About Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1917)
2 5H.h3a.545.460 BOND MUSE IS EXPUBIED Secretary McAdoo Discusses Terms of Bill With House Committee WASHINGTON. Au*. 29. —Secretary McAdoo was* attain before the house ways and means committee today to discuss the terms of the administra tion's >11.538.945.45<» bond and cate bill and to answer further ques tions concerning details of the transfer of moneys already authorised. Most of yesterday's committee ses sion was taken up with an examina tion of Secretary McAdoo behind closed doors regarding; how money is being spent in this country. House Republic ans had threatened to oppose further appropriations for allied loans unless detailed informatio/t on the subject were forthcoming. Efforts by some committeemen to have others called before the commit tee to testify concerning the transfer of money was being discouraged by the leaders today on the ground that this would delay action on the bill in the house. 1 by/yitnani Ki»g, t t\/y telWr X<ERY WOMAN \ EVERY MOTHER EVERY DAUGHTER NEEDS IRON AT TIMES To put strength into her nerves and color into her cheeks. be no beauti t u I . healthy. aAf rosy - cheeked women with out iron The trouble in the ; WWI past has been I UgO* _■ that when wo- n e «d ed iron they gen- JHgy/ orally took * vyT22*y7 ordinary me- \ talite Iron, X. which often “Tg I corroded the / | F. King. M 0 S I stomach and X. did tar more ■ harm than good T.xiay doctors pre seribo organic Iron— Nuxated Iron. This particular form of Iron Is easil; assimilated, does not blacken nor In jure the teeth nor upset the stomach. It will Increase the strength and en durance of weak, nervous. Irritable, careworn. haggard looking women IOS per cent in two weeks' time In many instances. I have used It in my pww .practice with most surprising Verdinand King. M. IX. ✓ \oTE: NUXATED IRON recommence . ’. Ve by Dr. Ferdinand King can 1 \ X from any flood druggist wIF Xi X \e guarantee of success orZ JFy I r«K Nt- It is dispensed In thls< Xby I X\t all q»od drugg rts. / f | Mothers Ip 1 use '<Wrey’s \T * Vernliruge For the A safe old fashioned || remedy for worms Mpiff Seventy-fire years •■vntinu- -Jr' ous use Is the best testimo- ([ X nial FREYS VERMIFUGE ceu offer you. q; —> y Keep a bottle always on J"J I hand. It will help keep the q; —. little one* happy and healthy. 25c a bottle at your drug- gists or general store: «r it IFITJ your dealer can’t supply yon. send his name and 23c in r~V stamps and we ll send you a bottle promptlv. E. &S. FREY, : £73 Baltimore. Me. ® Made to A <&sQk 1 Offor Inequality: # 4Krr £ cff into for Dress or X4JTJ N dcoof many hand- f ruaraßteed for » rear andaaUsfae-iZ | *\ tiok or MONET BACK, abio- . ■ f t ,tH !•••% G» |LM va.ua—while they f ’! 1 !$\ No Extra Charges I IVi Ko charge for B;g Krttomo Peg T>peor I •>■ I |;J Cass Bocums, as*.rungastm for fancy Belt 11l Loops er Pocket Ha;-, no ebarge for Opew ■ U Welt Seems or Large Sisss all novelty M 111 GOLD FINISHED I U ,«XPIN FREE-. Jd i A!TBh* 5 lap^.P l * with ntyi- wr lUrmt- tret srdw. ecly a Mecsg \TjUKfJgJM few hundred on band, get yours quick. —neighbors Yoor gG-crge Gekovich mode •MJt in ane day. Write for free samples today. Chicago Tailors Association Dedt. s-IM. s •*» Booth FrewWln Street, Chicago CB Crown Your Teeth Ill’Ukow Imitewa G<-,14 Shell,; fnolyoor t .ends. '■bUit d-nlid, - work. Stirs ovsr as th- tot’. wi;-. nmc-wl m will. Owe .mWioamM. All Mia*ii< *. Manufacturers If. Co.. 2234 M. Lawndale. Av. Chicago H Locket. Cham & 2 Rings Frea BoH G Beras Rcssbed Salve < M* gTn -g_ aiksteai&perbnx Al - seller Wher sold return the XJ-K 3 wty 11.6 c and we will send these xW? 4 beautiful gold laid prerr. ’ - -wy ums or eboiee from b’H -atalog Write far Sa- * A To Day WK TRUST TOU. _«■ ImoM Fsrfsme Ca Isi tM Woedskora. YOUR HEART lioe* It Flutter, i'alpitate b ?W3jj|i2’|or Skip Brat«T Have /og l-'hor'arae ol Breath. Trw tvJ julerueeo. Numbueae, or ”T II whig Hi ****■ ,o ,cf * side.Diaa-ineod, ——- kulMtlng Nprlle, Wputa tie- * ~ ’ lorr eyr*. *4uddvn Bin rtiug in sleep. Nerve it ones s. Hungry er Weak hpell* Oppressed Feeling tn cheat, ( boking Ben eat lon in throat. Painful to lie on left side, ■sinking or Smothering **en*atlon. I’ifli e«lt Breoihlnr. Heart Dropsy orNwrllinc os feet or aukeeaf If yon base one or mere of the above symptoms, don't fail to us- Dr.Kius taaa’e Hrs-t Tablets. Not a secret medicine. It ts said that one person out of every four has a weak heart. Probnhly threw-fourths of these do not know It, and hundred* wrongful'.v treat tliem selves for the Ntomach. I.unao. Kidneys <w Nerves. Don't take any cLances when Dr. Kinaman’s Heart Tablets are within your reach. More than IWfl endorsetnenta furnished, f FREE TREATMENT COUPON 1 f Any sufferer mailing this