not nervotfii any more. I sleep well every night and feel fresh and fine every day ” Tanlac is sold by regular established agencies in all principal towns of the south.—(Advt.) Alleged Insult Given As Cause for Shooting Os Columbus Fireman COLUMBUS. Ga.. Aug. I.—Tom Davis, aged thirty-six. city fireman for years, •_is in a dying state at the hospital as result of two pistol wounds in the ab dcmen, and Charles Bambush. aged about thirty, is in the county jail charged with the shooting. The shooting took place in front of No. 1 fire station on Broad street just before 10 o'clock. Davis, in a semi conscious state, told of a visit of Bam bush to his home last night, when he is alleged to have insulted Davis* wife. • The wounded man was given medical attention and hurried to the hospital, where It was announced by physicians that he has little chance of recovery. PELLAGRA TM» erw dtoeea* to epreeding over the Booth with a 25 per ccat yearly increase, learla* borr'sr and death la its wake. lon will want to read the etory of bow Bine year* a<. 1 diacorered the eauae of thia dkaease. and bow thouaanda of pellagra aufter era bare been reatoeed to good health by a Slavic bone treatment. Take no cbancea with harmful dreg* or gue»» work doctoring. ion arc entitled to know the troth. The whole atory la given In tbta wonderful BIG 50-PAGE BOOK FREE! Mailed in Plain Sealed Wrapper FKEK to all who wnte (or a ropy. Thia new, ln»truc tlve and IntereaUng book gives you my proven theory aa to what canaca pellagra and bow It may be cured ngbt in your own home under a guarantee of abeoiute aatlafaction or no charge fur treatm’-bt. it alan routaln* mauy pbolographs and letter* from State and County Official*. Banker*. Minister*. Doctors. Law yers and other*, who tell wonderful storiea of their einerienee with tht* *ucc«aaful pellagra treatment. HAVE YOU THESE SYMPTOMS? Tired and Drow*y feeling* accompanied by bandark*a, depreaeloo or »tat* ot indolence; roughne** of akin, breaking out or eruptions; band* red like sunburn; sore mouth; tongue. Up* and throat flaming red; much mueua and choking, indlgeetion and nausea, diarrhea or euoeri;st ion. mind affected, aud many other*. I»on't take chance*. Write fw Your Copy of Thia Book Today. BememUer. it ia mailed to you Free in plain Sealed Wrapper. W. J. McCRART, M. D. Dept. 333 Carbos Hill, Alabama YOUR HEART Doee it Flutter, Palpitate _ . iMbortne** oi Breath. Ten- 4 ‘•ernes*. Nuiubnrwa, or "T rWBwW~ P Palkin left side. Dizziness, flM— Faintins Mprlls. !*pots be- 1 ' *of fore eyes. Modrien starting VfcT-•« aleep, !< r rro.i jrn, < Hungry or Weak Bpello, Oppressed Fooling in cheat. Choking Hen nation in threat. Painful to lie on leftside, Binaing nr Hmetbering Menaation. Diffi cult Bremthlng. Heart Dropsy, Hwelline of feet er ankle*, er Neuralgia arouna heart* If you bare one or more ot the above •ympt.-ms, don't fail to use Dr. Kinsmen's Heart Tablets. Not a secret medicine. It is said that one person out of every four ha* a weak heart. Probably three-fourths of these do not know it.and hundreds wrongfully treat them ■elves for the Btomach. Langs. Kidneys or Bervee. Don't take any chances when Dr. Ilian'* Heart Tablets are within your reach. More than IKO endorsements fuAotahed. FREE TREATMENT COUPON Any •offerer mailing this coupon, with their name and P. O. Address, to Dr.*F. G. K Ins man Box N«4. Auguata. Maine, will re ceive a box of Heart Tablets for trial by return mall, postpaid, free of charge. Delays are dangeroo*. Write at once—to-day. /t /» M Unnecessary jSt For we M Deformed K\ 2k. children ‘ m ' t> go through life in such a condition. In the 41 years we have been established, we have relieved hundreds of little sufferers, with dis ease of the Spine, Hip Joints ami other afflic tions. Many remarkable cures ot Club Feet and Infantile Paralysia. Write for catalog. NATIONAL SURGICAL INSTITUTE, 72 S. PrynrSt. Atlanta. Ga. CASEMENT DIES BY THE NOOSE IN TOWER OF LONDON. Sir Roger Case ment and the Tower of London where he was hanged at 9 o’clock I hursday morning, following conviction on charges of conspiracy against the British government. ’• 1 lit liSOMBES frßl THREE-FOUHTHS Os CORN CROP REPORTED RUINED Chattooga County Damaged by Rains to Extent of Over Half Million {Special Dtsoatch to The Journal.) LYERLY, Ga., Aug. 2.