Newspaper Page Text
2
CAMPBELL COULD
HARDLY KEEP UP.
SO HE DECLARES
I
5 Savs He Had Rheumatism
B <o Bad Before Taking
> v.
g Tanlac He Couldn’t Move
f Without Suffering Pain
B
“I am in better shape today than
JC I have been in over a year, for Tan-
Jac is fast driving the rheumatism
my system.” said Marion
Sj Campbell, of 605 S. Walker street,
Oklahoma City, Okla.
“Every little change in the weath
rt- er would make my* misery worse.”
he continued, “and often I would suf
'k fer so terribly that I would be un-
Z able to work, M'y muscles and joints
’J would be so sore that I couldn't move
; without suffering agony, and I have
had to lay off for two or three days
■ at a time and when I did go b£ck to
i- work I would be so badly rundown!
X that I could hardly stand the es
-5, fort. My stomach was in such an
aw’ful condition that everything I
L would eat disagreed with me and
* would sour and form gas that swell-
Z1 ed me up till I could hardly get my
5 breath; I was badly constipated and
t my back hurt like it would break in
two.
*- “The last time I had to lay off
; from wmrk Tanlac was recommended
y to me, and right after I started tak
“ mg it I felt relieved of my stomach
r trouble and the soreness began to
leave my joints and muscles. Every
symptom of my old troubles is gone
and I don’t feel like the same per
son I was before and am able to go
L about my work with satisfaction
again. From the way it has fixed
me up I am glad to recommend Tan
-slac to anybody who may be suffering
k . the way I was before I took it.”
All druggists sell Tanlac.—(Advt.)
'i
, |!giW!l^o F F r IHi
ißesinol
i I keeps skins clear
| in spite of everything
The smoke and dust of city life,
1 the sun and wind of the country,
the steam and dirt of housework
—all spell ruin for good complex •
ions. But the regular use of
Resinol Soap, with an occasional
application of Resinol Ointment,
keeps the skin so clean, clear and
fresh that it simply cannot help
being beautiful.
AH druggists sell Resinol Soap and Oint
ment. Why don’t you begin using them?
RHEUMATISM
RECIPE
I will gladly send any Rheumatism sat
fercr a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free
that Completely Cured me of a terrible at
tack of muscular and inflammatory Rheu
matism of long standing after everything
else I tried bad failed me. I have given
it to many sufferers who believed their
cases hopeless, yet they found relief from
their suffering by taking these simple
herbs. It also relieves Sciatica promptly,
ns well as Neuralgia, and is a wonderful
i ?od purifier. You are most welcome ‘to
Herb Recipe If you will send for it at
nnce. - believe you will consider it a God
Send after you have put it to the test.
There is nothing injurious contained in it.
and you can see for yourselff exactly what
you are taking. I will gladly send this
Recipe—absolutely free—to any sufferer
who will send name and address, plainly
written.
W. G. SUTTON, 2650 Magnolia Ave.
Ros Angeles, California
PHYSICALLY FIT
AT ANY AGE
It isn’t age, it’s care'ess living that
puts men “down and out.” Keep your
internal organs in good condition and
you will always be -physically fit.
The kidneys are the most over
worked organs in the human body.
When " they break down under the
: strain and the deadly uric acid ac
- cumulates and crystallizes look out!
These sharp crystals tear and scratch
the delicate urinary channels, causing
excruciating pain and se£ up irrita
tions which may cause premature de
generation and often do turn into
deadly Bright’s Disease.
One of the first warnings of slug
: gish kidney action is pain or stiffness
. In the small of the back, loss of appe
tite, indigestion or rheumatism.
Do not wait until the danger is upon
; you. At the first indication of trouble
get a trial box of GOLD MEDAL
Haarlem Oil Capsules, imported direct
£ from Holland. They will give almost
immediate relief. If for any cause
they should not, your money will be
refunded. But be sure to get GOLD
MEDAL. None other is "genuine. In
sealed boxes, three sizes.
