Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, March 02, 1917, Page 3, Image 3
ONE DUD, THREE INJURED IN COURTHOUSE SHOOTING Shooting and Cutting Scrape Staged in Courthouse at Nashville, Tenn, (By Associated Press.) NASHVILLE. Tenn.. Feb. 28.—E. G. Tompkins was killed. Will Hoffstetter fatally >h o t and Jim Hoffstetter and Mrs. W. A. Bevington, a bystander, were wounded in the Davidson county court house this morning following the con tinuance of a case in the circuit court in which Tompkins is suing the Hoff stetters for alleged alienation of his wife’s affections. Following his wife being granjed a divorce. Tompkins filed suit for fSh.- 000 damages against the Hoffstetter brothers and their sister. Miss Emma Hoffstetter. alleging they had embit tered his wife, against him. The case was continued today because of Tomp kins counsel withdrawing from the case. As the parties were leaving the court room it is alleged Tompkins drew a pistol and shot Will Hoffstetter in Uie abdomen. - Another shot struck Jim Hoffstetter in the arm. Still another struck Mrs. Bevington, a bystander In the leg. Before he fell Will Hoffstetter plunged a khife into Tompkins heart. The parties are farmers and live near Done, son. Tennessee Land Agent Is Shot From Ambush I NASHVILLE. Tenn . Feb. 88. —A < Waynesboro. Tenn., special says that J. G. Stricklin, forty-two. a land agent and trader of that county, was shot ' frpm ambush on one of the prominent streets of the town last night just after , leaving a friend's home en route to the I hotel. Nine buckshot fired from behind I a wagon struck him just below the ’ heart and he died soon after. It is l claimed he sevealed the name of his assailant befare dying, but if this is true the name has not been disclosed. A coroner's jury is investigating. IT DNCE! STOPS STOMACH MISERY . ANO INDIGESTION “Pape’s Diapepsin” makes sick, sour, gassy Stomachs fee! fine Do some* foods you eat hit back— taste good, but work badly; ferment Into acids and cause a sick, sour, gassv stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsin helps neutralize the excessive acids In the stomach so your food won’t sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No Difference how badly your stomach is upset you usually get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it helps to regulate your stomach so you can eat your favorite food* with out fear. Most remedies give you relief some times—they are slow, but not sure. “Pape’s Diapepsin’’ is positive in neu tralizing the acidity, s© the misery won’t come back very quickly. • You feel different as soon as "Pape’s Diapepsin” comes in contact with the stomach —distress just vanishes—your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch ing. no eructations of undigested good, your head clears and you feel fine. Go now. make the best investment you ever made, by getting a Large fifty cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store. You realize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from indi gestion. dyspepsia or any stomach dis order due to acid fermentation- —(Advt.) Rheumatism Bwnarkabl* Bom* Cure Given by One Who Had It—He Wants Every Buffer*! to Benefit. Seed No Money—Just Tar Address Yean of awful suffering and misery have taught this man. Mark 11. Jaekson of Syracuse. Ke« York, bow terrible an enemy to human hap pines* rheumatism is. and bare given him sym pathy with all unfortunates who are within its grasp. He wants every rheumatic victim to know bOW be was cured. Beal what he says: i \ » “I Wad ghar? Pains Flashes Shooting Through My Joints.'' "In the spring of 1393’ I was attacked by Muscular end Inflammatory Rheumatism. I suf fered as only those who have it know, for over three years. I tried remedy after remedy, and doctor after doctor, but sueh relief as I received was only temporary. Finally. I found a remedy that cured me completely, and it has never re turned. I have given it to a number who werq terribly afflicted and even bedridden with Rheu matism. and it effected a cure in every case. I want every sufferer from any form of rheu matic trouble to try this marvelous healing power. Don’t send a cent: simply mall your name and address and I will send it free to try. After you have need It and it has proven itself to be that long-looked-for means of curing your Rheuma tism. you may send the price of It. ooe dollar, but. understand, I do not want your money un less you are perfectly satisfied to send It. Isn’t that fair? Why suffer any longer when positive relief is thus offered you free? Don't delay. Write today. MARK H. JACKSON, N'S.