Newspaper Page Text
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• 9 Z .>.' 4,1
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JCHnr.AP OLERBNEB, Ed. and Pro]
’AIm) Ccihiul nibronU *»--••*»-—/»•>< Were
maalnions in tlxli.g the value of Its
ftrMMthUe Hl stl,Bo«M 00.
The Athens Burner boasts that the
agricultural college now has three stu
a«ils where recently it had oi iy one.
J’wtinaster yk' 1 mail’s brolher-in
la*has been elected niiqor of Oarters
«K>. Now, will bain Jolies be good?
lin. Stuyvcraut Fish nays Mrs.
taoseveh dresses on |3UO a year. How
may women in Griflln upend more on
And it is now announced that the
is to be operated us u.i inde
pendent system mid t bill the Rock Is
land deni is off.
President Roosevelt h said to be suf
faring from luck of exercise. It must
tahis mind flint Is tints afflicted; it is
smtainly not his lungs.
The Statesboro News is offering a
Slasher bed for sale, and the Dublin
Tunes infers from this the motto of the
>»ws is “We never sleep."
Roosevelt may never have heard of
SSsueral George B. McClellan, but he
will hea’* fr Jin young George before the
saaniotpal campaign in New York is
am.
It is said that the Southern railroad
tafcinls would have been perfectly sal
tated had their franchise been assessed
at half a million mote ; but they are not
dis tied MS it Is.
It is announced that General Grant’s
granddaughter is to wed the son of a
4 sufederate colonel. If this happens it
will indeed be a reunion of the blue and
the gray.
There was a frost in Kentucky a few
•fays ago, lint Colonel Watterson’s mint
tai, according to the Denver Post, was
U« near his red hot editorial mill to
sustain serious damage.
The Dawson News tli. -ks that Agni
oaido has given up' his ambition to be
George Washington of his country.
He now aspires to be "the Booker VVasn
iugtou of the Philippines.'’
It is stated that twenty thousand
fautrels of whiskey have been shipped
•rom Kentucky to Europe to mature.
Ita explanation is given that whiskey
v«n't keep in the Blue Grass State.
Although a great deal of money was
tat by the government in the postal
aantracts. it is Apparent from Mr. Mu
tarn's statement that the contractors
»* none of it. Maybe it evaporated.
President Roosevelt is said to have
gained thirty-five pounds since he be
one president, and the Augusta Her
ta) thinks there is no reason why he
should not grow fat, as he has a fat job.
Tha talk about Miss Ruth Bryan is
taout to end. She is to be married—
■M to Hobson, but to a Rhode Island
tai who has no record as a life-saver or
jnri kisser. He’s just a plain artist who
works.
WP
Gfeorge B. McClellan triumphed and
W»s named by Tammany for mayor of
ssw York. Grout and Forues, two
wsion Republicans, were also placed on
tta ticket. Now watch the fur fly in
dte coming municipal campaign.
¥ou can’t tool the people id' Laurens
Stanty. The Dublin Courier-Dispatch
wys: “Down in this .section of the
wuntry al least the people know that
there is n short crop of cotton, it matters
*>t what the speculators think.'’
Colorado awoke and found the ground
Wvervi w h snow. Colorado can pull
>< mt> t sn >w storms and Kansas more
ninstoims when they are not- wanted
tian all the other States in the entire
Union combined. Yes, and Canada,
The Athens Banner truly says:
-They are after the tax dodgers with a
>iarp stick in Atlanta. It would be a
t red thing to get after them all around
There are millions of dollars of taxable
property in this state that never find
heir w«y to the tux books."
The following paragrah is floating the
Tuinds of the press: "The Griffin News
Mgr Sts that a State board of tax as-
Wsurs would make a good State issue.”
We can not continue to take the credit
M this excellent suggestion, which orig
unted with the Albany Herald and whs
merely copied and endorsed by the
News and Sun.
“The Atlanta Constitution is advising
the cotton planters to hold their cotton.
What will the cotton mills and their
army of operatives do?" asks the Au
pasta Herald. They will simply pay
what the cotton is worth and go ahead.
3t doesn't hurt the mills to pay a good
yrice for cotto j, as it all comes o.it of
fee consumer at last; and those who
kelp the farmer most, do most help the
jsmmunity iu which they live.
JIMGBiGGBOh THE BIIUATIOB.
CoogreMman Ju men M Grigg*, of
the Second district, la in Atlanta.
Mr. Griggs will spend several days
there. H« regards the Democratic
outlook of nixs vear hs very bright,
and thinks the D tnocrats will win.