C,.-- THIS NOVA-TONE
TALKING MACHINE
f /*"" kQ./ Case Mahogany finish, enameled parta
f 1)0 rotor 1o get out of order, cxcellen
reproducer, enjoyment for alt Sell 12
I | boxes Mentho-Nova Salve, great so:
■s J? -■ ■■ -J cuts, bums, influenza, eta Return $3
1’ J j 1 and the machine is yours. Guaranteed
j ’ ' | Records free. Ordei today. Addreaa
X/*- U. b. Co., Box 4C4,
Greenville. Pa.
SlJiaL? J dl hl
"Tr?
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IFI 1 q 1 A" «f panta free
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1 ft Fl I ' If Makes no difference whr.t
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t ft I Jil ) J ing a penny extra. Tho ex-
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y F i long—so you really get the wear of
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■ - B f We make everything to measure. Giveyou
f f if finu' (ruality ffrade lea
t r If Ines—fresl Workmenthlp.
I [I NG EXTRA CHARGE
I rfl fringe, or largo sizes. Wo propry oxpress and
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I L ; I tra pclr of pants fra© with every ruit, ar.d our
|... i Ju. u famous “money’o worth or money back" guar*
onto© goes with everything you buy.
Onr nrw catalog shows all tho latest Styles,and larpe •ampltr
of handsome Woolens. Write for it today. It is FREE.
This is the greatest Tailoring proposition in the country today
Him Many of our cuotomora make $50.00 a week
IqLmpk or more taking orders for our Tailoring in
their spare time. You can do tA* same.
Fp Write us for full information, nou-,
ITVj Just send us your name on a card.
IM 1
I DEPT. 71 6 500 THROOP STREET CHICAOO |
LABOR DISSATISFIED
IT REPRESENTATION
111 WORLD CONGRESS
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Dissatis
fied with the present basis of rep
resentation in the international labor
conference, the labor group delegates
decided today to make an effort to
throw out the votes of all countries
which have not sent worker delegates
and are represented only by govern
mental appointees.
More than ten Latin-American
countries, as well as China, Rumania
and Siam, have not sent labor dele
gates, and are represented by diplo
matic officers stationed in this coun
try and rot qualified to represent
them.
The grievance goes back to the
provisions of the Versailles treaty,
which gave the government two dele
gates, employers one and labor one.
At the Amsterdam meeting of the in
ternational federation of trade unions
which will hold its second session
here on the arrival of the German
and Austrian representatives, the
demand was made that the govern
ment delegation in each case also be
reduced to one.
The raising of this issue blocked
the program of the conference to take
up Monday the question of an eight
hour day and forty eight hour week.
The commission of selection, which is
the conference steering committee,
was unable to agree on procedure to
handle the problems and the entire
matter probably will come before
the'conference next week. Some dele
gates favored referring the question
of representation to a committee to
prepare a plan for reorganization of
the conference.
Labor delegates sought this delay
in the program for the further pur
pose of preventing action prior to
the arrival of the German and Austri
ans, it was said, as they are expect
ed to be almost solidly in sympathy
with the workers. By eliminating
the votes of governmental delegates
from countries without labor repre
sentation, and through the support
of the governmental appointees of
Germany. Austria and other coun
tries believed to side with labor as
against capital, the labor group lead
ers hope, it was said, to create a
block strong enough to prevent the
conference from taking any action
unfavorable to it. A two-thirds vote
is required on all conclusions of the
conference.
The government delegates of
Czecho-Slovakia and probably of Hol
land and Belgium would take the
part of the workers on all issues in
cluded in the agenda of the confer
ence, one foreign delegate said.
The German and Austrian dele
gates sailed from Amsterdam on
October 24 and should be here by
Wednesday, according to W.' A. Ap
pleton of England, president of the
International Federation of Trade
Unions. It was frankly admitted
that their presence might produce an
awkward situation. The eleven
men from each of the two central
powers will be placed on a quasi
diplomatic status, it was said, and
may be housed in the old German
embassy, which now flies the Swiss
flag. They would take theit seats at
the conference in alphabetical order,
in accordance with present seating
arrangements.