«IC (>un>ey Bldg., Syracuse. N. Y." FITS! Dr. Grant's treatment for Epilepsy. Fits and Falling Sickness ha.» been used for over 20 yearn with great success. Many who had given up all hope say this treatment cured them. G. A. Duckworth. R. R. No. 2. Norwood, Ga, nays: "Let those that don't believe write to me. Mrs. Kate Sisk, R.R. No. 1. East Prairie. Mo., says: "May God bless you and your wonderful remedy.'* We have scores and scores of similar letters from all parts of the country. $2.00 Free Bottle We want every tr.nn. woman and child suffering with this terrible disease to try this wonderful treatment. Let us prove what it can do. If you. a friend or relative are afflicted. don't fail to write us at once. Give age. how lorz afflicted, full name and express office. We will prepare and send you at once a large $2.00 free bottle. Dr. F. E. GRANT CO, De*. W i Otr.Ma. . PEACH BASKET MASTS OF U. S. NAVY. The United States is the only nation using the cage mast on its Dreadnaughts and Battleships. The photo’here shows the two-masts of the battle ship New York. jfe x * Is S V.S&b® O A *4 _• IS ♦ x i ' dvr*/ iuflHHKv iTk 'W' / If - IS* *' V-T*** ■ .mpi Z?*. *> - • LIUHENS COUHTY SOLVES BOLL WEEVIL PROBLEM # ——- Farmers Have Steady Sale for Cattle, Hogs, Beans and Other Products Laurens county, until four years ago the largest cotton-growing county in Georgia, affords a striking Illustration of how progressive farmers can meet the ravages of the cotton boll weevil by diversified agriculture. Conditions in Laurens are interesting ly related in a letter just received by State Commissioner of Commerce and Labor H. M. Stanley from Harry Floyd, managing editor of the Dublin Courier- Herald. In part Mr. Floyd says: ••The oat crop has been badly hurt in Laurens, and some of it killed outright. October oats will probably come out again. The freexe has not hurt the wheat much, if any. but about every - thing else. There is a more confident feeling among the business men gen erally because diversified crops are be ginning to show up and bring in money. There have been something like 200 cars of velvet beans shipped out of the coun ty bv farmers since the gathering began last fall. At least that many more cars were left in the warehouses of the two mills here. * "Something like 125 cars of corn have been sold at a good price. In the ear. be sides the meat that has been cured and is being sold more or less. It Is proba ble that more meat was saved in Lau rens county this year than ever before in her history. Both packing plants here have had all they could handle without being overrun, and they didn’t cure half of what was killed ”A great many hogs and cattle have been sold on the hoof by farmers In the county since January 1. Something like thirty-five cars, eight of them hogs, have been sold recently. The hogs are all of them, nearly, meat hogs, ready to be killed, left after the farmers have killed their year’s supply, while there Is a good deal of the cattle which could be left with profit; a good sprinkling of steers, the result of a cross of Here ford s. Short Homs and Angus on native cattle, is to be seen In the lot ”Captain Rice and E. T. Barnes, at Rockledge, are In the beef cattle bust ness. and they are selling a good many: steers that show up pretty fair, espe-*! daily for this county. All of these ‘ things which are bringing in more or less money all the time help to make the business situation a little more sure, and the prospects of 15 cents next fall for what cotton is grown is not bad at all. “J. T. Pope has already started a vel vet bean mill running, turning out a good grade of meal for cow feed. The Oconee Milling company, D. S. Brandon and Alex Blackshear.- are putting up a $15,000 plant now for grinding velvet beans, making mixed feeds of all kinds, and operating a general milling busi ness. They will have a very complete plant and turn out a heavy tonnage when running steadily." CUBAN REBELS RETREAT AFTER THREE-HOUR FIGHT HAVANA, February 28.