Newspaper Page Text
The Atlanta Semi-weekly Journal
VOLUME XX.
HUNS CONTROL JIS
OVER U. S. FRONT.
OFFICERS ADMIT
Thirty-Five German Airplanes
Destroyed in Past Three
Days and Nineteen Driven
Down—Bombing Operations
WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN
FRANCE, Feb. -20.—(8y the Associated
Press) —Control of the air in the Amer
ican sector belongs to the enemy. Army
officers at the front will make this de
claration—all have made IL The con
trol is obvious. German airplanes come
and go over the American lines almost
at will. Every time the Germans come
over their path the sky is speck
ed by fleecy shrapnel puffs, but the
hances of hitting an airplane with an
ti-aircraft shells is so remote that the
enemy aviators calmly fly along as if
on a pleasure tour. Every now and
then airplanes on this side attack the
enemy, always when they get a chance.
Rut the Roche is clever while flying and
manages to come over and take pictures,
make observations and do virtually
whatever else he desires and sail home
without interruption. Nearly always
he Is at an altitude of about 3,000 me
ters where he is comparatively safe
from anti-aircraft fire and knows it-
It is not permitted to name any offi
cer* of the American expeditionary
force. It is not permitted to quote
them If both were auowcd it would
be possible to carry quotations from
virtually every officer at th» front urg
ing a speed.' appearance of large num
bers of airplanes with American pilots.
For there is only one way to wrest
control of the air from the enemy, that
■ s to fight him for it in the sky and
relieve • him of it by force of over
whelming numbers.
t Right now. if the Germans knew
American airplanes were waiting for
them every time they came over the
line their trips would be less frequent.
Neither would they dare to attempt
sueh a bold piece of work as when they
reeently flew over the line with an air
plane disguised with the allied red. white
and blue bulls rye marking and cut
loose with a machine gun on American
soldiers in the trenches.
If there had been American plane s
nearby the chances of the Germans get
ting hack home after such a trick would
bo anal!. And it is extremely doubt
ful. officers say. if they ever would
have tried it.
An officer also will say that the safe
ty of individual soldiers depends upon
xeoping the enemy from doing as he
pleases overhead. For days the Ger
mana have been flying over certain towns
where American troops have been rest
ing after periods in the trenches. Once
or twice theae daylight observation
tours have been followed the same night
by visits by enemy bombing plane.-.
So free and unrestricted are the Ger
man airmen that in some towns the
commands are under -strict orders .to
disappear under cover the moment a
German airplane is sighted.
Moreover, officers say. more and more
German planes are appearing in the sky
and In various quarters there is a prow
:ng belief, that these are the first of the
machines which the tiermans have been
building feverishly to offset the large
number of expected American airplanes
in accordance with plans announced in
the United States
Whether this belief is true or not the
fact remains that American troops are
holding the sector and arc endangered
daily became there arc no American air
planes with them. The question most
asked from one end of the American
front to the other is:
"When are some American planes
coming here"”
Aero Chib to Act on
Condition at the Front
NEW TORK. Feb. fll.—A special
meeting of the executive board of the
Aero Club of America was called here
today to consider and take action upon
the airplane situation on the American
front in France as told in dispatches
from the American front.
The reports would indicate the situ
ation is indeed serious,” an official of
the club said. "Our executive board
will meet today and we shall take im
mediate steps to ascertain if we can :
do anything that will assist the gov
ernment in removing the menace. It
has been truly said that ‘the war will
be won in the air,’ and if the Germans,
as the dispatches say. are In control,
we must speed up our preparations to
wrest It from them.”
Famous Airmen Escape
From German Prison
AMSTERDAM. bVb. 31.—Lieutenant
Roland G. Garros, the famous French
•aviator, and Lieut. Antoine Marchal. who
flew over Berlin in the summer of 1916
and was forced to descend a few kilome
tres from the Russian lines, reached Hol
land yesterday. According io Les Nou
vel les. of they escaped from
a German prison.
Lieutenant Marchai. starting from
French soil, flew over Berlin in July.
1916. dropping proclamations, and con
tinued his flight with the intention of
landing within the Rusmm lines. He
was forced by motor trouble to descend
in Poland and was taken prisoner by
the Austrians. He made a continuous
flight of more than 800 miles, establish
ing a record.