—Monday mark ed the close of one of the wettest July* ever experienced in Chattooga county, and as a result this county will produce this year one of the smallest corn crops in her history, the total damage to this ;rop alone being variously estimated at 140.000 to 160,000, about 75 per cent of the corn in the county having been de stroyed by the high waters. The cotton crop diu not suffer as bad ly as did the corn crop, though many acres of fine cotton tn the bottoms along the Chattooga river and various creeks were flooded by the high waters and ruined, while all cotton has been in jured to a considerable extent, as has all other crops throughout this section. Crops that were not drowned out by the high waters have been seriously damaged. not only- by the wet weather, but because the farmers were unable to cultivate them properly. Usually at this time of year farmers in this sec tion are ready to --lay by” their crops, but this year the work can not be com pleted until late in August, even should there be no more rain to interfere. Since July 6. when the rain first be gan to fall, there has been less than one week that the soil has been dry enough to permit the use of a plow in cultivating the crops. Despite the lateness of the season, however, the farmers who have lost so heavily have not become discouraged and unless there are other floods later in the year, the flooded areas —hundreds of acres of fine bottom land—will pro duce one of the biggest crops of hay. millet, sorghum and peas in the history ot the county. . The total damage to all crops in Chat tooga county as a result of the twenty days* rain is practically incalculable, but it is believed to be considerably in ex cess of a half million dollars. Flood Fund Resolution Blocked in the Senate By Republican Senators (By Associated Proas.) WASHINGTON, August I.—Repub lican senators today- blocked Immediate consideration by the senate of a joint resolution by Senator Underwood to ap propriate >540,000 for flood sufferers in southern states. Senators Smoot and Penrose refused unanimous consent and insisted that the resolution take its reg ular course, going first to the appro priations committee. The resolution would afford temporary relief for destitute and homeless in Ala bama, Florida. Georgia, Nqrth and South Carolina and Mississippi. Senator Penrose, discussing the reso lution, said the Republicans soon would show that no matter what kind of a special revenue bill was passed the treasury would face a dificit due to the heavy appropriations of the present con gress. ALLIES’ PREPARING FOR PERIOD FOLLOWING WAR (By Associated Preu.) LONDON. Aug. 2.—Premier Asquith on opening the discussion in the house ot commons today on the resolutions of the Paris economic conference said the British government had entered the conference with two objects in view. The first was to convince the central powers that the entente allies, what ever their views on the economic policy, were resolved to wage War in complete unity and determination in economic as in military spheres. The second was to make preparations for the period fol lowing the declaration of peace in view of the known taaitude and will of the Germans. 'Ounr eyes- have been opened." said the premier, "as to the meaning of the manifold ramifications of the German system of economic pentration and com mercial an dfinancial control of vital interest an dthe use to which, with ad vantage this sytem could be put in time of war.’ ;• Germany, Mr. Asquith sand, would be animated with the same spirit when the war was over. The tSFernfflna al ready were organising their industries for an attack on thq markets of entente allies he said, and for a vigo-- rous, if possible, attaevk on neutral. markets. The Germans would start with ob vious advantages, the premier through their action in destroying the works and factories in the Invaded countries, and because of the fact that they had a large maritime Jeet safely interned in FGerman and neutral ports, it would be necessary to make prepa rations for the coming of the peace and the resolutions of the conference rep resented the general lines upon which these preparations would proceed. FIVE PERSONS INDICTED FOR BOMB OUTRAGE (By Associated Press.) SAN FRANSCICO, August 2.