—Colonel Betancourt, marching at the head of a government force from Manzanillo to attack the rebels at Santiago, entered | the town of Bayamo, in Oriente province, at 3 o’clock yesterday afternoon after a battle lasting more than three hours. Loyal troops which are holding Bayamo were being attacked by disloyal soldiers under General Gonzalez Clavel, who had surrounded the place. The rebels retreated in disorder to wards Jlguani. The number of dead on j either side had not been announced, but j it is believed to be large. Many sol diers on both sides were wounded The wounded among the loyal forces | includes Major Garcia Vega. Captain Juan Corana. and Lieutenants Rodriguez and Ferreira. The rebel dead includes Colonel Antonio Jimenez. THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, MARCH 2, 1917. ÜBRUICEMLNTS NUDE FDD PLACING FARM LOAN BONOS Rates Charged Farmers Will Range From 5 to 5 1-2 Per Cent WASHINGTON, Feb. 2?. Federal farm loan board are understood to have arranged for placing half of the entire first /Issue of forthcoming farm loan bonds, amount undetermined, with a syndicate of bankers at New York and elsewhere at a rate of 41-2 per cent. The rate to be charged tne farmers on loans will range between 5 and 5 1-2 per cent. The Quinine That Does Not -Affect the Head Because of its tonic and laxative effect. Laxative Bromo Quinine can be taken by anyone without causing nervousness or ringing in the head. There is only one “Bromo Quinine.” E. W. Grove’s signature is on each box. 25c.—(Advt.) Auto Thieves Battle Sheriff of Richmond I (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) AUGUSTA. Ga.. Feb. 28.—Three self confessed auto thieves are in the county jail, one slightly wounded, as the result of a clash with the sneriff of Richmond county this morning. Sheriff Plunket was wounded by one of the men, who raa and was fired at five times by the sheriff. Former Police Chief M. J. Nor ris was on the scene and later cap tured the man who shot the sheriff, while the latter, painfully wounded, stood guard over the remaining two. Al Sinclair, Dock Fairbanks and Joe Car ter. whose real names, respectively, are: R®bert Carson, Harry Burke and Joe Cramond. are the men under arresr. They stole an automobile in Ocala, FTa. JMMMMni Wet Feet! Colds! As soon as the first symp toms of a cold are noticed, check it at once. Dr. Bell’s Pine Tar Honey con tains the ingredients to free the throat from congestion, soothe the irritation which accompanies the cold and quickly relieve you. Pleasant to take. Children like it 25c. bottle at your druggist wy ME KILLED WHEN FREIGHT RAMS PULLMAN SLEEPER Heavy Toll of Death Taken on Pennsylvania Road Near Al toona—Children Die With Parents (By Aaaoclatod Press.) ALTOONA, Pa.. Feb. 27.—Twenty persons were killed when the east bound Mercantile Express on the Penn sylvania railroad was hit shortly after midnight by a fast preference freight train at the station at the Httle moun tain town of Mount Union, forty-three miles east of here in a heavy fog. Sev eral others were injured. Those most seriously hurt were taken to the Blair Memorial hospital at Huntingdon. At noon today Pennsylvania railroad officials said of the twenty killed seven teen have been identified. The express train had stopped to* dis charge passengers at Mount Union and members of the crew were testing the air brakes when the heavy freight crash ed into the passenger train from the rear. Alongside the express train at the station was an accommodation train carrying workmen from the Mount Union powder plant and this train had barely moved away from the station when the crash occurred. There were three sleepers attached to the Mercan tile Express, all of steel construction. As the freight engine, backed by a heavy train, plowed Into the passenger train, the rear coach of the latter tele scoped the second passenger coach which was split asunder by the terrific impact. The freight engine was literally weld ed to the passenger car. None of the passenger coaches left the track, but six of the freight cars coal laden, were hurled down a forty foot embankment. Relief trains from Altoona ,and Huntingdon, bearing phy sicians, were hurried to the scene. Little headway could be made in reaching the dead and injured owing to the "three sleeping coaches being almost inextricably massed together. The Bell wood, the third sleeper, had split apart and the car ahead was forced through it. while the third car from the rear of the train had plowed into the second car. Telescoping of the pars was of such force that all those within the Bellwood were Imprisoned. , The train crew and the uninjured pas sengers were unable to reach them to give aid to any that might have escaped death. The wreck blocked tracks num ber one and two and stopped traffic for several hours. THE DEAD. The identified dead: Chester A. Minds, twenty-five years old, Ramey, Pa. Mrs. Doris Minds, twenty-eight, his wife. Chester A. Minds, Jr., their infant son, two weeks old. Miss Maud Minds, twentjweight, Coni fer, N. Y., sister of Mr. Minds. M. A. Caslisch, Conifer, N. Y., a broth er-in-law of Mr. Minds. Mrs. A .S. Delling, Cleveland, 0., Mrs. Minds’ sister. Richard Owen, seven. Dorothy Owen, six. Jean Owen, four, nephew and nieces of Mrs. Minds. Charles Levine, New York. P. B. Holland, New York. Mil ton Hymes, New York. N. Bright, color*! porter. J. S. Kelly, Brooklyn. H. A. Roefler, Prattsville, Wis. L. W. Montgomery, salesman, Bloom ington. 