The conference hall was given an
International aspect by identifying
each country’s place at the long ta
bles with the flag of that nation, but
the German and Austrian designs
will be excluded, due to legislation
prohibiting the display of enemy
colors.
How to Heal Leg Sores
A WONDERFUL treatment that
heals leg sores or Varicose Ulcers
without pain or knife is described in
a new book which readers may get
free by writing a card or letter to
Dr. H. J. Whittier, Suite 29, 1109
Mcgee. Kansas City. Mo.— (Advt.)
French Couple in
Suicide Pact Are
Blown to Atoms
CHATEAU THIERRY Friday,
Oct. 31. —(By the Associated Press.)
—Thirty-five pounds of melanite,
set off by a detonator, was the
method employed by Adrien Thum
erel and his fiancee to end their
lives here today. Thumerel, an em
ploye of the explosives depot at
Mezy, near here, was charged with
the theft of hams from stores des
tined for war prisoners, and was
to appear in court tomorrow to an
swer' the charge.
The melanite was made ready in
a shack -where Thumerel and his
fiancee met. The explosion which
followed -was- heard for miles, awl
destroyed property within a radius
of 100 yards.
Young Grandson of
Champ Clark Dead
NEW ORLEANS, La., Nov. I.
Champ Clark Thomson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James M. Thomson, and
grandson of Representative Champ
Clark, of Missouri, died at an in
firmary here today, following an op
eration for ear infection. The child
was nearly three years old. Mrs.
Thomson is a daughter of the for
mer speaker of the house.
OmHbMms CAR DED
EOf as dangerous
Calomel salivates! It’s mercury. Calomel
i acts j Jke dynamite on a sluggish liver. When
calomel comes into contact with sour bile it
crashes into it, causing cramping and nausea.
Take ‘"Dodson’s Liver Tone” Instead I
If you feel bilious, headachy, con
stipated and all knocked out, just go
to your druggist and get a bottle of
Dodson’s Liver Tone for a few cents,
which is a harmless vegetable sub
stitute for dangerous calomel. Take
a spoonful and if it doesn’t start
your liver and straighten you up
better and quicker than nasty calomel
.ATLANTA SJCMI-WHEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA. L OH?
Sergeant Alvin C. York, Here to ;
Speak for Roosevelt Memorial,
Almost Eludes Reception Committee
Mb
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STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS HAVE BETTER LUCK hitting Ser
geant Alvin York than did the Germans in the Argonne. At the top
is the famous hero and his wife. At the bottom are Wiley West, Al
bert S. Adams and Lucien York, vying with each other to “tote” his
baggage.—Staff Photos by Winn.
DEALERS MAY BUY
SUGAR WHEREVER
THEY CAN FIND IT
The Atlanta Journal News Bureau,
623 Riggs Building,
BY THEODORE TILLER
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—The im
pression that the sugar equalization
board or any other governmental
agency would interfere with the
purchase of sugar in any part of
the country for shipment to any
other section is entirely a mistake.
It was a natural error growing out
of the fact that during the time
the equalization board owned all
the sugar in the country, it ob
served a rule against shipping from
one zone or section to another. In
the ■western zone the dealers and
refiners were confined to western
beet sugar, the eastern zone to
Cuban sugar and the southern zone
to the Louisiana supply and a part
of the Cuban sugar.
Investigation today by Senator
Hoke Smith, for the wholesale and
retail dealers and brokers of At
lanta, develops the fact that there
is no restriction of that nature at
the present time. Atlanta, Savan
nah. Macon or other Georgia mer
chants, may buy sugar in any mar
ket. southeast or west. It appears
to be a fact that northern refiners
are paying 20 cents or more for
the Louisiana sugar. Unless the
food administration is revived and
continued in authority as has been
recommended this week by the at
torney general, sugar prices may
go very high.
Female workers in Japanese fac
tories number 500,000, of whom 300
are under 20 years of age.
and without making you sick, you
just go back and get your money.
If you take calomel today you’ll
be sick and nauseated tomorrow; be
sides, it may salivate you, -while if
you take Dodson’s Liver Tone yon
will wake up feeling great, full of
ambition and ready for work or play.
