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2
WOULDN'T BE LIKE
HE WAS FOR FARM
“I Sure Am a Different Man
’ Since I Took Tanlac.’’ Says
: Vinson—Has Gained Fifteen
Pounds
**l*d rather lose my whole farm, stock
and everything on it, than be back in
'fee fix I was before Tanlac restored my
health." said Joe M. Vinson, a prosper
ous farmer living on Route 2 out of
Love. Miss.
"Three years ago my stomach got out
of shape, and for eight months 1 had
|o live on the white of egg and butter
milk. I was so nervous I couldn't sleep
and suffered misery from indigestion,
lias would form on my stomach and
swell me so I couldn't button my
clothes, my head ached until it seemed
like it would pop open and I'd have
smothering spells and almost choke to
death.
♦ "1 sure am a different man since 1
took Tanlac! 1 can just eat anything I
want, have gained fifteen pounds in
weight and my strength has come back
gnti: I can do as big a day's work as 1
ever could. All the misery has gone
from my stomach and the headaches
and smothering spells are a thing of the
past-"
; Tanlac is sold by one regularly estab
lished agency in every town. —(Advt.)
mmUbsX
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XhLifcZ'KTT rag br <ormpo»den» tweaty .
PfTUbS/ \ *<an. Graduate* a»*.red la raray .
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/ LoadMVat.CarrMimrvdaaee
A school
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Himn White SLAVES
I iORRORSot the T RAF Fit
I This aos gives details of the
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INDOOR TOILET
tn A Placedin Your Home
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WP- NAWNEAR CABINET CO
MB Kawnear Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
CuredHisRUPTURE
ll was badly rupture-1 hv lifting a trunk
several years azo. I»rt-.rs «ai-i tnv only hope
A ewe was an one re’ion. Tniaees did me
ffik
I
\
bo g««-l. Finally 1 got hold of something that
quiekiy md completely cured me. Yean* bate
jweaed. and the rupture baa never returned,
although I am doin-.- bard work as a carpenter.
Tberv was no operation, no lost time, no trou
. hb>. I imve nothing to sell, but will give
; fail information about how you may find a
rumpl-tr ■ ore without owratlon if you write
tn ■»". Eugene M. Pullen. Carpenter. I<K!6-I»
i{ Marcellus avenue. Mauas.iuan. N. J. Better cut
L .ut tMa anti ■ ■ M anv others; you
k n.ay save a life or stop the misery, worry and
■ danger of npcration.—l Advt.)
WILSON ASKS WAR ON AUSTRIA
IN HIS MESSAGE TO CONGRESS
ASHINGTON, Dec. 4 The text
of President Wilson’s war
mesage to congress, asking
w
that body to immediately declare war
against Austri-Hungary, follows in
Eight months have elapsed since
I last had the honor of addressing
you. They have been months crowd
ed with events of immense and
grave significance for us. I shall
not undertake to detail or even
summarize those events. The prac
tical particulars of the part we have
played in them will be laid before
you in the reports of the executive
departments.
I shall discuss only our present
outlook upon these vast affairs,
our present duties, and the imme
diate means of accomplishipg the
objects we shall hold always in
view.
I shall not go back to debate the
causes of the war. The intolerable
wrongs done and planned against us
by the sinister masters of Germany
have long since become too grossly
obvious to every true American to
need to be rehearsed.
But I shall ask you to consider
again with a very grave scrutiny
our objectives and the measures by
which we mean to attain them: for
the purpose of discussion here in
this place is action, and our action
. must move straight towards definite
ends. Our object is. of course, to
win the war; and we shall not slack
en or suffer ourselves to be divert
ed until it is won.
Whan Shall We
Consider War Won?
But it ia worth while asking and
answering the question, when shall
we consider the war won?