111. C. M. Medskei, New York. P. R. Fanning, Prattville, Wis. Body supposed to be that of Mrs. Fan ning, because of a letter congratulat ing on her marriage. On this body was a Bible bearing the name of Miss Ellen P. Hayt, Denver, Col. All of those killed were in the. car ’ Bellwood. , An official of the railroad here said I the list of dead may exceed twenty I 11 This official places the blame on the | engineer of the freight, A. T. Cook, of j Harrisburg, who had a leg crushed. It i was his duty, he said, to get of his en- I ginX walk ahead and look at a signal ; ! in case of fog, rather than run past it. j The express arrived at Mount Uni in I station twelve minutes late with brake trouble. It was held there while the brake was repaired, it is declared, and the signal to start had been given wher the freight crashed into the rear sleeper. Cook, the freight engineman, declared that the block signal at “Mu” tower, a mile and a half from Mount Union showed white, indicating a clear track Wrecking crews and relief trains with physicians, nurses and all first aid equipment, were rushed to the scene within an hour. . | Wrecking crews from Mifflin and Den holm also were caled out and it was nec essary to raise two of the sleeping carS vertically before the killed could be reached. Every occupant of the rear sleeper is believed to have been killed. It was the first time In three years | that a passenger has been killed in a wreck on the Pennsylvania railroad. The ill-fated passenger train, however, was the-same one that was wrecked at Mex ico. Pa., last August, when it ran into a stock train, killing three employes. Cracksmen Get $15,000 And Overlook SB,OOO DAYTONA, Fla, Feb. 2S.—Expert cracksmen this morning opened and rifled the vault of the First National Bank of Daytona, securing 815,000 in cash and an unestimated amount of securities including the Volusia county road bonds. The cracksmen overlooked $4,000 which was left on the floor of the vault. Entrance was effected through a rear window of the bank buiHing and the vault was drilled fourteen inches from the top to the right of the door. Through ♦he hole thus made the electric wires connecting the burglar alarm were sev ered and the vault was opened by use of the combination. The inner door was broken down with a wooden battering ram weighing 100 pounds and covered at one end to deaden the sound. Cashier Sullivan this morning stated that the bank is fully protected by in surance. On the floor of the vault was found an old savings book containing the com bination and measurements of the vault. TO KEEPMOVEMENT OF VESSELS SECRET MOBILE, Ala.. Feb. 27.—The collector of the port has issued notice that move ments of vessels through Mobile will be kept secret. Action was taken upon instructions from Washington. No in formation about incoming or outgoing vessels will be disseminated, regardless of what foreign country the vessels ply | between. I Two thousand dollars cash, permits you to get into this | clean-cut, pleasant, permanent, dignified and most . profitable milling business which so quickly pays far Q itself You can prove the facts beforeyou invest a cent. OVER 1000 farmers, planters and millers are now making from $l5O to SIOOO and more per month with American Marvel Mills —mak- ing FLavo FLour. Many started with only S2OOO. They all prospered so well right from the first that each mill not only paid for itself but became a leading money-making business of each cocnmurrity. This is truly a wonderful oppprtunity. FLavo FLour, Nature-Flavored, can be made only by this mill, in each community. It is the “better barrel of flour cheaper” which the whole country is demanding. 