Lieutenant Garro- was a prominent
aviator before the war. holding several
world's records. He brought down a
number of German airplanes, and was
taken prisoner in the spring of 1915.
Kaiser Replies to Carranza’
MEXICO CITY. Feb. 31.—Emperor
William's reply to President Carranza's
birthday message to him of January
37 was given out officially here today.
It reads:
"I am very grateful to you for your
tmfable telegram of felicitation on the
occasion of my birthday. I send to you.
Mr. President, my sincere thanks to
getner with my best wishes for your
self and for the prosperity of the Mex
ican people.
(Signed) “WILHELM.
"Emperor and King.”
Full Associated Press Service
DETAILS OF PARLEY
BETWEEN RUSSIANS
AND KUEHLMANN
German Representatives Said
Nothing When Trotzky Sug
gested Opposition of People
of Central Powers to Force
PETROGRAD. Feb. 16.—i Delayed)—
The central powers delegates refused
the proposal of Foreign Minister Trot
sky to send a German officer to Kieff. to
prove that the Ukraine rad a (governing
body) did not exist. The following day
the tenth plenary session of the peace
conference was called.
Foreign Minister Kuelniann. hushed
with his diplomatic victory over the
Ukraine, arose to present General Luden
dorff's ultimatum directed at the Bolshe
viki.
Trotzky. anticipating him .took the
floor and read the declaration, breaking
off the negotiations. There was dead si
lence. When Trotzky had concluded,
Kuehlmann and General Hoffman sat
apparently stunned. Kuehlman finally
hinted it was “Impossible to quit the
war cart without the proper ticket."
“You evidently are suggesting that
your guns are a proper substitute for
proper judicial formula.” said Trotzky.
Hoffman nodded affirmatively.
"I don't believe the peoples of Aus
tria and Germany will pennit you to do
that.” continued the Russian minister.
None of the central powers representa
tives replied.
Kuehlmann finally muttered that it
was necessary to settle the diplomatic
details and suggested another session.
Trotzky refused saying:
“We must return to Petrograd. We
have no more to say. If you have any
thing to say the radio is still working.”
The Russian delegates departed with
out bidding farewell and refusing to
shake bands.
The announcement of Russia's de
cision to accept the German terms, was
sent by wireless at 5 o'clock Tuesday
morning. At first the German wireless
station showed a disposition to refuse
to take the message, but finally, four
hours later, acknowledged it.
Bolshevik leaders held repeated con
ferences throughout Tuesday, and later
in the afternoon received the German
reply, refusing to accept the wireless
message as official and requesting that
a delegation be sent to Dvinsk to confer
with regard to peace.
The Russian press is divided as to
the wisdom of the council’s action. The
Pravda says the soldiers and work
mens' delegates have again shown wil
lingness to make peace and carry out
their pledges and that whether Ger
many accepts the offer or not. the Bol
shevik! have won a moral victory. The
Nova Jizn says the Bolshevik! have
brought the affair to an ignominous end
and have proved themselves adventur
ers who are willing to keep the/nselves
in power at any price.
Cotton 801 l Weevil
Not Exterminated by
Recent Cold Weather
WASHINGTON, Feb. 21.—“1t is ex
tremely unwise for cotton farmery to
assume that the freezes of the last few
weeks have exterminated the- cotton
boll weevil,” the department of agri
culture announced today in answer to
many inquiries from the south.
The department said it was to be
hoped that planters would not be led
into increasing their cotton acreage at
the expense of raising foodstuffs and
thus not only fail in their patriotic
duty, but at the same lime suffer finan
cial loss from boll weevil. The neces
sity for the south to produce its own
food this year was stressed.
"During the past winter the tempera
tures have been lower than at any time
since 1'99." the statment continued,
"and there can hardly be any doubt that
this extreme cold has reduced the num
ber of weevils in many sections of the
south. The impression has been gained
by many planters that the weevil has
been reduced to negligible numbers, if
not altogether exterminated. It is too
much to expect that the temperatures
have been uniformly cold enough to
absolutely exterminate the weevil from
large areas.”
Read the Second Installment of “The Truth
About Belgium” in This Issue
By BRAND WHITLOCK
YOU who missed the first installment of this great
story in the last issue of THE SEMI
WEEKLY JOURNAL must not miss the rest. The
second installment of this great narrative given by
one who saw it with his own eyes—is given in this
issue. YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS IT.