He is exceedingly hopeful of tte re
sult. Mr. Griggs was chairman of
the last national campaign commit
tee, arid did splendid work in that
capacity,
Mr. Griggs’ presence at the cap
ital b sadded renewed strength to
the Iloirst bootn for the presidency.
Among other things, he said :
“William Randolph Hearst has
done more lor the masses than any
other available man for the presi
denoy, and I am confident that if
placed in nomination he will carry
the Democracy to victory in the
mxt campaign The South will
stand solid for him.’’
We should be pleased to see Mr.
Griggs proved correct in all his pre
dictions. He talks sanguinely, but
that is the only way to go into a bat
tle. and if all Democrats were like
h’m the victory would be more than
half won.
THE GEORGIA BPEAKEHSHIP-
The latest thing in the speaker
ship contest is the effort to put Em
met Owens in the race.
The Atlanta correspondent of the
Augusta Hearald says:
• There is considerable speculation
at pretent as to who will be elected
speaker of the next house of repres
entatives in the Georgia assembly.
The appearance of a number of
members at the capitol today
hr >ngbt forth much comment. It
is known that Slaton, of Fulton,
will be in the race, and the follow
ing men are considered strong pos
sibilities: Howard,of Baldwin ’; flynt
of Spalding ; Owens,of Pixe ;Ferner,
of Bibb, and Mitchell, of Morgan.”
The Darien Gazette makes no mis
take when it states:
“Rnmor is mixing up a good
many members of the present legis
lature with the speakership of the
next bouse. The unmtxing will
tuke place in due time.”
LESSON IN A HIGH MAN’B LIFE-
A millionaire in New York told a
writer in Success that, when he was
a boy, he let himself out by verbal
contract for five years, at 17.50 a
week, iu a large dry good store in
Naw yoik. At the end of three
years, this young man had developed
3uch skill m judging goods that an
other concern offered him 13,000 a
year to go abroad as its buyer. He
said that he did not mention this of
fer ‘o his employers, nor even sug
gest the breaking of his agreement
to work for <7.50 a week, although
verbal, until his time was up.
M vny people would say he was
f olish not to accept the offer men
tioned, but the fact was that his
firm, in which he ultimately became
a partner, paid him <IO,OOO a year
at the expiration of his <7.50 con
tract. They saw that he was giving
them i ”ny times the amount of his
salary, id in the end he was the
gainer. Suppose he had said to
himself : “I hey gave me only <7.50
a week, and I will earn only <7.50 a
week ; I am not going to earn <SO a
week when lam getting only |7.50. ”
This is what many boys would have
said, and then they would have
wondered why they were not ad
vanced.
Every boy should copy the above
and keep it for frequent reference;
and there is a lesson here for every
employee, that is, always do your
best whatever your occupation, and
in time you will fiad substantial re
cognition. Thireia“room at the
top ” and the industrious, careful
and conscientious workman is al
ways the most likely to get there.
making prohibition prohibit.
The sale ot whisky in the prohi
bition counties of the Patanla oiroti
is accompanied with some hazard.
Offenders against the law in this
particular will have a dose of judi
cial medicine administered to them
by Judge Sheffield which will make
them very sick, and it will nl<o be
quite expensive to take. Judge
Sheffield has an idea that prohib’-
tion laws are enacted to beentoiced,
and so far as his administration of
the statutes is ccnc. rood be intends
to teach the lesson that prohibition
dues prohibt. Therefore, the whis
ky drummer in the Patanla circuit
has begun to mourn that his "lot is
not a happy cue.” Judge Sheffield
has undertaken to impress upon the
people that not only is the man who
takes the order for the whisky a
violator of the la w, but the dealer
who ships the liquor is cqilly as
guilty.
We learn from an exchange pub
lished in the Patanla, c rcuit that
there were three interesting oases
along this line in Clay superior
court at Fort Gaines hs> week,
Kauffman & Lo-b, a whisky firm
doing badness in Columbus, pleaded
guilt v to seiling whisky in Clay
c Minty, and Mr K luffman, who was
present a* tlid reprMkmtutive of the
firm, was fl ied <750 Mr. Phillips,
a drummer for K «uffman & L jet■,
and who made the e 1 • for them,
w fi i d <3OO upon a plea of guilty.
Z. B. Jones, of Fort Gaines, the
party to whom the Columbus firm
shipped the whisky upon the order
received through their salesman,
was also titled <3OO. Judge Shef
field was, before court adjourned
for th*’ term, presented with a peti
tion requiotir g tnat the fines of
Phillips and J mes ba reduced, and
after ctubl I ring the nqwt fix d
their pnnuhment at <2OO each.