'You can make FLavo FLour and control the - bQkL -M' manent business wberoyou live. Is Made Only By Members of -• W Community Marvel Millers JI j| . You automatically become a member of th is Na- u UTTLE3 tion-wide movement when you decide to own PRESIDENT != and operate an OSU AMERICAN Jdf-Co Rkiattl) MARVEL MILL Batauu* Milling Co., of Bahama, N. Carolina, writes xrs February Xlth: SuZjir **Pagc copy in Saturday Evening Post February 10th received. We have studied maLvel mb rnrey the proposition thoroughly and we think that it is a good one. We have yet . Ttrti nlmuk L bear of any matnriacturing concern whfrh to doing as nroch for tbeir r iitorai era, or kava tn W, V J JHB. HU. 1 - -'' view to do as much as the Anglo-American Mill Co. has for theirs.” Av. I .tv. i' i-. >v 1 ■ 1 This is the way over 1000 business men, Americna Marvel Mill g_ _ XT . .w owness,feel. Yooeaoeeebowwebevebelpedtjbem<toriD<7yaera CHMit. IOU INVESTIGATE and yotfllwmt of their uniform success. They win t efl you. wsatart you right. w*e sh pa pa to g.t into this clean, indepen- Assist you in local advertising and sales rises- Adviseand help you M |a B< dent bueineet yoartelf. Write. rnnwtantly through onr Sueicfal Service Dei>artn>a«t * “V z ■. . a • 30 DAYS TRIAL OFFER g- Time Payments—Previoua MS> Experience Unnecessary , No new bnfldfog, and Httie rower re- JjPjßl fv'jk ___ " qutred. Practically automat!:. One . V —__ /4NX.' F Tra> 1 J man easily operates this mill. Previous wjg I IllgtKPS milling experience is unnecessary, to , I make from $l5O to SIOOO per month, I It right where you flvs. )2\WOliiM&CiiL’*» I Q Write —— . A A ssio-American Mi fl C*.. Irx. f 190-2D3 Trast Bldg-. Owensbcee, Ky. •Mi ' .1 I would Tike to know complete feets about owning an Arperi- i ■it ‘ i I«1W can Marvel Mill and making FLavo FLour for my community. ' hfe kglvwttg uHg Alio send “The Story of a Wonderful Flour MiII"—FREE. I g-T ' ’ **' ’ Name ? - -<■**'«» ? state - -—(95) i NOTE: This book is nni for housennva. Serrt only to those in- . _ . _ , , terested and v>ho would like to get into a prtfitable business. Self-Contained—Several Capacities to Ju»t Suit Your Needs _ ■mmb, wnw wmb mwm wai skwo aww, a. [IST SIDERS ARE OPPOSED TO “EAT BICE" CAMPAIGN Claim It Is Not Satisfactory Substitute for Some of Staple Foods (By Associated Press.) NEW YORK. Feb. 28.-*-The citizens food supply committee learned today that its "eat rice” campaign was meet ing opposition, especially among the poor of the East Side. Speakers" at some of the impromptu mass meetings asserted that rice was not a satisfactory substitute for some of the staple foods ajid that Americans could not live on it. Reports received by the committee, however, show that there has been a growing demand for rice at retail stores. Stale bread as a means of defeating high food prices is advocated by the latest bulletin of the health department. The bulletin, says that good white bread two days old may be bought for 4 or 5 cents a 12-ounce loaf and gives a num ber of suggestions for preparing it in palatable ways. Commissioner Hartigan of the bureau of weights and measures, announced that food commissioners in twenty-eight states had informed him that there were large quantities of potatoes and onions for sale at reasonable prices in all of these states except one. 200 Killed; 700 Hurt In Munitions Explosion (By Associated Prees.) BERLIN. Feb. 27.—(Via Sayville.)— The Frankfurter Zeitung says it has re ceived from a private source in France, byway of Switzerland,.a report that more than 200 persons were tailed and 700 wounded by an explosion oLammuni tion depots on February 2. According to this report, more th*an SO.OOO tons of ammunition were destroyed. ■ > A CLEAN STOMACH ZMLA-ZsLJESSJ -A. ’VV’ESX.Xji At A.TXT. (By Dr. I. W. SHORT.) zc'i Mo. The body is a highly organized machine of complicated parts in which the stomach, liver and the kidneys work for the common good. _ Damage to any one of these organs interferes with man as a motor mechanism. If vou will clean the stomach, liver and bowels occasionally with a gentle laxa tive you can keep well. Too much fuel | in man’s machine, such as eating too much meat, or alcohol or tea, nervous ! overwork and lack of exercise in out door air bring constipation and bad health. Eat less meat, plenty of vege- SAME MACON VETERANS OBJECT TO BISHOP IHLEY Don’t Want Him to Make Me morial Address—He Is a Confederate Veteran (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) MAOON, Ga. Feb, 2s.—mxty Confeder ate veterans in Macon have signed a let ter addressed to Mrs. Walter J. Grace, president of the Daughters of the Con federacy stating that unless the Daugh ters recall their invitation to Bishop Keiley, of SaVannah. to deliver the Me morial day address here oir April 26th they will refuse to participate in the ex ercises but will invite a speaker of their own a id hold separate exercises. They'Urge that Mrs. Grace, as presi dent of the local organization, use her influence to have the Memorial day ad dress delivered by one who Is in full ac cord and sympathy with the American constitution. The letter concludes; • “It is our earnest desire to avoid conflict bet wen the Daughters of the Confederacy and the old veterans and we hope