counor.. withth*lr? .n* me and P.O. Address, to Dr. F. Kine-I lis.is. Box Kilt. Auiresta. .Ilatne. will-e-< |ce< .ea box of Heart Tamets for trial by return! Imall. poetpaid. free of eharg*. Delays are dan-j jgermu. write at once—to-day. QUARTET OF PROMINENT MILITARY MEN who are among the officers assigned to Camp Gordon. At the top, left, is Lieutenant Colonel Benjamin J. Tillman, who comes of fighting stock, the famous Tillman family of South Carolina. He has been in the service since 1898, having had ex perience in Cuba, the Philippines and on the Mexican border. He came to the cantonment from Fort Oglethorpe, where he was with the Fifty-first infantry. At the top, center, is Lieutenant Colonel Charles S. Blakely, a West Pointer who. until his assignment to Camp Gordon, was inspector-instructor of the Fourth division of field artillery, comprising batteries of the national guard in Georgia, Alabama and Louisiana. At the top, right, is Major D. M. Beere, field artillery, another West Point man. And at the bottom is Captain Carl F. McKinney, a West Pointer of the class of 1911, who has served in the Philijy— pines and is now peisonal aide to General Eben Swift, commander of Camp Gordon. ... * . « y ' • Ik r. ■ g A V —m< J J « -***Z > | j 1 ' ' ' /I ' ' Camp Gordon, the Miracle City, Opens Its Dusty Arms To Welcome Officer Force BY WABD OBEEME Camp Gordon, the miracle city that the hand of Uncle Sam has carved out of DeKalb county cornfields in thd course of a few weeks, opened its dust>" arms Tuesday to the officers who will make fighting men out of the first forty thousand citizens selected for military service on the battle front in France. Singly and in •groups of two and ten they reported for duty at the little shack on a knoll facing the tracks of the Southern railway, where Majo'r General Eben Swift has established his tempo rary headquarters. For a sheer mile and a half to tha east stretched the city, a tangle of raw timber rising in housetops and skeleton frames above w’oods and fields, clamor ing with the rattle and hum of ham mers and saws, swept by a wind that curled the dust in clouds over men and buildings, so that a roof was scarcely finished before the new surface was thick with a red deposit. Around the little shack on the knoli 1 wagons, automobiles and people clung like moths to the flame. Here the new arrivals approached; here they stopped and waited and went in; and. aftet a while, from here they dribbled off north and east and west to new quarters or back to Atlanta. The little shack on the knoll seemed to be the magnet which drew all the activities of the raw city. ■ only to shake them off again and send them whirling and scattering through its intertwined streets and ropds. By Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock I all 1,400 of the Incoming officers will have reported for duty and been as signed to their quarters. Within a few days they will have settled down, “found themselves.’’ And within a week j they will be ready for the first two ' thousand rookies who will begin re porting at the rate of four hundred a i dav on September 5. PICTURE OF CONFUSION. Today Camp Gordon is a picture ert ■ utter confusion to the casual visitor. The great cantonment is like a giant's child, all arms and legs beating about I in the hot sunshine, as if he was seek | ing. bewildered, to And a place to ffTt down, and raising a mighty rumpus ' about it until he could. But a peep into one little section of the camp brings order out of chaos. One piece of building, where each man has his bit to do and is hammering away at it as though his life depended upon it. Or just that little shack on the knoll, where a clerk pauses above a groaning typewriter and snaps out a j message to an office boy, who in turn {dashes away, all concentration and im- I portance. Each man has his bit, and all doing lit despite the hundreds of others doing I theirs around him, from the general I down to the black and sweaty team- I ster. That is the secret of the work, ; that is why Uncle Sam’s city Js growing ;so fast that today it is different from i what it was yesterday, and tomorrow you will not know it if you see it to day. The only comparison is to say that north Atlanta vanished in flame but little quicker than Camp Gordon is growing. A quarter of a mile away from the camp, on the road to Atlanta, a breath of wind brings you the faint volley of hammering. Nearer, and you glimpse on the horizon a fringe of telephone | poles, men clinging to them like birds | black against the blue sky. rigging • them with wire with the speed of sail ors snugging down a schooner's shrouds before an advancing storm. BUILDINGS EVERYWHERE. As your car sweeps over a rise in the road, the valley falls away before you i into an open area brimming with half