From one point of view, it is not
necessary to broach this funda
mental matter. J do not doubt
that the American people know
what the war is about and what
sort of an outcome they will re
gard as a realization of their pur
pose in it. As a nation we are
united in spirit and intention. I
pay little heed to those who tell
me otherwise. I hear the voices
of dissent —who does not? I hear
the criticism and the clamor of the
noisily, thoughtless and trouble
some. I also see men here and
there fling themselves in impotent
disloyalty against the calm, indo
mitable power of the nation. I
hear men debate peace who under
stand neither its nature nor the
way in which we may attain it with
uplifted eyes and unbroken spirits.
But I know that none of these
speak for the nation. They |lo not
touch the heart of anything. They
may safely be left to strut their
uneasy hour and be forgotten.
But from another point of view I
believe that it is necessary to say
plainly what we here at the seat of
action consider the war to be for
and what part we mean to play in
the settlement of its searching is
sues. We are the spokesmen of
the American people and they have
a right to know whether their pur
pose is ours. They desire peace by
the overcoming of evil, by the de
feat once for all of the sinister
forces that interrupt peace and ren
der it impossible, and they wish to
know how closely our.thought ¥uns
with theirs and what action we pro
pose. They are impatient with
those fvho desire peace by any sort
of compromise—deeply and indig- |
nantly impatient—but they will be
equallv impatient with us if we do
not make it plain to them what our
objectives are and what we are
planning for in seeking to make
conquest of peace by arms.
Garmany Must Hava
Spokesman Who Can Be Believed
1 believe that I speak for them
when 1 say two things: First, that
this intolerable thing of which the
masters of Germany have shown
us the ugly face, ' this menace of
combined intrigue and force which . I
we now see so clearly as the Ger
man power, a thing without con
science or honor or capacity for
covenated peace, must be crushed
and. if it be not utterly brought to
an end. at least shut out from the
friendly intercourse of the nations;
and. second, that when this thing
a*id its power are indeed defeated
and the time comes that we can
discuss peace—when the German
t»eople have spokesmen whose word
we can believe and when those
spokesmen are ready in the name
of their people to accept the com
mon judgment of the nations as to
I what shall henceforth be the bases
of law and of covenant for the lite
of the world —we shall be willing
and glad to pay the full price for
eace. and pay it ungrudgingly.
We know what that price will
be. It will be full, impartial jus
tice —justice done at every point
and to every nation that the final
settlement must affect, our enemies
as well as our friends.
You catch, with me, the voices of
humanity that are in the air. They
grow daiU' more audible, more ar
ticulate. more persuasive, and they
come from the hearts of men
everywhere. They insist that ths
war shall not end in vindictive
action of any kind; that no nation
or people shall be robbed or pun
ished because the irresponsible rul
ers of a single country have them
selves done deep and abominable
wrong. It is this thought that has
been expressed In the formula "no
annexations, no contributions, no
punitive indemnities.’’ Just be
cause this crude formula expresses
the instinctive judgment as to right
of plain men everywhere, it has
been made diligent Use of by the
masters of German intrigue to lead
the people of Russia astray—and
the people of every other country
their agents could reach, in order
that a premature peace might be
brought about before autocracy has
been taught its final and convincing
lesson, and the people of the world
put in control of their own des
tinies.
To Base Peace on
Generosity and Justice
But the fact that a wrong use
has been made of a just idea is no
reason why a right use should not
be made of it. It ought to be
brought under the patronage of its
real friends. Let it be said again
that autocracy must first be shown
the utter futility of its claims to
power or leadership in the modern
world. It Is impossible to apply
any standard of justice so long as
such forces are unchecked and un
defeated as the present masters of
Germany command. Not Until that
has been done can right be set up
as arbiter and peacemaker among
the nations. But when that has
been done—as. God willing, it as
suredly will be—we shall at last be
free to do an unprecedented thing,
and this is the time to avow our
purpose to do it.. We shall be
free to base peace on generosity
and justice, to the exclusion of all
selfish claims to advantage even on
the part of the victors.