to be able to join with you in Memorial services on this April 26, as in the past and ask thatej ou give our let ter careful consideration. If afterwards, you feel that Bishop Keiley Is the man to deliver |he patriotic address on Abril 26 and refuse to recall your invitation, then we will feel justified to select an other speaker and commemorate our dead apart from the daughters. “We trust this will not be necessary; that all will be harmony and peace for perhaps it will be the last Memorial day that most of us will attend.” The letter is sigbed by W. J. Parker. J. F. Hodges, T. W. Rankin and James T. Bishop. Attached to the petition that the invitation be recalled are sixty signatures of well known veterans. Mrs. Walter J. Grace when seen this morning regarding the letter stated that she would refer the matter to the meet ing of the Daughters of the Confederacy tables, and with air and good exer cise you need little else, sis the liver needs rousing—and most of us need thia once a week —take a safe vegeta ble extract of the leaves of aloe, May apple, root of jalap made into a tiny sugar-coated pill, sold by almost every druggist as Dr. Pierce’s Pleas ant Pellets and first put up nearly fifty years ago. Most people die eventually of an oyer-acid condition. If the blood can i be rendered more alkaline, the longer ] we live. With regular hours, 6to 8 A glasses of water between meals, sen i sible coarse food and a chance to get ' the poisons out of the system, a man will live to be a hundred. But, un fortunately, our highly nervous way of living brings increased storage of uric acid in the body. This acts as a poison, and consequently we suffer from headaches, neuralgia, lumbago, aches or pains, rheumatism, gout. Get rid of this uric acid poison by taking a harmless medicine called Anuric, which throws out the uric acid by stimulating the kidneys. Drink a pint of hot water before meals and take Anuric (double or triple strength) after meals and at bed time. Anuric can be obtained at almost anv drug store, or send s_l.oo to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., for full treatment. t next Wednesday afternoon. She said the invitation had been ’ extended and ac cepted some months ago, and that the Daughters thought they were doing the right and proper thing .in view of the. fact that Bishop Keiley himself is a' loyal Confederate veteran and had made, many Memorial addresses in the past without arousing any antagonism. The affair has created a big, sensa tion in Macon and the action of the Macon chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy will be awaifed wtih great interest. / Fund For Food Probe WASHINGTON, March I.—The house today accepted an amendment to the sundry civil bill appropriating $400,000, for an investigation into the high cost of living by the federal trade commis sion. Mtol totey fw foßto. cfiUMWMWI fonaatioo bow to r« roar bow $lO to sls a Day ta your ti®a. It to bffi eaiy—yaa »ercr uw a not bier fitt •aftaranwrertxninwgpattcrß, DI & I lift ■w. Molt Rootoil*-*1 / I ■ XLsierbwiU'aelcn WUfis Co. fef.aS- \ I Dept. 205. <fh>oos» g S Cured or No Pay I Pellagra ia no longer incurable. By the B ■ wonderful Baughn Pellagra Treatment the ■ B tortureaend suffering have been boaiahed. ■ I And we issae a written guarantee to refund I your money if you are not cured. Hyousnf- ■ B Yer or know anybody that suffers get m touch n I with us at once. Write us today for our free M J book on Pellagra and copy of guarantee. Ad- ■ I d re “ American Compounding Co. g 5 Box 587-1. Jasper, Alabama ■ t zL ' ” P R - KIN& * AT ALL DRUGGISTS > FACTS FOR MEN Telia AU About MEN’S DISEASES And How to Be CURED AT HOME Every afflicted man suffering from any man' disease, should write today for hi«t . wrr-w copy of this VALUABLE gjTr" BOOK treating on General, fcZC \ Nervous, Chronic and Special diseases. It tells you in uTT** J plaih, strong, simple words how any man can be traccesa- Y'' fully treated without leaving home. No matter bow long you have suffered; bow long #vK you have failed to find re lief i how old or stubborn your case or ho- discouraged an( l down-hearted you are— year in this book will be a revelation Jacksonville, to yon and may give you 20 years a new hope. It is chock full of Specialist. good, sound advice—just the things you should know and follow. It mav mean your complete restora tion to HEALTH. STRENGTH AND VIGOR. Send right NOW for your copy. Book Bent free upon receipt of 4 cents for postage, in plain envelope. Address DB. G. LEWIS DICKH&SOH, The Leading Men’s Specialist, 111 W. Forsyth, Jackaonville, Fla. 3