completed buildings. Men swarm over I their tops like flies, the incessant harn i mertng volley is loud in your ears, the buildings seem to stretch east and west and north as far as you can see. You are amazed. But — “Wait a minute,” says your compan ion. “This isn't a bit of it.” And it isn’t. For a mile and a half —the length of a good sized city in it self—reach the buildings ;«id the dusty streets and the swarms of men. For a mile and a half and for a mile on either side the corn fields have wilted • before the hammer and saw. For a mile 1 and a half you ride, until your amaze ment knows no bounds. Many of the buildings are already so I finished that they lack nothing but ten ! ants. Home are but now rising from their foundations. Others lack only a I roof; but pass that way a few hours | ater, and they will have it. V’eh'des ot all sorts and sizes thread the dusty streets by <he score—a hump backed farm tractor with wheels' as high as •cemetery mcnu.nents; long eared mules tugging away at plows and rotd snovels; high-powered trucks, handsoma limousines;* flivvers that buzz by with the cocky conceit of pamnered poodle dogs; a tet.m ot oxen hauling a load of lumber; a motorcycle dashing up the hill with a sputter of cylinders. The farm tractor ploughs through lust inches deep, the trucks throw dust on either side in clouds, the shiny bodies of the limousines are Invisible THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1917. under a dusty coating, the flivvers look like they have rolled in dust, the mo torcycle kicks up dust by the bucketful. Even the slow-going mules, when t’tej I lant their hoofs in the road, send dust balls m puffs to left and right. WIND CARRIES DUST. The wind catches the dust and carries ie over the camp leaving.lt in sheets on the roofs of the buildings, whisking it down the backs of the men, spreading it over their arms and faces, searing the green leaves of the woods to a dirty yellow. Yet the work goes on; the* men wipe their hands and faces and grin; tb.< mules bat the dust from their ears; the buildings grow and grow. As you ride on through the camp, you * pick out individuals; for this city, half soldier, half civilian, has in its borders now all types. A horse stationary un der a withered oak tree, casting just enough shade to protect the trooper who is on guard there and who stops you and examines your pass, shifting his carbine to his other hand A darky so old that he grins at you with one tooth, tipping his hat as he plods past with a bucket of water. Carpenters of all ages, color and size; a fat man sitting in a Ford and shouting orders through a megaphone; a young engineer in white duck bent above blue prints; a squad of khaki, tramping past, their hat bands showing they are members of the hospital corps; another file in uniform and out, herded toward tents at the far end, the cooks; colonels so many, majors so numerous, captains in such quantity that you can't throw a brick without hitting an eagle or a gold leaf. They are all there, the rank and the file and the in-betweens. In a few days, they will be doubled; in a week or two tripled; before a month is past, quadrupled. And within an other few months, they will be gone from the dusty roads and the raw buildings and the city Uncle Sam has built, gone—to France. WILSON IS GREETED AS NEW LEADER OF THE ENTENTE CAUSE (Continued From Page One.) peace now. The president’s note is the first concrete evidence Germany has had that the ambition of her enemies is not to crush her. President Wilson has declared against dismemberment of empires and against post-bellum trade wars. in these cir-j cumstances. Germany for the first time can realize that the war against her is ; not mercenary, or aggressive, but that i it is one of altruistic purpose. Hence, as many here see it, the liberals of Ger many will soon force off the yoke of kaiserism. If. however, they content themselves with hearkening to the made-in-Ger many plea that the war is now one of defense in so far as Germany is con cerned, the struggle will go on. Mili tary men believe that Germany will de-1 cide either to take the chance of a mili tary defeat or will start peace negotia tions honestly now. Should she decide however that there is no peace chance now or that her arms ! can ultimately triumph then she w’ll fight on for a year or two more. By that time, America’s strength will be felt in full force and Germany’s de feat will be an assured fact. Secretary of State Lansing did not see today in Germany’s concessions to Argentina anything particularly signifi cant. He pointed out that the German government made such promises to America—only to break them later. Others, however thought Germany saw the handwriting on the wall anil was easing up on her U-boat contest so as to get some