Let there be no misunderstand
ing. Our present and immediate task
Is to win the war. and nothing shall
turn us aside from It until it Is ac-
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY. DECEMBER 7, 1017.
complished. Every power and re
source we possess, whether of men.
of money, or of materials, is being
devoted and will continue to be de
voted to that purpose until it is
achieved. Those who desire to
bring peace about before that pur
pose is achieved 1 counsel to carry
their advice elsewhere. We will
not entertain it. We shall regard
the war as won only when the Ger
man people say to us, through prop
erly accredited representatives, that
they are ready to agree to a settle
ment based upon justice and the
reparation of the wrong their rul
ers have done. They have done a
wrong to Belgium which must be
repaired. They have established a
power over other lands and people
than their own—over the great em
pire of Austria-Hungary, over hith
erto free Balkan states, over Tur
key and within Asia —which must be
relinquished.
German Industrial
Skill Hot Begrudged
Germany’s success by skill, by in
dustry. by knowledge, by enterprise
wc did not grudge or oppose, but
admired, rather. She had built U
for herself a real empire of trade
and influence, secured by the peace
of the world. We were content to
abide the rivalries of manufacture,
science, and commerce that were in
volved for us in her sucess and
stand or fall as we had or did not
have the brains and the Initiative to
surpass her. But at the moment
when she had conspicuously won
her triumphs of peace she threw
them away, to establish in their
stead what the world will no longer
permit to be established, military
and political domination by arms,
by which to oust where she could
not excel the rivals she most feared
and hated. The peace wc make
must remedy that wrong. It must
deliver the once fair lands and hap
py peoples of Belgium and northern
France from the Prussian conquest
and the Prussian menace, but it
must also deliver the peoples of
the Balkans and the peoples of
Turkey, alike In Europe and in Asia,
from the impudent and alien domi
nation of the Prussian military and
commercial autocracy.
We owe it, however, to ourselves
to say that we do not wish in any
way to impair or tp rearrange the
Austro-Hungarian empire. It is no
affair of ours what they do with
their own life, either industrially or
politically. We do not purpose or
desire to dictate to them in any
way.
We only desire to see that their
affairs are left in their own hands,
in ail matters, great or small. We
shall hope to secure for the peoples
of the Balkan peninsula and for the
people of the Turkish empire the
right and opportunity to make their
•qrn lives safe, their own fortunes
■ecsre against oppression or injus
tice and from the dictation of for
eign courts or parties.
And our attitude and purpose with
regard to Germany herself are of a
like kind. We intend no wrong
against the German empire, no in
terference with her internal affairs.
We should deem either the one or
the other absolutely unjustifiable,
absolutely contrary to the principles
we have professed to live by and
to hold most sacred throughout our
life as a nation.
. The people of Germany are being
told by the men whom they now
permit to deceive them and to act as
their masters that they are fighting
for the very life and existence of
their empire, a war of desperate
self-defense against deliberate ag
gression. Nothing could be more
grossly or wantonly, false, and we
must seek by the utmost openness
and candor as to <£r real aims to
convince them of its falseness.
Must Get Naw Bolars
To Join in World Peace
We are in fact fighting for their
emancipation from fear, along with
our own—from the fear as well as
from the fact of unjust attack by
neighbors or rivals or schemers aft
er world empire. No one is threaten
ing the existence or the indepen
dence or the peaceful enterprise of
the German empire.
The worst that can happen to the
detriment of the German people is
this, that if they should still, after
the war is over, continue to be ob
liged to live under ambitious and in
triguing masters jnterested to dis
turb the people of the world, men
or classes of whom the other
peoples of the world could not trust,
it might be impossible to admit them
to the partnership of nations which
must henceforth guarantee the
world’s peace. That partnership
must be a partnership of peoples,
not a mere partnership of govern
ments. It might be impossible, also,
in such untoward circumstances, to
admit Germany to the free economic
intercourse which must inevitably
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spring out of the other partnership
of a real peace. But there would
be no agression in that; and such a
situation, inevitable because of dis
trust. would in the very nature of
things sooner or later cure itself, by
processes which would assu/rediy
set in.
The wrongs, the very deep
wrongs, committed in this war will
have to be righted. That, of course.