Brand Whitlock began his story before the Ger
mans began their terrible ravage of Belgium, and
he touches on the great personages of the Belgium
legation— some of the German legation. He de
scribes the beauty of their homes and cathedrals,
which have since been destroyed and ruined —the
owners having been exiled. He did not know at
this time what terrible brutality and ignoble treat
ment was to be practiced in this land of now —
Peace and Beauty.
But this is just the beginning of what is to
come. He tells how the Germans enter Belgium;
what treatment the people received. No man.
".oman or child was spared; what*devastation and
Subscribe Now—We Cannot Furnish Back Numbers
It will not be necessary for you to write a letter if you sign your name and address to this
coupon and send to us with your remittance. ,
The Semi-Weekly Journal. Atlanta, Ga.: Enclosed find $ for which send me The Atlanta
Semi-Weekly Journal for months
Name
P. O
R. F. D. No ‘State
sin cany busy
! ON WESTERN HUB
WENTHER IS IDEAL
■Thirty-Five German Airplanes
Destroyed During Past Three
Days and Nineteen Driven
Down
BY WXLIIAM FHJXuLP SIWttS
WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES IN
■ THE FIELD. Feb. 21.—Air cavalry has
i been successfully and extremely busy
during the past few gorgeous days in
the high, freezing sun-filled heavens.
Hindenburg’s aerial uhlans are at
tempting to hold off Haig's cloud hurd
i ling lancers, which are daily observing
J preparations for the German offen
| five.
I Thirty-five German war planes have
I been destroyed in the lft.st three days
• and nineteen driven earthward, uncon
‘ trolled—a total of fifty-four “quietused"
I by the Britishers, of whom only ten are
' missing despite the severest and aJinost
I unending fighting day and night.
While Hindenburg and Ludendorff
i are poring over the details of their im-
■ pending forlorn hope the air is filled
with the throbbing of motors, the faint
, patter of machine guns and the thun
der of air bombs exploding in towns and
: villages behind the fighting lines.
The Hrit'sh airmen have dropped
[ huge quantities of explosives on billet*.
' ammunition dumps railway stations
| and aerodromes in the roofs, machine-
• gunned marching columns, disrupted
I Iran, port trains ard wrecked big gun
' pits. The fine freezing weather has
j a’ded them greatly.
Meantime. British troops are busy
raiding and repulsing raids. Short
sharp clashes arc constantly occurring.
, The ice in shell holes is suffiicently
I strong to support the death grappling
i men.
The Britishers are in fine fettle, not
I nervous and ready whenever Hinden-
I burg starts. While this may happen
any day, the Germans may try to sur
prise the alliese by a sudden shift, or
may attempt to produce a state of
“crisis” by further delay.
Two Postoffice Robbers
Believed to Be Hiding
In Vicinity of Juliette
FORSYTH, Ga., Feb. 21.—Two rob
, bers, who entered the postoffice here
| yesterday morning and blew the safe,
i are believed to be hiding near Juliette.
That locality is being watched by of
ficers. The two night marshals were
iat the city hall whentncexplosioa.nfir*
! curred and upon hearing .the, report
trashed to the postoffice just in time to
give chase to the fleeing men.
Both officers emptied their revolvers
at the two men who were making their
retreat. They were chased to the out
skirts of town where they were lost
sight of.
Between twelve and fifteen hundred
dollars worth of postage stamps were
I taken front the demolished safe. Most
lof the stamps were recovered this
morning in Bookswood, in the edge of
town.
Hammond Eve Not Now
Legislative Candidate
SAVANNAH. Ga.. Feb. 21. —Hammond
Eve. a representative in the legislature
from Chatham county, says he will
serve out his term in the legislature,
but will not offer for re-election unless
the war ends before the September pri
mary. Business cares arc given as the
reason for his not running again.
Spy Organization Is
Discovered in France
PARIS. Feb. 21.—A formidable Ger
man spy organiaztion. the object of
which was to create insurrections in
France, while the German offensive was
destruction they wrought as they went. He tells of
the horrible rapine worked on the young girls and
women of Belgium while their brothers, fathers and
husbands were forced to look on.
Any man. woman or child that has any patriot
ism at all should get the benefit of these stories.
They are FACTS offered you—not mere fiction.
Get these now—by subscribing for The Journal.
No other paper is giving them.