SHOULD NoFbE INVITED.
The objection raised by rhe Nev a
and Sun to an invitation being ex
tended to President Roosevelt to
attend Savannah’s fair and be en
tertained by the board of trade and
other officials in Georgia’s principal
seaport city is one that all self-res
pecting Southerners must share. If
Mr. Roosevelt wants to come South
of his own notion, that is another
matter ; there is nothing to prevent
him, and we agree that be should
be treated with all the courtesy and
respect due to bis office, but northing
farther. The Savannah Press has
ooms to this same view and signifi
cantly says that “If he were
brought here to draw a crowd or to
make an autumnal holiday he would
probably be a failure. ”j
Here is the editorial that appeared
in the Press Thursday, showing also
the attitude of other Southern pa
pers :
“The Charleston News and Cou
rier doubts very much that the
president seriously contemplates
making any tour of the South, but
adds that should he do so ‘he would
be received with the respect due to
his office wherever he west.’ The
News and Courier is entirely right.
He would behold at the Sjuth, we
trust, a self-respecting race, who
would not forget the courtesies due
from a hospitable people to a distin
guished stranger, but, after all, the
president wo aid beastranger. He
could not feel entirely at home He
had every right to be a friend of the
people of Georgia and the South.
But the president’s course in the
white house has not been such as to
win him friends in the South.
"The Nashville News thinks that
President Roosevelt would make a
great mistake in making a Southern
tour at this time. The News trusts
that his advisers will dissuade him
from such a step, for the result
would be *a series of embarrass
ments.’ We have no comment to
make upon this. Colonel Roose
velt is president of the whole Unit
ed States, and the South is a part
of the United States. His reception
in the older cities of the South
would certainly not be effusive. If
he were brought here to draw a
crowd or to make an autumnal hol
iday he would probably be a failure.
He is not popular with the people*
ind cannot expect to be, but if he
should come he would receive, as
we said before, ‘the most dign fi?d
and proper courtesy.’ The Charles
ton News and Courier doesn’t think
it would be necessary for him to
carry his six-shooter or his secret
service detectives. His patriotic
and pathetic speeches would not
draw tears perhaps, but there would
be no show of indecorum or of in
dignation. Whatever Colonel
R josevelt may be or whatever his
impulses may move him to do, he is
still the president of a great nation.
Some of his appointments in the
South have been such as to arouse
protest, bat, as the chief executive
of this country, he should be enti
tled to the best there is in the land. ”
Reliance the Better Boat.
The new cun defender which so sasily
defeated the challenger iu the recent series
of races is acknowledged to be the best
racing yacht t ver c 1 ructed Even the
owners and officers f .11 ■ defeated yacht
acknowledge our supremacy The best
medicine always wins, too That is why
Hostetter's Stomach Bitters Lae been able
to make such a successful record of cures
during its 5o years experience No other
medicine Is near so good tocuretick head
ache, b Ichlng, heartburn, indigestion,
dyspepsia, or malaria, fever and ague and
it is acknowledged by most everybody to
be the best remedy that science can pro
duce. Keep a bottle of the Bitters In the
house at all times to counteract any sick
spell that may attack any member of the
family. It never fails.
Remove the Stumbling Block.
Americus Times-Recorder.
A prominent member of the legisla
ture, who figured largely in the brave
effoit of the honest minority to reform
the convict system of the State during
the recent session, stated to the editor
of the Times-Recorder that, the great
est obstacle they met with was the
"prison commission" and right now the
members of the "prison commission"
are proving a stumbling block in the
way of any legislation which would
tend.to nd. Georgia of the convict scan
dal; which basso long been a disgrace
to the Btat§. •- t
A Lovp Letter.'
Would not interest you if you’re
looking for a guaranteed Salve for
S ires, Berns or Pi ea Otto Dodd, of
Ponder, Mo.' wri cs: "I suffered
with en uglv sore for a year, but a
box of Bucklen'a Arnica Salve cur
ed me. It’s the best Salve on earth ”
25c at Carlisle & Ward and Brocks
Drug Store.
EMERGENCY RATION
*
A man has fon&y daya
without other food than lais
own fat
Fat is man’s emergency ra
tion. The fat is stored in
convenient hollows all over
the body against the day of
necessity.
Consumption makes heavy
demand on the storage of fat.
Nature uses fat to fight the
disease. The crying need oi
the consumptive is fat.