—lndict ments charging murder were voted today by the grand jury against five of the persons under arrest in connection with the preparedness parade bomb explosion of July 22. according to seemingly au thentic reports. Those said to have been indicted are W. K. Billings. Thomas Mooney, Mrs. Rena Mooney. Israel Weinberg and Ed ward Nolan. The indletmeits were t be returned later today, according to reports. THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ATLANTA, GA.. FRIDAY, AUGUST 4, 1916 I mJn Wilf 'Jw 'ZzASSssr £77x7 '*«•"“ g> CONFERENCE IS RESUMED ON STITE HIGHWM BILL Senate Committee on Public Roads Agrees on impor tant Amendments The senate committee on public roads resumed the conference Wednesday morning on the state highway bill, which has recently passed the house, and which will enable the state of Geor gia to share in the $75,000,000 fund ap propriated by the federal government for the state roads of the United States. Georgia's share in this appropriation is 12,000,000, of which $134,000 is to be received the first year, the amount be ing apportioned on an ascending scale throughout a, period of five years. The committee, of which Senator Tison is chairman, amended the bill as tegards the officers of the state high way commission. The state highway commission is to be composed of the prison commission, which was the orig inal commission as designated by the house, and to this the senate commit tee added »s members of the, commis sion the state geologist, the dean of the department of highway engineering at the University of Georgia and the chief of the engineering department at the Georgia School of Technology. The bill was also amended, providing for the apportionment of the funds to be received among the various counties of the state. The amendment provides that the funds be apportioned according to the manner in which the motor vehicle taxes are distributed, that is,' according to public road mileage. Senator Stovall, of the Thirtieth dis trict, a member of the commission, con tended that the apportionment according to this scale is unfair, since in that way Elbert county will receive more money than Futton county. He pointed out that although Fulton county’s automobile taxes amounted to $30,000, which is about one-third of the entire auto taxes of the state, Fulton had received for the last year under this schedule, only $450 of the $90,000. Senator Stovall will insist that the money be apportioned, first, one-third, according to the public road mileage, one-third according to the square road mileage, and one-third according to the population of a county. 35 DEATHS, 135 NEW CASES OF PARALYSIS (By Associated Press.) NEW YORK, July 31.—The mortality rate took another Jump today in the epi demic of infantile paralysis, while the ntimber of new cases discovered re mained virtually the same. During the twenty-four hour period ending at 10 o'clock this morning there w’ere thirty five deaths and 133 new cases reported, as against thirteen deaths and 145 new cases during the period ending at the same hour yesterday. BLACK TONI ERE BREAKS OUT AGAIN (By Associated Press.) JTRSEY CITY, N. J., Aug. 2.—The smouldering fire on the scene of the Black Tom explesion broke out afresh today and is threatening two carloads of explosives near the end of the Le high Valley pier. Jersey City police headquarters were so notified today by Superintendent Mulligan of the railroad, who asked that additional fire appara tus be immediately sent. DEAD iTTfOREStTiRES ESTIMATED AT 500 TORONTO, Ont., Aug. 2.—Estimates today of the number of dead in the bush fires in northern Ontario Saturday and Sunday are put at 500 by refugees ar riving from the various localties in tiie fire-swept zone. From many sections know-n to have been sprinkled with set tlers no word has been received at any of the northern towns of refuge and this is taken to mean that all have perished. SHERIFF ANO BIG POSSE SEIZE LIQUOR ON TYBEE Proprietors of Alleged Saloons Are Taken to City Follow ing Raid (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) SAVANNAH, Ga., Aug. 2.