If your time has expired or you are not a sub
st’Tiber now is the time to get your subscription to
us so you will not miss a single part of this great
story. Our prices are more than reasonable: 75
cents for one year, $1 for 18 months, $1.25 for two
years or $1.50 for three years. Tell all you see
about this great story and induce them to sub
scribe. If you can raise a club of five or more
subscribers and send to us at one time we will
make a special club price of only 50 cents for a
one year's subscription. Raise a club for us in
your community.
ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1918
VICTORY POSTAGE
w™
“» ! :<s< -
m /A
SUBSTITUTES FM FLIMJR
Iffl BE USED iS'OEJlflffl
I
Food Administration Recom
mends Victory Bread Rec
ipe to Housewives
WASHINGTON. Feb. 21.—Housewives
may use wheat flour substitutes in any
manner they wish, the food administra
tion jointed out today in a statement de
claring that some grocers have misun
derstood the wheat flour substitute rule
and arc requiring purchasers of wheat
flour to agree actually to use 50 per cent
of other cereals i nthe breed they bake
at home.
The grocer is required to sell one
pound of substitute cereals with every
pound of wheat flour, but the housewife
is free to use the substitutes in any way
she chooses. The food administration,
however, has requested women to bake
a Victory bread in their homes contain
ing 20 per cent or more of wheat flour
substitutes.
in full swing, has ben discovered In St.
Etienne, it was announced today.
The organization is said to have been
directed by a German barkeeper. Many
arrests have been made, including a
draughtsman in an arms factory who
was connected with the recent strikes.
BOTH SIDES CONFIDENT
01/ER BUGIMJIIL TRIAL
Mrs. Hirsch Better Thursday
After Slight Illness—Cook
Writes Card
Their plans practically complete, coun
sel for both the state and the defense
are perfecting the details of their court
room campaigns for the triad of Mrs. H.
IH. Hirsch and J. W. Cook, jointly in
dicted for an alleged attempt to black
mail Mayor Asa G. Candler. Declining
jto issue any further statements regarti
! ing the various phases of the case, At
i tomeys .lames and Bedgood, for the de
fense, and Attorney Reuben R. Arnold,
i who is assisting Solicitor General John
l A. Boykin for the state, expressed thern-
I selves Thursday as being content to
| await developments as they shall appear
'when the issue is joined in Judge Ben If.
Hill’s division of the Fulton superior
court on February 27.
Attorney John R. Cooper, of Macon,
who has been retained to assist in the
defense of both Mrs. Hirsch and Cook,
is expected to return to Atlanta on Fri
day to hold further conferences with the
defendants and their original counsel.
He has already sj>ent one day here, ar
riving Tuesday morning in response to
a telegraphic summons and returning to
Macon Tuesday night.
Mrs. Hirsch, who was suffering from
a cold on Wednesday, was somewhat im
proved Thursday and displayed her us
ual interest in the preparations for her
approaching trial.
A short statement was issued Wed
nesday afternoon by J. W. Cook, who did
not elaborate on his bare declaration
contained in the signed card, which was
as follows:
“To the Public: Keep this for future
reference. Asa G. Candler. Sr., Asa G.
Candler. Jr., Judge John Candler, For
rest Adair and George Adair know the
truth as to this case now, and ev
erybody will knodw, when the trial is
over.
•‘J. W. COOK.”
Mrs. Hirsch had no callers at the
' Tower Thursday morning. Her husband
' left the city Wednesday night on a
' short business trip, expecting to re
; turn. It is understood, in time for the
; trial next Wednesday. His friends state
i that he is determined to stand by his
i original declaration that he would ful
i fill every obligation placed upon him
■by the predicament in which his wife
has been placed.
Previous Relations
As the result, of investigations con
l ducted since the indictment of the two
defendants, it is announced by Solicitor
General John A. Boykin that- evidence
has been secured to show that Mrs.
Hirsch and Cook were on terms of fa
miliarity for some time previous to the
alleged attempt to extort $500,000 from
Mayor Candler.
Witnesses have been found, the solici
tor general declared Thursday, who wtil
'testify regarding an incident occurring
at the Southeastern Fair grounds last
fall. On the occasion in question, the
solicitotr says, Mrs. Hirsch and Cook
were seen at a refreshment stand on the '
midway, taking alternate bites from the
same piece of pie.