But they cannot and must not be
righted by the commission of s’ml
lar wrongs against Germany and her
allies. The world will not permit
Hie commission of similar wrongs
as a means of reparation and set
tlement. Statesmen must by this
time have learned that the opinion
of the world is everywhere wide
awake and fully comprehends the
issues involved. No representative
of any self-governed nation will
dare disregard it by attempting any
such covenants of selfishness and
compromise as were entered into at
the congress of Vienna. The thought
of the plain people here and every
where throughout the world, the
people who enjoy no privilege and
have very simple and unsophisti
cated standards of right and wrong,
is the air all governments must
henceforth breathe if they would
live. It is in the full disclosing
light of that thought that all poli
cies must be conceived and exe
cuted in this midday hour of the
world’s life. German rulers - have
been able to upset the peace of the
world only because the German peo
ple were qot suffered under their
tutelage to share the comradeship
of the other peoples of the world
either in thought or in purpose.
Russian People Have
Been Poisoned by Faleehoode.
They were allowed to have no
opinion of their own which might
be set up as a rule of conduct for
those who exercised authority over
them. But the congress that con
cludes this war will feel the full
strength of the tides that run now
in the hearts and consciences of
free men everywhere. Its conclu
sions will run with those tides.
All these things have been true
from the very beginning of this
stupendous war; and I cannot help
thinking that if they had been made
plain at the very outset the sympa
thy and enthusiasm of the Russian
people might have been once for all
enlisted on the side of the allies,
suspicion and distrust swept away,
and a real and lasting union of pur
pose effected. Had they believed
these things at the very moment of
their revolution and had they been
confirmed in that belief since, the
sad reserves which have recently
marked the progress of their affairs
towards an ordered and stable gov
ernment of free men might have
been avoided.
The Russian people have been
poisoned by the very same false
hoods that have kept the German
people in the dark, and the poison
has been administered by the very
same hands. The only possible an
tidote is the truth. It cannot be
uttered too plainly or too often.
From every point of view, there
fore, it has seemed to be my duty to
speak these declarations of purpose,
to add these specific inteipretatlons
to what I took the liberty of saying
to the senate in January. Our en
trance into the war has not altered
our attitude towards the settlement
that must come when it is over.
When I said in January that the na
tions of the world were entitled not
only to free pathways on the sea
but also to assured and unmolested
access to those pathways, I was
thinking, and I am thinking now. not
of the smaller and weaker nations
alone, which need our countenance
and support, but also of the great
and powerful nations, and of our
present enemies as well as our pres
ent associates in the war. I was
thinking, and am thinking now, of
Austria herself, among the rest, as
well as of Serbia and of Poland.
Justice and equality of rights can be
had only at a great price. We are
seeking permanent, not temporary,
foundations for the peace of the
world and must seek them candidly
and fearlessly. As always, the
right wil prove to be the expedient.
Must Clear Away AU
Impediments to Success
What shall we do, then, to push
this great war of freedom and jus
tice to its righteous conclusion?
We must clear away with a thor
ough hand all impediments to suc
cess, and we must make every ad
justment of law that will facilitate
the full and free use of our whole
capacity and force as a fighting
unit.
One very embarrassing obstacle
that stands in our way is that we
are at war with Germany, but not
with her allies. I therefore very
earnestly recommend that the con
gress immediately declare the
United States in a state of war
with Austria-Hungary. Does it
seem strange to you - that this
should be the conclusion of the ar
gument I have just addressed to
you? It is not. It is in fact the
inevitable logic of what 1 have said.
Austria-Hungary is for the time
being not her own mistress, but
simply the vassal of the German
government. We must face the
facts as they are and act upon
them without sentiment in this
stern business. The government of
Austria-Hu'ngary Is not acting
upon its own initiative or in re
sponse to the wishes and feelings
of its own people, but as the instru
ment of another nation. We must
meet its force with our own and
regard the central powers as but
one The war can be successfully
conducted in no other way
The same logic would Iliad also
to a declaration of war
Turkey and Bulgaria. They also
are the tools of Germany. But they
are mere tools and do not yet stand
in the direct path of our necessary
action. We shall go wherever the
necessities of this war carry us
but it seems to me that we should
go only where Immediate and prac
tical considerations lead us and not
heed any others.