It is harmless, pleasant and safe io
give to children; they like it.
Tennessee War Hero Tells
How He Slew and Bagged
Germans While Rafters
Ring With Cheers
—————
Sergeant Alvin York scored a great■
personal triumph at the Auditorium |
Saturday night in Atlanta when a!
very small audience gave him SI,OOO j
for the school he proposes to estab-i
lish at his home in Fentress county,
Tennessee, for the edlcation of
mountain boys and girls.
Many meetings of varying success i
have been held in the Auditorium |
for the purpose of raising subscrip- |
tions of one kind and another, but I
there probably never was a one where i
such a large percentage of the au
dience subscribed as they did last
night after hearing Sergeant York
tell the story of his single-handed
battle with a whole battalion of Ger
man machine guns, and the story of
his movement to found a school tc
give the boys and girls in the “moun
tain country” an education.
Somebody has been telling it
around that Sergeant York was no
great shakes when it came to mak
ing a speech. It was even reported
in Atlanta yesterday that most of
his speaking would be done by Dr. G.
W. Dyer, professor of economics at
Vanderbilt university, who is ac
companying him on some of his tours
in the interest of the school. Who
ever started this talk must have been
a newspaper reporter that tried to
interview “the second elder” and fell
back defeated. Getting an inter-
> view from him is practically hope
less; but when he goes on the plat
form to make his appeal in behalf
of his school he opens up as freely
as he did when twenty-five German
machine guns commenced to blaze at
him in a little ravine in the Argonne
forest.
What he did for his audience last
night in the way of entertainment
and effective appeal proved the ab
solute error of all reports that he is
not a speaker. For nearly an hour he
held their attention without a flicker.
No other man in the world could
have told his story or made his
speech as well as he did.
His story was told in his own
simple language—his own ungram
matical language—his own moun
tain idiom and his own mountain i
uccent. There was not a place in it'
where the touch of a tutor could!
be detected. It rang as true as a!
piece of blue steel start to
finish, and that was the thing that
made it so effective. If he had got
up and recited a memorized speech
that somebody else had helped him
prepare, his audience would have
known it.
In other* words, Sergeant Alvin j
York is a man with a head on his J
shoulders—a head full of the very |
highest order of intelligoace—and the j
thing that held him back in his ini- j
tial speeches was not inability to [
express himself in effective lan- j
guage, but a very genuine modesty I
that pulled away from a recital ;
: which might sound boastful.
A majority of the subscriptions to [
the school were not subscriptions in !
the usual promissory sence, but were
checks on bank accounts. Mr. Adair ■
suggested that checks made payable ;
to Sergeant Alvin York, indorsed |
by him and stamped “Paid” by the ;
bank would make most cLsirable fu- j
ture souvenirs. The asaience took j
to the suggestion with a vim. The ’
checks ranged all the way from $2.50 !
Io SIOO.
STRIKE OF STEEL
WORKERS IS NOT
LOST, FOSTER SAYS
PITTSBURG, Noy. I.—W. Z. Fos
ter, secretary of the national steel
strike committee, told the Pennsylva
nia Federation of Labor, in session
here today, that the steel strike Is
not lost, the steel mills throughout
the country are tied up, and the
bottom has fallen out of steel pro
•duction.”
It was the outstanding feature of
the steel strike situation in the Pitts
burgh district today, for union lead
ers generally attended the conven
tion, and said there was no change in
the situation.
Steel companies met Foster’s state
ment with the assertion that mill op
erations had improved during the
week and more steel had been made
than at any time since the strike was
declared.
Mr. Foster, in appealing to the con
vention for funds for the strikers,
said more tlfan 300,000 men were out,
and that the families of striking steel
workers were facing starvation and
crying for bread.” He reviewed the
work of the strike committee’s com
missaries, and said "thousands of
dollars” were needed to carry them
on.
President James E. Maurer, who
opened the convention, said as pres
ident he was “willing to go through
on any program. We must do some
thing and must be active.”