Additional evidence has been secured,
according to the solicitor general, which
will be Introduced in an effort to show
that Mrs. Hirsch and Cook sought to
obtain legal advice as to their status
in the affair. Several days before the
grand Jury was called upon to investi
gate the case, it is claimed by the
' state, Mrs. Hirsch and Cook together
visited the office of a well-known At
lanta attorney, but details concerning
this bit of evidence are not divulged by
the prosecution.
PRDFITEERIN6 PLOT fflS
NUTIDN-WIK, IS ALLEGED
Eleven Men Indicted for De
frauding Government of
$5,000,000 in Cloth
NEW YORK, Feb. 21.—An alleged
country-wide plot involving illegal
profiteering in army cloths at the ex
pense of the government was disclosed
here today with the indictment by the
federal grand jury of eleven men, one a
clerk in the quartermaster's department
of the army, on charges of fraaid.
Investigations which will extend to
other cities, federal authorities be
lieve. will show the government has
suffered to the extent of $5,000,000, but
at the same time it was stated the in
dictments today would serve to termi
nate further conspiring and save the
government from millions more in
losses.
The accused are Louis Davidson, Hy
man Horwitz, and his son, Benjamin,
in business as Horwitz & Muskowltz;
Barnet iTetz, of B. Tietz and company;
Jacob Weinstein and his son; Abraham
Fursch and Leon, of Pursch & Le
vine; Barney Robinson and Morris Ale
witz, shipping clerks in the employ of
the New York Manufacturing company,
all of this city, and Ira D. Janowsky, a
civilian clerk in the quartermaster’s of
fice here. The manfucturers are ac
cused of having received and retained
army cloth. Robinson and Alewitz are
charged with perjury before the grand
jury and Janowsky is alleged to have
destroyed government receipts so as to
conceal thefts of the cloth.
Eight of the defendants are manufac
turers of uniforms.
The profiteering is made possible, the
federal investigators explained, by the
methods in which the cloth is cut. From
material which the government estimat
ed would provide a dozen uniforms, the
manufacturers would cut ten or less, ac
cording to the authorities, and the ex
cess cloth would be resold either to the
government itself or to other manufac
turers.
Some of the defendants. Lieutenant
Barnitz said, represented to the govern
ment that their “clippings” amounted
to 3 per cent, whereas, actually due to
the method of cloth cutting, they
amounted to 8 per cent, the difference
representing the excess cloth alleged to
have been retained.
to the alleged activity of
Janowsky in connection with the pur
ported plot it was easy for concealment
to be effected.
U. S. Funeral Service
Interrupted by Shell
WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN
FRANCE. Feb. 19. —(Delayed.)—In a
little cemetery immediately behind the
lines of the American army, where now
twenty-four Americans lie buried, a fu
neral service was interrupted by a Gar
man .155 shell. Swishing in during the
services the shell burst within a few
yards of a burial party.
The roar of American guns sounded a
requiem for those who have given their
lives in the cause of democracy. A
stone wall separates the American plots
from a cemetery used by the French
near the church.
A priest was praying when suddenly.!
a German shell exploded with terrific
violence. Pieces flew against the stone
wall and* flattened themselves. None I
of the party was injured, but the serv
ices were abandoned when the prayer
had been finished.
NUMBER 43.
«UN FUND
BT HUNS REPORTED;
SLAV BOOTY TAKEN
Germans Push on Into Russia,
Taking Town, 1,000 Cat%
Many Loaded With Food,
Airplanes and War Material
HAPARANDA, Sweden, Feb. 21.
Four steamships have arrived at Vasa,
in the Gulf of Bothnia, from Germany,
carrying Finnish soldiers who have
served in the Germany army and a
number of German volunteers. The
vessels also carried a large number of
guns, machine guns, rifles and muni
i tions. It is reported a strong offen
sive will be taken by* these troops
against Tammersfors and Viborg, :n
■ Finland.
Vasa, also called Nikolaistad. is the
capital of the province of Vasa in wes- “
tern Finland. The province has an
area of 16,084 square miles and a popu
lation of about 450,000. Vasa, the town,
is 327 miles by rail northwest of Hel
singfors and has steamer communica
tion with Hernosand, Sweden. The town
has a population of 11,000.