The financin' and military meas
ures which must be adopted will
suggest themselves as the war and
its undertakings develop, but I will
take the liberty of proposing to you
certain other acts of legislation
which seem to me to be needed
for the support of the war and for
the release of our whole force and
energy.
It will be necessary to extend In
certain particulars the legislation
of the last session with regard to
alien enemies; and also necessary,
1 believe, to create a very definite
and particular control over the en
trance and departure of all persons
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ing to be fed and housed at the
expense of the government in the
detention camps and it will be the
purpose of the legislation I have
suggested to confine offenders
among them in penitentiaries and
other similar institutions where
they could be made to work as other
criminals do.
Recent experience has convinced
me that the congress must go fur
ther in authorizing the government
to set limits to prices. The law of
suupply and demand. I am sorry to
say, has been replaced by the law
of unrestrained selfishness. While
we have eliminated profiteering in
several branches of industry it still
runs impudently rampant in others.
The farmers, for example, complain
with a great deal of justice that,
while the regulation of food prices
restricts their incomes, no restraints
are placed upon the prices of most
of the things they must themselves
purchase; and similar inequities ob
tain on all sides.
Favors Combinations
Among the Exporters
It is imperatively necessary that
the consideration of the full use of
the waterpower of the country and
also the consideration of the sys
tematic and yet economical develop
ment of such of the natural re
sources of the country as are still
under the control of the federal
government should be immediately
resumed and affirmatively and con
constructtvely dealt with at the ear
liest possible moment. The press
ing need of such legislation is daily
becoming more obvious.
The legislation proposed at the
last session with regard to regulated
combinations among our exporters.
In order to provide for our foreign
trade a more effective organization
and method of co-operation, ought
bj’ all means to be completed at
this session.
And 1 beg that the members of
the house of representatives will
permit me to express the opinion
that it will be impossible to deal
in any but a very wasteful and ex
travagant fashion with the enor
mous appropriations of the public
moneys which must continue to be
made, if the war is to be properly
sustained, unless the house will con
sent to return to its former prac
tice of initiating and preparing all
appropriation bills through a single
committee, in order that responsi
bility may be centered, expenditures
standardized and made uniform,
and waste and duplication as much
as possible avoided.
Additional legislation may also be
come necessary before the present
congress adjourns again in order
to effect the most efficient co-ordi
nation and operation of the railway
and other transportation systems
of the country, but to that I shall,
if circumstances should demand,
call the attention of the congress
upon another occasion.
If I have overlooked anything
that ought to be done for the more
effective conduct of the war, your
own counsels will supply the omis
sion. What I am perfectly clear
about is that in the present session
of the congress our whole atten
tion and energy should be concen
trated on the vigorous, rapid and
successful prosecution of the great
task of winning the war.
Thia War Is Based
On High Principles
We can do this with all the great
er zeal and enthusiasm because we
know that for us this is a war of
high principle, debased by no selfish
ambition of conquest or spoliations;
because we know, and all the world
knows, that we have been forced into
it to save the very institutions we
live under from corruption and de
struction. The purposes of the cen
tral powers strike straight at the
very heart of everything we believe
in; theif methods of warfare out-
e Based On
Cost Per
Tablet
It Saves 9V2C
CASCARA& QUININE
No advance in price for thia 20-year
old remedy— 25c for 24 tablet*—Some
cold tablets now 30c for 21 tablets
Figured on proportionate coat per
tablet, you aave 9%c when you buy
Hill’s—Cures Cold
®tn 24 hours—grip •
24 Tablets for 25c. UiCnLiH
At any Drug Store
rage every principle of humanity
and of knightly honor; their intrigue
has corrupted the very thought and
spirit of many of our people; their
sinister and secret diplomacy has
sought to take bur very territory
away from us and disrupt the nation
of the states.
Our safety would be at an end.
our honor forever sullied and
brought into contempt were we to
permit their triumph. They are
striking at the very existence of
democracy and liberty.