—Heading a large posse of deputies, Sheriff Dixon, of Chatham county, late yesterday vis ited Tybee island, and raided a number of alfeged saloons, where whisky and beer is said to have been sold. The pro prietors were placed under arrest and taken to the city in the charge of offi cers. Much beer and liquor is said to have been confiscated in the raid which grew out of the recetn grand jury investiga tions. Seat of Plague Shifts In New York, With 166 New Cases Reported NEW YORK, Aug. 2. —Forty-one chil dren died and 166 were stricken in the gieater city' during the last twenty-four iiouis in the epidemic of infantile pa ralysis. The seat of the plague spitted to Manhattan borough today and there were more deaths and new cases report ed in that horough than at any previous time. Jersey City reported three more deaths and two cases, and reports from other nearby cities indicated that the epidemic was not under control. New Cotton at Eastman Brings 16 I -2 at Auction EASTMAN, Ga., August 1. —The sec ond bale of Georgia’s 1916 cotton crop was marketed in. Eastman yesterday. The bale was grown by John W. Thompson on his farm eight miles west of the city and was ginned by W. S. Milner. The cotton graded fully middling and was sold at auction upon the streets this afternoon to Bennett’s warehouse of this city, bringing a price of sixteen and one quarter cents per pound. This is the second year that Dodge county has fur nished the state’s second bale, A. G. Williamson, of this city, having the dis tinction of marketing the second bale last season. tfUMLHKS lOU DEATHLY SICK Stop usina dangerous drug be fore it salivates you! It’s horrible! You're bilious, sluggish, constipated end believe you need vile, dangerout cal cmel to start your liver and clean your bowels. Here’s my guarantee! Ask your drug gist for a 6U cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If it doesn’t start your liver and straighten you right up better than cal cinel and without griping or making you sick 1 want you to go back to the store and get your money. Take calomel today and tomorrow you will feel weak and sick and nauseated. Don’t lose a day’s work. Take a spoon lul of harmless, vegetaoie Dodson's Liver Tone tonight and wake up feeling great. It’s perfectly harmless, so give it to ‘your children any time. It can't sali vate, so let them eat anything after wards. —(Advt.) JOE POTTLE GETS FINE RECEPTION AT VIENNA Dooly County Voters Hear One of Most Impressive Speeches of Campaign VIENNA, Ga., August I.—Although court was not in session here today an audience that filled the big Dooly coun ty superior courtroom heard Joe Pottle, of Milledgeville, deliver one of the most impressive and effective speeches he has yet made in his campaign for governor, and at the conclusion of his address his hearers crowded aiound to shake his hand to tell him how they enjoyed his speech and to pledge him their support. That he made a wonderful Impression is admitted by all who heard him. Among those who called on Mr. Pottle at his hotel this morning was Judge G. W. Wooten, an aged and retired lawyer, who several years ago was judge of the county court of Calhoun county. Judge Wooten told Mr. Pottle that he was a member of the Fifth Georgia reg iment during the Civil war, which had been commanded by Mr. Pottle's father. He paid his old colonel a high tribute and declared it gave him great pleasure to be able to support his son for gov ernor. Mr. Pottle was introduced to the Dooly county voters by W. V. Harvard, a well known Vienna attorney. AGAIN HITS DORSEY. Mr. Pottle renewed his attacks on Mr. Dorsey for his connection with the Lou isville and Nashville railroad in its fight to set aside the state law prohib iting it from paralleling the Western and Atlantic railroad: declared Mr. Dor sey’s action while solicitor general in accepting a fee of SI,OOO from the widow Nelms for his work in extraditing the Inneses was contrary to all precedents; ridiculed him for what he termed as inconsistency and insincerity regarding executive clemency for having recom mended clemency for murderers, bur glars, forgers, for men convicted of crimes against women and other