Physicians Recommend Castoria
you know the real human doctors right around in your neighborhood: the
doctors made of flesh and blood just like you: the doctors with souls and
hearts: those men who are responding to your call in the dead of night as readily
as in the broad daylight; they are ready to tell you the good that Fletcher’s
Castoria has done, is doing and will do, from their experience and their love
for children.
Fletcher’s Castoria is nothing new, We are not asking you to try an experi
ment. We just want to impress upon you the importance of buying Fletcher’s.
Your physician will tell you this, as he knows there are a number of imitations
on the market, and he is particularly interested in the welfare of your baby.
Children Cry For
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Do People Know?
£-*■"*s 1 Thereby Promoting D^esb° n r
T Cheerfulness and Rest Contains Do y OU know why you are asked to can for Fletcher’s Castoria
’ neither Opiiirn^forphiDC ncr when you want a child’s remedy: why you must insist on Fletcher’s?
Mineral. NotNahgotic For y ears we have been explaining how the popularity of
T 4 n Fletcher’s Castoria has brought out innumerable imitations, sub-
\ i stitutes and counterfeits.
j To protect the babies: to shield the homes and in. defense of
generations to come we appeal to the better judgment of parents to
/ ■ insist on having Fletcher’s Castoria when in need of a child’s med-
j r I | icine. And remember above all things that a child’s medicine is
’ made for children—a medicine prepared for grown-ups is not inter
. I changeable. A baby’s food for a baby. And a baby’s medicine is
i“ st “ essential <OT ,he w.
e ' i f refishness and "1 The Castoria Recipe (it’s on every wrapper) has been prepared by
!t* . a oF sleep th* same hands in the same manner for so many years that the signa-
s : 1 ture of Chas. H. Fletcher and perfection in the product are synonymous.
' facsimile Signature of rt MOTHERSSHOULD BEADTHE bOOKLETTKATIS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE Os FLETCHER'S CASTORIA
-I genuine CASTOR A always
® ears Signature of
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
r rr THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
SCTIffl ON W? ■.
SEEN KEIM
MIOOLEOE MONTH
The Atlanta Journal News Bureau,
623 Riggs Building.
BY TBOBODOBE TILLER
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2. —Senate
Democrats today went to Senator
Hitchcock, ranking Democrat of the
foreign relations committee, and sug
gested a prompt conference of the
minority on the questions of reser
vations 'to the peace treaty and an
agreement on a time for a final vote.
As a result. Senator Hitchcock asked
fop a meeting Monday morning of the
steering committee, and this will be
held.
Indications now are that a final
vote of the peace treaty and reser
vations thereto will come by No
vember 12 to 15.
When Senator Lodge, the Repub
lican leader, suggested a vote about
November 12, Senator Hitchcock
temporarily did not acquiesce, owing
to a desire for an agreement among
the Democrats of the senate. How
ever, Senator Hitchcock is expected
to concur in the early vote pro
gram, and his temporary objection
was merely to permit the holding of
conferences among leaders of both
sides, so there may be a bone fide
agreement as to disposition of the
treaty. The prospects now are that
the treaty will receive action in the
senate not later than the middle of
November, and the adjournment of
congress I quickly will follow.
There is little doubt that a large
number of Democrats, possibly as
much as one-half of the Democratic
membership of the senate, are in
favor of mild reservations to the
peace treaty, although Democrats
willing to stand for amendments to
the treaty proper may be counted
on the fingers of one hand.
Senator Hoke Smith is hopeful of
persuading the Democratic confer
ence that it should agree upon a
definite program as to reservations so
that the more radical Republican
reservations to the treaty may not
prevail. The reservations intro
duced by the Georgia senator may
be the basis of some agreement on
Wednesday among the Democratic
senators and the steering commit
tee.
Senator Smith informed the sen
ate that he saw no rtasjn why a
vote on the treaty should be delayed
and suggested that this vote ought
to come early in November.
Crook Specialized
In Motorcycles
LONDON. —Sentenced for the theft
of two motorcycles, Frank Young ad
mitted stealing twenty-seven of the
machines and passing thirty-nine
forged checks.