It is because it Is for us a war
of high, disinterested purpose, in
which all the free peoplse of the
world are banded together for the
vindication of right, a war for the
preservation of our nation and of
all that it has held dear of princi
ple and of purpose, that we feel
ourselves doubly constrained to pro
pose for its outcome only that
which is righteous and -of irre
proachable intention, for our foes
as well as for our friends. The
cause being just and holy, the set
tlement must be of like motive and
quality. For this we can fight, but
for nothing less noble or less wor
thy of our traditions. For this
cause we entered the war and for
this cause we will battle until the
last gun is fired.
I have spoken plainly because
this seems to me the time when it
is most necessary to speak plainly,
in order that all the world may
know that even in the heart of ar
dour of the struggle ajid when our
whole thought is of carrying the
war through to its end, we have not
forgotte* any ideal or principle for
which the name of America has
been in honour among the nations
and for which it has been our glory
to contend in the great generations
that went before us. A supreme
moment of history has cothe. The
eyes of the people have been opened
and they see. The hand of God is
laid upon the nations. He will
show them favour, I devoutly be
lieve. only if they rise to the clear
heights of His own justice and
mercy.
SEVEN OF ESM MEN
ARRESTED IN BOX MH
Other Six Illinois Convicts Are
Surrounded and Will Be
Taken Soon
JOILET, 111. Dec. 4.—Seven of the
thirteen convicts who escaped from
the state penitentiary here yesterday
morning were captured early today by
three posses near Morris in a box car
on the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific
railroad. The other six are surrounded
and their capture is expected shortly.
The captured convicts offered no re
sistance.
The three posses were organized late
last night after the convicts had stop
ped a Chicago, Ottawa and Peoria inter
urban car, robbed the passengers of
everything they had. including most of
their clothes, and had driven the car
to Morris, 111., whfbe they abandoned
it.
Reports from Morris stated that the
passengers from the interurban car
reached there about midnight, all badly
bruised, but none was seriously in
jured.
Former Health Commissioner Says
Nuxated Iron
Should Be Used in Every Hospital and Prescribed by Every
Physician—Attributes His Own Great Physical Activity
Today at Over 60 Years of Age Largely to His Personal
Use of Nuxated Iron.
WHAT FORMER HEALTH ffl
COMMISSIONER KERR SAYS
‘•As Health Commissioner of the City of Chicago, I was \
importuned many times to recommend different medicines, ... K SW<
mineral waters, etc. Never yet have 1 gone on record as -1 jj
favoring any particular remedy, but I feel that in Nux- WjBBBHBIwMI
nted iron an exception should be made to the rule. I have ,
taken Nuxated Iron myself and experienced its health-glv
ing strength-building effect, and in the interests of the
"iblic welfare. I feel it my duty tn make k>. »n ite results
of its use. I am well past mv three-score years and '
want to sav that I believe that my own great physical ac
tivity is due largely today to my personal use of Nux- ■-
a ted’ Iron, and if my endorsement shall induce anaemic,
nervous run down men and nomen to take Nuxated Iron.
and receive the wonderful tonic benfits which I have re- St'ifv *
.a-ived I Shall feel greatly gratified that I made an ex- ■Z<WwiKMF*~»'
eention to rav life-long rule in recommending ft. From jWglsr
mv own experience with Nuxated Iron. I feel that it Is '
such a valuable remedy that It ought to he used in every i
hospital and prescribed by every physician in this coun- Former Health Commissioner
try. - ’ • Kerr has given rears of his ’if a
_Z . *** SS lighting for public health in his
// LZ» Lx'kXy Z. who introduced Anti-toxin for
J I Diphtheria in Chicago’s Health
Former Health Commissioner. City of Chicago. the Hß a'nd
1 ■ thereby helped to save the lives
o, thousands of belies. He in-
NOTENuxated Iron, which has been used by Former Health troduced the anti-snitting ordi-
Commissioner Kerr with such surprising results, and which is nance which has been copied all
prescribed and recommended by physicians in such a great va- over the country and also tome
rlety of « P at, nt nor ’ p - r ’’ t remedy, care of the sewers and raroa?.