con victs, although he now sets himself up as opposed to any interference with the verdicts of the courts unless some new fact Is discovered which justifies such interference. Mr. Pottle, in citing the record of cases in which Mr. Dorsey urged clem ency, read a letter which he said Mr. Dorsey had written to a convict' at the state farm named Chris Majors in which he suggested to the convict that if he would make application for a pardon he (Dorsey) would aid him all he could. According to the letter read by Mr. Pot tle, Mr. Dorsey wrote Majors that ha (Dorsey) would recommend that he be let off with the payment of a reasonable fine, something like actual costs. "You all know what costs mean to a solicitor general,” significantly remark ed Mr. Pottle. "Some folks are criticising me,” said Mr. Pottle, "because I happen to have some personal friends who are antl-pro hibitionlsts. I have been a consistent prohibitionist all my life and Tor twenty five years have fought against the liq uor traffic. My home folks know this to be true. if in order to be elected governor I have got to repudiate a lay down on a loyal friend simply because he differs with me on the prohibition question, then I am not the man for you to vote for. I never laid down on a friend in my life, and I don’t propose to begin now. "I presume some anti-prohibition friends in Bibb county; are supporting Governor Harris, that some in Jackson county are supporting Dr. Hardman, and I know that a number in Fulton county are suporting Mr. Dorsey, but that is no reason to doubt their sincerity in this matter.” WOULD MEET DORSEY. Mr. Pottle read letters from former pastors and others in support of his statement that he had always been an earnest and consistent prohibitionist. Mr. Pottle said that an invitation haa been sent to him and Mr. Dorsey to come to Blackshear, Pierce county, one day this week and jointly address the voters. He said he had promptly ac cepted but that Mr. Dorsey had de clined, giving as his excuse that he (Pottle) did have a sufficiently for midable following in the state to justify him (Dorsey) in meeting him in joint debate. "I suspect,” said Mr. Pottle, "that this egotistical alibi was merely a subter fuge because Mr. Dorsey did not relish the prospect of a debate. However, from the outset I have been ready to meet Mr. Dorsey at any time and place, and am still willing to do so.** During the course of his speech Mr. Pottle stated that after his address in Dublin Monday a man had Inquired how he stood on the separation of church and state and he said he had replied that he, like all other patriotic citizens, was unalterably opposed to any union of church and state or anything which The Semi=Weekly Journal SI.OO Heavy Bessemer Steel Safety Box FREE WE CONSIDER this Safety Box one of the most useful and valuable premiums we have ever offered to our subscribers. It is made of heavy Bessemer Steel; finished in black baked Japan; size inches; substantial lock, two keys. Here is our offer: The Semi-Weekly Journal Eighteen Months, SI.OO. Heavy Bessemer Steel Safety Box Free This box is for the safe keeping and preservation of' The Semi . Weekly Journa |, At | anUi Ga . Mortgages, Deeds, Receipts, Notes, Leases, Insurance Poli- Enclosed find SI. Send me the Semi cies, Wills, Stocks, Bonds and all valuable papers. steel safety Deposit Box Every man needs one—and if bought in the regular way would cost about a dollar. We give it to you abso- Name lutely free. Sign the coupon and get this box at once. It might save you hundreds of dollars by saving one of p ’ °•. vour valuable papers from loss. Address: The Semi- J r 1 R F D StatA Weekly Journal, Circulation Dep’t, Atlanta, Ga. . y * i What Would We Do Without Suqar? We are so used to sugar i that we aro likely to for- 4 get to give it its properly WtOKII important place. B now if somebody asked you w’at sugar was good -S ..jjgLy Affler for you'd probably say— "Oh! to put in coffee and tea and for making can- T j' jgly dies anil desserts.” That’s aMSgarS& k A—' f’ • ' It—we all t ink of sugar ns a sweetener and over- look its value as a food. The chemists classify -v<— S'U'G&m. C7WS' sugar as a hydrocarbon— that name may or may not be