moral and material support from this hemisphere. That she is look ing to trade after war is considered ob vious. Russia, despite her enormous strug gle to keep weakening forces in line, is J heartened by the president’s note which diplomats feel makes Russia and the i United States virtual arbiters of peace. The answer it is felt may crush the last traces of separate peace talk in Russia. Meantime, allied diplomats gave their word that their nations agree with President Wilson as to abandonment of ideas of a post-bellum trade war. They said that if Germany’s claws aro clipped, such wars will be unnecessary except in isolated Instances. On the whole, however observers here saw in Wilson's expression a notice to Ger many that she will get a fair trade deal after the war. and a sign that America and the allies realize a blunder was committed in notifying Germany she would be crushed no matter how the war ended. A certain suspicion must attach to German business after the war, it Is pointed out but under Wil son’s ideas Germany can re-establish her trade if she will remove from ft the taint of kaiserism. Y *v» .A z f f ■ I .... <- g M fl z*• V WHEAT PRICE OWSEIT IN COMMITTEE MEETING Failure to Reach Conclusion Indicates Division of Opin ion on Figure WASHINGTON, Aug. 29 —The wheat price-fixing committee resumed its ses sion today in a further effort to igree on a price for the 1917 crop. Last night’s meeting was adjourned after sev eral votes were taken without disposing of the‘question. There had been a prior agreement that a tnree-fourrhs vote would be necessary to determine the price. Failure to reach a conclusion is believed to indicate that there are sfrong differences of topinion regarding what constitutes a fair valua tion on the crop. The basic price fixed will be for num ber one northern wheat or its equiva lent. Scales for the other grades will . be worked out within the next few days by the food administration. Bodies of Drowned Young Couple Missing CLARKESVILLE, Tenn., Aug’ 2«. Diligent search today failed to result! in the recovery of the bodies of Isaac* | Winfield, 18. and Miss Margaret Mor-1 | ris, 17, who were drowned Sunday ini I Cumberland river near here. The young! ; people had gone for a boat ride with* Morris Heister and his wife. Miss Mor ris stepped into water beyond her depth and Winfield rushed to her assistance, a rapid current carrying both to their death. PAINS SHARP AND STABBING Woman Thought She Would Die. Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Ogdensburg, Wis.—“l suffered from female troubles which caused piercing —pains like a knife E through my back and side. 1 finally lost all my strength so I had to go to bed. The doctor advised an oper ation but I would not listen to it. I i thought of what I 4. had read about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound and Rt tried it The first bottle brought great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me. All women who have female trouble of any kind should try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”—* Mrs. Etta Dorion, Ogdensburg, Wis. Physicians undoubtedly did their best, battled with this case steadily and couid do no more, but often the most scientific treatment is surpassed by the medicinal properties of tne good old fashioned roots and herbs contained in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If any complication exists it pays tp write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for special free advice. SOW WINTER OATS THIS FALL THROUGHOUT SOUTH— WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 29. —Because ol * the shortage of corn In some sections of the ' south and the mure than usual need for growing I nt home all the feed that stock «IU require, a I liberal acreage should be sown to winter oats this fall wherever that crop is adapted. While many farmers had a disastrous experience with 1 oats last winter when a large part of the ! crop was destroyed by the February freeze, a l repetition of that occurrence tills year is not * very probable. Oats are general! yrecognize<l las being ordinarily the best grain crop for * full sowing in I lie south, as it usually yields tetter than other grains, matures early, and * both tlie grain ami the. straw may be fed to live stock. In fact, it is a very general prac- i tice in many sections, either to cut oats for I hay or tv feed them in the bundle, to Work stock, thus providing both grain and roughage. SEED ECONOMY. The scarcity and high price of seed oats this ttll, due to the short crop last spring, make i it desirable to use special precautions to get a good stand with as little seed as possible. As less seed is needed when the seed is sown arly o nwell-prepared land, attention to ths points will pay well. Oats usually do best