but one which is well known to druggists everywhere. Unlike in the interest of public health,
the older Inorganic iron products. it is easily assimilated. He u positive that the wide
does not future the teeth, make them black, nor upset the spread use of Nuxausd Iron
stomach: on the contrary, it is n most potent remedy in would greatly lessen the worries
nearly ••ill forms of indigestion as well r.s for nervous, run- and troubles of Healtn Vom
down conditions. The manufacturers have such great confi- n.i'sinners in keening up a high
tlciice in Nuxated Iron that they offer to forfeit XtO'i.OO to standard of public hea.th.
anv charitable instltntion if they cannot take any man or
woman under fiO who lacks iron ami in- rease their strength U»» ier cent or ov-r in tour
I oceks' ti.ne. provided tliev have no serious organic trouble. They also offer to refund your
| uoncy if it does not nt least double your strength and endurance in ten days time. It is
dispensed by all good druggists.—(Advt.)
RELIEVES THAT
WHEEZY GOLD
Proper time to check a cough
is at the first symptom.
Delay is Dangerous.
If you are still neglecting your cough,
the sensible thing is to stop taking
chances and begin taking Dr. Bell’s
Pine-Tar-Honey.
Treatment with this effective bal
sam remedy should give you quick re
lief. You will notice Its soothing ef
fect on the air passages from the first
dose. As its name implies, it contains
ingredients proved to allay Inflamma
tion, quiet coughing and tickling in the
throat, find to loosen and expel the
phlegm. Don’t lose time from your
work.
Take a dose of Dr. Bell’s Pina-Tar-
Honey promptly and regularly as di
rected. Your cold or cough will be
broken up. and its ill-effects thrown
off. The taste is so pleasant, children
take it readily.
Tear this ad. out and take it to your
druggist with 25c and he will give you
the genuine Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey.
(Advt.)
Tobacco Habit
Easily Overcome
A New Yorker, of wide experience, baa writ
ten a book telling bow the tobacco or snuff
habit may be partly and quickly banished witn
delightful benefit. The author, Edward J.
Woods. 831-H, Station E. New York City, will
mail bis book free on reqnest.
The health improves wonderfully after to
bacco craving Is conquered. Calmness, tranquil
sleep, clear eyes, normal appetite, good diges
tion, manly vigor, strong memory and a gen
eral gain in efficiency are among the many
benefits reported. Get rid of that nervous,
writable feeling; no more need of pipe, cigar,
cigarette, snnff or chewing tobacco to pacify
morbid desire.—(Advt.)
your Heart
a Does it Flutter. Palpitate
or Skip Beats* Have you
Shortness of Breath. Ten
derness, 'Numbness, 01
Pain in left side,Dizziness.
Fainting Spells, fepots be
fore eyes. Sudden Starting
in sleep, Nervousness,
Hungry or Weak Spells,
Oppressed Feeling in chest. Choking Sen
antion in throat, Painful to lie on leftside.
Sinking or Smothering Sensation. Diffi
cult Breathing. Heart Dropsy or Swelling
offeet vr ankresf jf you have one or more of
the above symptoms, don’t fail to use Dr.Klus
man’s Heart Tablets. Not a secret medicine.
It is said that one person out of every four has a
weak heart. Probably three-fourths of these do
not know It, and hundreds wrongfully treat them
selves for the Stomach, Lunge. Kidneys or
Nerves. Don’t take any chances when Dr.
Kinsman’s Heart Tablets are within your
reach. More than 1000 endorsements furnished.
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
name and P.O. Address, to Dr. F. (». Kins
man. Box N 64. Augusta, Maine, will re
ceive a box of Heart Tablets for trial by return
mall, postpaid, free of charge. Delays are dan
gerous. Write at once—to-day.
Wai
A toils* preparuMon of BMrtb
Helps to scad I eats dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Boauty to Gray or Faded Hair,
and >l.to otnmrxlsu.