Town, Food and War
Material Taken by Huns
BERLIN, Feb. 21.—(Via Izindon.) —
; The Russian town of Rovno has been
• cleared of the Russians, the war office
reports. TraJns wtih about 1.000 cars,
! many laden with food, have been captur
jed, as well as airplanes and an incalcu
i iable amount of war material.
Between Dvinsk and Pinsk the Ger-
■ mans are pressing eastward. General
i von Lmsingen’s movement ’continues
Important railway and highway junc-
1 tiOiis have ben occupied.
Germans have passed through Wen
den, 55 miles northeast of Riga, and
are now before Wolmar, 70 miles north
east of Riga.
Rovno is the most easterly of the tri
angle of Russian fortresses in Vol
hynia. Lutsk, the western citadel in
the triangle, capitulated to the Ger
mans February 18 without fighting. The
third fortress in Volhynia, Dubno. lies
about midway between Rovno and the
town of Brody on the Galician frontier.
Further Advance Made
By British in Palestine
LONDON, Feb. 21.—A further ad
vance of three and one-half miles on a
front of seven and three-quarter miles
has been made by the British forces in
Palestine, the war office announces,
i The British are now within four miles
of Jericho. The operations are being
continued.
The British losses on Tuesday, when
an advance was made on a fifteen-mile
front east of Jerusalem, were very
slight. Yesterday’s losses have not
been reported.
The British also advanced northwest
of Jerusalem to a maximum depth of
one mile on a front of four miles.
Germans Preparing to
Occupy Petrograd Itself
LONDON, Feb. 21.—German detach
ments twenty miles cast of Vitebsk dis
tributed proclamations, declaring resist
ance to Germany was futile and that
German forces are preparing to occupy
Petrograd, according to an agency dis
patch from the Russian capital today.
News of War Fronts
Condensed From Cables
NEW YORK, Feb. 21.—(Summary of
European Cables.) —The German ad
vance into Russia will probably
The German advance will probably
continue until an authenticated copy of
the message of surrender is received
from the Bolshevik government in
Petrograd. This is now on its way. For
eign Minister von Kuehlmann told the
German reichstag that he believed the
new war would bring peace in the east.
The treaty with the Ukraine was made
for the purpose of forcing the Bolshevik
to accept the German terms. Germany,
he declared, wanted a peace with Rus
sia that corresponded to German inter
ests. In announcing that the German
invasion of Esthonia was in answer to
appeals for help. Dr. von Seydler, the
Austrian premier, declared that Austria-
Hungary will not aid Germany in her
renewal of the war on Russia.
In a brilliant attack in Lorraine
French troops have gone through the
German first line on a lengthy front and
captured more than 400 prisoners. This
attack, the first of large proportions on
the western front in 1918, was carried
out north of Bures and east of Moncel.
virtually on the Franco-German border
south of Chateau Salins.
Complete details of the successful ef
fort are lacking. There have been many
raiding enterprises by both sides in this
section of Lorraine recently and this
front has been looked upon by French
military leaders as one where the Ger
mans might make their heralded drive
It lies northeast of Luneville and east--
northeast of Nancy. A German attack at
Four de Paris, in the Argonne, has been
repulsed with losses by the French. On
the British front in France there has
been no increase in the raiding and the
artillery activity.
American troops in their sector north'
west of Toul have checked another Ger
man attempted raid, the enemy being
driven back by artillery fire.
German airmen are reported to con
trol the air over the American sector,
and Wednesday enemy aviators flew
I 1 over the entire position repeatedly. Al
though apparently outnumbered the
American airmen are active and on-
I has attacked an enemy trench with ma
• chine gun fire.
Entente airmen continued to be busy
; in air fighting and bombing expeditions.
' 'French and British fliers have brought ,
• down twenty German machines, and
(Continued on Page S, Column 1.)
Cured His Daughter of Fits
A well-known resident of Milwaukee.
Wisconsin, reports that his daughter
has been completely cured of Epileps -
(Fits) by a prescription secured from
a friend. This girl had suffered an
many as one hundred attacks in a da;-
and seemed beyond all hope of relief.
’ Her father says he is so grateful for
i her recovery that he will gladly mail
' a bottle of this wonderful medicine in
\ plain sealed wrapper, free, to any suf
i serer who writes him. If you, a friend,
or a relative, suffer, write R. P. N.
Lepso, 18 Island Ave., Milwaukee, Wis
consin, and get a free bottle.—(AdTtj