after a cultivated crop, such as corn or cotton. If these crops have been kept free from weeds, it is beat not to plow the land, '»it to make a fine, mellow seed bed two or three inches deep with the disk, spring-tooth or spike-tooth har row. The disk harrow is the best of these tools for this purpose, though the apike tooth or smoothing harrow should be used the last time over the field to break clods left by the disk and to leave the surface fine and smooth for the seed. A good sed bed may also be made with the disk harrow on land from which a crop of cowpea or soy-bean hay has ! been removed. Plowing is nt usually advisable i unless the land is very hard r weedy, as it leaves the ground so loose that it dries out readily. If the field must be plowed, the work should be done at least two weeks before seed ing time, and the land then disked or dragged | thoroughly to firm it. . FERTILIZATION. If the land is rich or if it has been heavily fertilized for the preceding crop, no further fer- I aillzatlon is necessary. On inmost soils, how eier, the addition of 100 to 200 pounds of acid phosphate or some other form of phosphate fer tilizer before or at seeding time is beneficial Fertilizers containing nitrogen are usually ap plied to best advantage about tbe time growth starts in the spring. VARIETIES RECOMMENDED. ; In the gulf states. Georgia and the Carolinas, the best oat to grow Is the Red Rustproof or some of Its various forms, as Appier, Bancroft. . Cook, Hundred Busheu or Patterson. The Ful- I ghum, a very popular variety in many sections. is quite similar to Red Rustproof, but lias the advantage of ripening ten days to two weeks I earlier. In Arkansas. Tennessee and Virginia I tlie Winter Turf is the best variety to sow in ! the fall, as it is hardier than Red Rustproof * and Fulghum. SEEDING DATES. Winter oats should be sown in Tennessee and I Virginia from September 15 to October 15. ac . cording to the locality. In the Carolinas and ' the northern portions of the other southern i states sow from October 1 to November 1, and I in the southern half of Georgia and the Jtulf | states sow from October 15 to November 15 | Tile farther north- or tbe higher the elevation .at which the seed is to be sown, the earlier should be the date of seeding. SOWING SUGGESTIONS. The grain drill is the best method of sowing oats. If one is not available, tbe seed may be sown with an ordinary cotton or corn planter or a one-horse drill. Sowing broadcast and plowing or disking in requires m<ye seed and is I Tonight! Take Dodson’s Liver Tone! Better Tfran Calomel For Liver Calomel sickens! If bilious, constipated and head achy read my guarantee. Listen to me! Take no more sick ening. salivating calomel when bilious or constipated. Don’t lose a day’s work! Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it comes into contact with sour bile, crashes into it, breaking it up. This i*s when you feel that aw ful nausea and cramping. If you are sluggish and “all-knocked out,” if you liver is torpid and bowels constipated or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Here’s my guarantee—Go to any drug store and get a 50-cent bottle of Dod son’s Liver Tone. Take a spoonful to night and if it doesn’t straighten you z Heavy Bessemer Steel Safety Document Box Absolutely 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 11 1-2x5 1-2x2 1-4 inches, substantial lock, two keys. Here is our offer: The Semi-Weekly Journal SI.OO Eighteen Months for and Heavy Bessemer Steel Safety Box Free x* This box is for the safe keeping and preservation of Mortgages, Deeds, Receipts, Notes, Leases, Insurance Policies, Contracts, Wills, Stocks, Bonds and all valuable jr e* papers. r * ♦* Every man needs one—and if bought in the regular way woujd cost about f & dollar. We give it to you absolutely free. Sign the coupon end get this jA box at once. It might save you hundreds of dollars by savins one ?f x* your valuable papers from loss. Send Your Order to ' ’’ The Semi-Weekly Journal /*/ X'” Circulation Dept., Atlanta, Ga. j* x’ S X' Z •••’’ ••*’* / HOG AND CATTLE EXHIBITS TO FEATURE DOTHAN FAIR (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) DOTHAN, Ala., Aug. 29.