75 Bushels of Yams
Raised on Half Acre
Seventy-five bushels of yams to
less than a half acre of ground is
[ the ‘record established by W. L.
Chasteen in the cultivation of land
on the Lucy Garretell place, at 2
Greenfield avenue, near West Tenth
street.
The sweet potatoes, which are of
the Nancy Hall and Porto Rico va
riety, run in weight form two and
a half to four and a half pounds, and
the average weight is from three to
four pounds.
This heavy production, Mr. Chas
teen states, was made on rocky soil
and was due to the employment of
scientific methods of cultivation.
RESERVE BOARD
SHOWS GENERAL
UNREST GROWING
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Advices
showing “that there has been an in
creasing degree of general unrest
throughout the country” were report
ed by the federal reserve board, the
highest business authority in the
government, tonight.
The words of the board, contained
in a monthly review of business con
ditions, puts into concrete form what
many officials are saying privately,
but what few care to ny for n >O
-
With the coal strike less than twen
ty-four hours old and the steel strike
already weeks old, the nation already
is seeing two of the greatest labor
struggles in its history.
A transportation strike which
would involve twice as many men as
the two strikes now on is looked upon
here as far from an improbability.
The utterances and actions of rail
road heads who are here are being
closely watched.
Already L. E. Sheppard, head of
the railway conductors, has an
nounced he will submit the answer
to his wage demands expected from
the railroad administration soon to a
referendum. W. G. Lee, head of the
trainmen, who is to receive his de
mand at the same time, is expected
to take similar action. The course
of other railroad unions’ pressing de
mands probably will be influenced by
the action of these two.
The reserve board report discusses
only the effect of existing strikes, de
claring that the “widespread condi
tion of social and industrial unrest”
is a troublesome factor In the “great
general prosperity throughout the
country.” It speaks of the coal strike
as a future event, since it discusses
conditions existing during October.
.This is what it says:
“More serious, perhaps in its pos
sibilities than any other labor dis
turbance was the threat of a coal
mining strike.’’
The steel strike, the report says,
“has not seriously hampered produc
tion,” and adds the influence of the
strike is declining.
The printers’ and longshoremen’s
strike in New York, the board says,
have resulted in general unemploy
ment.
“Unfortunate” is the term the
board applies to the break up of the
industrial conference, and says that
it disappointed many who believed
it wcu.'d be productive of immediate
gcod.
After summing up the things con
tributing to the condition of unresL
the board's report sees a hopeful in?
dication in the fact that a fewer
number of small strikes are in exist
ence, some sect ; ons of the country
reporting fewer number of men out
of work.
High prices, generally held to be
one of the primary causes of strikes,
went down slightly during the month
of October, the board says. It then
balances the statement that the peak
of prices has been reached, with the
assertion that “in certain quarters
no great declines in the near future
are anticipated.”
Dying Motorman Stops
Car. at Precipice
EDGEWATER, N. J., Nov. I.—A
; dying motorman’s last act today was
| to apply the brakes to his car lest
I it coast a precipitious incline on
the Hudson Palisades and kill thirty
passengers. Thrown from their seats
by the sudden stopping of the Car
the passengers found the motorman,
Alexander Rabb, dead from heart dis
ease. The car had stopped on the
edge of the precipice.
More than a million Polish chil-,
dren were fed by Americans during
the last year and a half.
j STOMACH 0. K. j
i
i I
| Indigestion, Acidity, Sourness j
j and Gases ended with t
“Pape’s Diapepsin” ?
Millions of people know that it is
needless to be bothered with indi
gestion, dyspepsia or a disordered ”
stomach. A few tablets of Pape’s
Diapepsin neutralize acidity and give
relief at once.
When your meals don’t fit and you
feel uncomfortable, when you belch
gases, acids or raise sour, undigested
food. When you feel lumps of indi
gestion pain, heartburn or headache,
from acidity, just eat a tablet of
Pape’s Diapepsin and she stomach
distress is gone.