Interest- are interesting because we find that ln- ing to us, but what is interesting is their stead of the luxury sugar having gone statement that it has, as a hydrocarbon. Up it is the FOOD sugar that has raised equal food value with the starchy foods Its price. Yet—even though the price and by digestion largely adds to the up we have to have cur sweet food just fatty tissuqs of the body. the same. Why do we eat sugar anyway? Your Certainly the makers of that delicious first answer might be: "Because it is beverage Coca-Cola must have dis- • sweet and tastes good.” Os itself the covered that sugar is up, because one of answer would be correct, but the more the principal ingredients in making Coca- important fact is that the body craves Cola syrup is fine cane sugar. Think of sugar because it needs it. And when the it>-they use an average of 80 tons of body craves something it gives us an ap- sugar a day—about 4 carloads. But un- petite for it. So primarily that’s why we like many manufacturers that company like sugar and things made with sugar has itself borne the raise and so you and and not just because they are sweet. I pay just the same today for our bottle In view of the fact that sugar has gone or glass of Coca-Cola that we’ve always up so tremendously of late these facts paid, incidentally, this phase of the sit- > - • uation is a good reminder the benefits one gets ' from drinking a bever s age as pure and good as I > x \ ' Coca-Cola. Not only do I • we please our palates I» v Y** i " derive wholesome I T, '' J refreshment from the ■ <■ s ff t’i* Tg (!;.:ik but we a'so give a. U O f our systems that bit of IMr . _ sugar sweetness that ~ . jgl they crave and which is necessary to health and IfIBfiHMBSSSSQHSI 6 I 1 ft. 4 Hlh I » ”‘l| tissues. Is it any won- ’ cn 1 r Cora-cola S . -r ar 1 so •' t . r :t has been called "the ZttZrZ, drink the nation drinks”? had the semblance of state domination by any religious sect. "However,” said he, "I have no at tack to make upon any church or creed. I recognize the right of every one to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience.” Mr. Pottle, who drove through the country in an automobile, stopped at Dexter, Chester, Hawkinsville and other towns between Dublin and Vienna Mon day afternoon and at each place admir ing friends took him around and intro duced him to the people. danisfTraper opposes SALE OF WEST INDIES (By Associated Press.) LONDON, Aug. 2. —Messages received here todtiy from Copenhagen asy the Danish authorities nave not confirmed the report of the sale of the Danish West Indies to the United States. The newspaper Politiken says the Rlgsdag will hold a secret session Friday when the government will answer questions on the subject. The newspaper Koeberhavn has start ed a campaign against the sale of the islands. • • •>” - : - Village Is Afire QUEBBC, Aug. 2.—Dispatches say the entire village of Ste Anne de la Poca tlerre is burning. Quebec and other cities have sent aid to the scene of the con flagration, the origin of which is un known. IKIfWw to Texas Quickest train Memphis to Dallas; Cotton Belt Route all the way; no nge of cars. Leaves Memphis 10:10 . ... p. m. Arrives Dallas 11:50 a. m. next operating solid morning, Ft. Worth 1:25 p. m. through trains Cotton Belt Route morning train to Texas, leaves Memphi from Memphi* 9:40 a. m. Trains from Southeast connect at Memphis, to Texas. Low fares to Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma L. P. Smith, Traveling Pass’r Agent, 201 Brown-Marx Bldg., Birmingham, Ala. One Killed, One Dying After Revolver Battle At Holy Roller Church WYTHEVILLE. Va.. August I.—Jo seph Peoples, aged 40, is dead, and Leek Fisher, aged 23. is dying after a free for-all fight with revolvers at the Holy Roller church at Lick mountain, accord ing to reports received here today. Fred and Gordon Fisher, brothers, and Wil liam Spencer, Jr., are in Wytheville jail in connection with the affair. The shooting, it is said, grew out of a fist fight some time ago between Peoples and the three Fishers. MUSTANG Rub ease and supple- ( ness deep into muscles and joints; soak out /i stiffness and PWjl\ rheumatism with Mustang J Liniment. 25c., 50c., LINIMENT