—Preparations for Dothan's fourth big annual fair, which will he held the week of October 29 to November 3, are being carried for ward on a scale in keeping with the unprecedented prosperity which ia sweeping over the wiregra.sn section of Alabama. Instead of curtailing expendi tures for amusements and premiums, purses in all departments have been increased, in some instances as much as 100 per cent. The great feature of the big fair this year, according to C. J. Faulk, presi dent of the association, will be the hog and cattle exhibits. Already reserva tions for four carloads of thoroughbred hogs from some of the best known farms in the south have been made, with the prospect of other famous herds coining. These are in addition to ex hibits from farms in southeast Ala bama. which will be the best in the way of home-raised porkers ever shown in the state. The cattle exhibit also promises to be the greatest ever seen in this section. Last year several well-known herds were barred from the Dothan fair on account of tick quarantine. Tick eradi cation in Houston counts - is now well under way, and permits to bring some of the finest herds in the country to the south. The Dothan fair has been a great Dothan fair this year have already been obtained. Included in this number are several famous Georgia herds which have won prizes at fairs all over the Incentive in boosting hog and cattle raising In the wiregrass. In the past three years shipments of hogs from Dothad to packing markets have grown from nothing to seventy-one carloads for the first three months of 1917. The industry Is growing so rapidly that 'his •section, at the present rate of increase, will soon take a leading place among the meat-producing portions of rhe country. The cattle Industry is also rapidly improving, and the next few years will no doubt see this industry also grow to great importance. Woman Named Major TALLAHASSEE, Fla.. Aug. 28—Mrs. George I. Horwitz, who was elected first woman mayor in the south, has been ippointed a major and an aide on the staff of Governor Catts. of Florida ui poor nnd uncertain method. The usual rate »f needing is to 3 bushels, but thia may be reduced to 2 bushels if the seed is drilled early on well preps red land. The seed should be sown only deep enough to be snre that it is i overed with moist noil, for deeper seeding de lays germination and early growth. Sowing 1 to I*4, Inches deep is usually <sufficient. right up and make you feel fine and vigorous by morning, I want you to go buck to the store and get your money. Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore it cannot salivate or make you I guarantee that tone spoonful of Dodson’s Liver Tone will put your slug gish liver to work and clean your bow els >f that sour bila and constipated waste which is clogging your system and making you feel miserable I guar p.nte*’ that a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will keep your entire family feel* ing tine for months. Give it t»> your children. It is harmless; doesn't gripe and they like its pleasant last*. (Advt.) “SIRIJP OF FIGS” FOO CONSTIPATED CHILD Delicious “Fruit Laxative” can’t harm stomach, liver and bowels Every mother realizes, after giving her children ‘‘California Syrup of Figs,” that this is their ideal la—vtlve, because they love its plea^^c. 'Jiarifc jtnd thor oughly cjeanc-»s r**- nttle stom ach, liver and ooweis without griping. When cross, irritable, feverish or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue. Mother! If coated, give a tea spoonful of this harmless “fruit laxa tive.” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undi gested food passes out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. When its little system is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic—remember, a good “inside cleansing’’ should al ways be the first treatment given. Millions of moihers keep “California Syrup of Figs” handy; they know a tea spoonful today saves a sick child to morrow. Ask your druggist for a 50- cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs.” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups printed on the bottle. Beware of coun terfeits sold here, so don’t be fooled. Get the genuine, made by “California Fig Syrup Company.”—(Advt). IPellagra V!EJ CURED Don’t take harmful drugs or hypodermic injections. You must have a reconstructive treatment to build up tbe system aud drive out the poin«onous infection if vou are to be CI.'RED GF PELLAGRA. My Pellagra Treat ment lias been used for ten years. Thousands testify to Its wonderful results. In the 50- page book, which is mailed FREE in plain iraleiF wrapper, you will find my proven the ory as to the cause of pellagra, and how it may be cured right in your own home under guarantee of absolute satisfaction or no charge for treatment. The hook also contains letters and photographs of patients, bankers, minis ters. doctors, lawyers and others. PELLAGRA: Tired and drowsy feelings: headaches, depression: indolence: roughness or breaking out of skin: sore mouth: tongue, lips nnd throat flaming red; mucus and choking: indigestion: diarrhoea or constipation; mind affected and other symptoms. Don’t take chances. Write for your copy of this book tedny. A postcard will do. W. J. MeCRARY, M. D. DEPT. 502. CARBON HILL, ALA. I ADIES SIOOO REWARD! 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