The cost is so little. The benefits
so great. You, too, will be a Dia
pepsin enthusiast afterwards.
(Advt.)
INFLDENZA
starts wife a
Kill ths Cold. At ths
sneeze take
CAS»yQU!NINE
Standard ’’cold’remedjE for 20 year*
in tablet form—safe, aure, no
opiates—breaks up a cold in 24
hours—relieves grip in 3 days.
Money back if it fails. The
genuine box has a Red
top with. Mr. Hill’s
vAJ nilW pi cture - r
NBsfflk. Ar All Drug Stan»
“Cure Your
Rupture Like
I Cured Mine”
Old Sea Captain Cured |iis
Own Rupture After Doctors
Said “Operate or Death.’”
His Remedy and Book Sent Eree.,
Captain Collings sailed the sOa<
for many years; then he sustained a.
bad double rupture that soon forced
him to not only remain ashore, but
kept him bedridden for years. He
tried doctor after doctor and truss
after truss. No results! Finally, he
was assured that he must either sub
mit to a dangerous and abhorrent op
eration or die. He did neither! He
cured himself instead.
w' Hwii’
twBWKbKIKwSE
“Fellow Men and Women, Yon Don’t
Have to Be Cut Up, and You
Don’t Have to Be Tortured by
Truues.”
Captain Collings made a study of
himself, of his condition—and at last
he was rewarded by the finding of
the method that so quickly made
him a well, strong, vigorous and hap
py man.
Anyone can use the same method;
it’s simple, easy, safe and inexpen
sive. Every ruptured person in the
world should have the Captain Col
lings book, telling all about how he
cured himself, and how anyone may
follow the same treatment in their
own home without any trouble. The
book and medicine are FREE. They
will be sent prepaid to any rupture
sufferer who will fill out the below
coupon. But send it right away— now
—before you put down this paper.
FREE RUPTURE BOOK
AND REMEDY COUPON
Capt. W. A. Collings (Inc.)
Box 147-D, Watertown, N. Y.
Please send me your FREE
Rupture Remedy and Book with
out any obligation on my part
whatever.
Name
Xddress
f ee^so £° o< J
TEffeC but what
\ | will make you w
C \r ’V’ feel better. u
I G * la /fg’SREW-Tllwr 1
I Box. j
30 Days Home Trial
and Two Years Time to Pay
if you don’t want to pay cash. That’s the way you
can buy a THIERY PARLOR ORGAN—the real" music-maker*
of al) organs. Now’s the time to buy. too—prices are going np
—you’ll have to pay $15.00 to $25.00 more six moot ha from
now. Take your choice of Tbiery Organs shown id the color
printed Thiery Organ Catalog—then tale 30 days trial in year
home to prove that it *a the real
“music-maker" of all organs—
then, after the t rial, you can pay
IV Tgy TJ OBfa h> full or boy co little nay-
9 U ments —two years credit if rm
Save $25 to ssd
I Thlerr Ortun are qmlii,
n"~rl V/ I'F—R# J orfrna —compared with other
XxlWiiH I organs yon easily cave $25.00
—~~~ ~Vx home* are now enjoying
uiiirn < 1 !'I~IVTWHIin Tbiery Organa—oil shippad
on trial—all pnrcEasel
w\w
WRITE TODAY
jSSJE O ®** to prices to
> 'J ,o op Euy now.
5} ’ .ikl ■>rWJrW!l Setxi today for Cualogne.
V ~~sjura?—Trial Order Blanks and Di
r 2 i •.V sTiK?’XXr‘* Jar 10 Yo ® Prices. Send
W KJ c«»P<» hetov and full par.
II lIUX*- Uf-" 1 *” ’*«l» »« j« t»
j - •—***• returxi mcul
J. B. TfuEßY l^. Milwaukee,
& W I. m u MKFO.X. Pn. CaUltmt ani rnffrtt to.
farmahn rrsonfsr, Tiury Oxow. rx .f
Ml. aifMAiuM ia AJLuU* J.*r..r,
Name-.—........
Address ’ _