Scott’s Emulsion contains
the best fat to be had, next to
human fat itself. Scott’s Emul
sion is a natural substitute for
human fat. It prevents waste.
It furnishes the consumptive
with nature’s own weapon for
fighting the disease.
We’ll send you a sample free upon requeat
SCOTT & BOWNE. 409 Pearl Street, New York.
Senator Hanna refuses to meet Mr.
Clarke, his Democratic opponent, on
the stump, because he «ayg he can’t lo
cate what kind of a Democrat he is.
But Mr. Glarke has located Mr.
as a Republican of the worst kind and
is pouring hot shot into him.
Spalding is put down in the list of
thirty counties that are to take convicts
under the new law, but this is a mis
take. Spalding generally has plenty of
misdemeanors to keep in good shape the
excellent roads that were made under
the management of Commissioner T. R.
Mills.
The Fitzgerald Enterprise, published
in a community settled by Federal vet
erans, who fought to free the negro but
do not allow him in their midst, says :
"Wb not only agree with John Tempie
Graves as to his solution of the race
p -obiem but have for a long time be
lieved that separation will become poti
t vely necessary.”
A Georgia editor had the temerity to
complain of the manner in which the
ladies of his town raised their skirts
while crossing the streets, and he has
been just j rebuked by Editor Rainey,
of the Dawson News, who takes occa
sion to say, "Ladies in this town raise
their skirts while walking, and it is all
right us far as we can see.”
The catch of cod on the Newfound
land banks is decreasing every year, ye;
the amount of "boneless cod” sent out
from Gloucester increases rapidly.
This apparent paradox is explained 1 y
the fact that "boneless cod” is not pre
pared from codfish, but from pollock.
The pollock averages of greater weigl t
than the cod, and its flesh is whiter and
sweeter. What’s in a name, anyway?
haves Two
“Oar little daughter had an al
most fatal attack of whooping cough
and bronchitis,” writes Mrs. W. K.
Haviland, of Armond. N ¥., “but,
wnen all other remedies failed, we
saved her life with Dr. King’s New
Discovery. Our niece, who had
Consumption in an advanced stage,
also used this wonderful medicime
and to-day she is perfectly well.”
Desperate throat and lung diseases
yield to Dr. Kings New Discovery
as to no other medicine on earth.
Infallible for Coughs and Colds.
50c and SI,OO bottles guaranteed by
Carlisle & Ward and Brooks Drug
Store. Trial bottles free.
CONFEDERATE VETS’ REUNION.
Unique Plan Decided Upon by Generals
Evans and ‘Parkhurst.
Atlanta, Oct. 3. —A unique plan
has been decided upon by General
Clement A. Evans, commander of the
Georgia division of the United Con
federate Veterans, and William F.
Parkhurst, commander of the Geor
gia division of the United Sons of Con
federate Veterans, for the parade of
the veterans which is to be held in
Augusta Nov. IQ, 11 and 12, at the an
nual reunion.
Sons of Confederate Vtaerans will
walk on eacih side of the veterans in
the parade, forming in three lines.
Heretofore the veterans have gone
first in the parade, and the Sons of
Veterans have followed, but General
Evans and Commander Parkhurst are
of the opinion that to nave the Sons
along with the older men will make
an interesing feature of the big gath
ering.
Tiie attendance at the state reunion
at Augusta this year will be unusually
large. Augusta has been preparing
for the occasion for some time, and
everything will be in readiness for the
veterans and the Sons of Veterans
when they arrive.
Catarrh and Hay Fever.
Liquid Cream Balm is becoming quite
as popular in many localities ns Ely’s
Cream B>hn solid It Is prepared for use
in a’oniiz ts. and is highly prized by those
who have been accustomed t i call upon
physicians for such a treatment. Many
physi .'an.- -.re a '.ng and- prescribing it.
All th, ■■ d : ci::al properties of tlieoeb--
bra’ed i’re »;u B.i’. . ar ’ contained tn the
Liquid form, which is 75 cts. including a
spraying tab ■ '•! druggists or by mail.
Ely Brothers, 56 Warren St., New York.
RECEIPTS SHORT
ABOUT 3,000 BALES.
Conipar***!vw R'aturnnt of R* , c**lpts at
Griftin for Month of September.
The total receipts of cotton up to ’
Thursday night, October Ist, 1903, were
; 1,219 bales, of which 141 bales were in
stock About 500 btles have been re-
I reived in the next two days, making a I
total of 1,703 bales up to St ta div night.
The price Saturday was unchanged, !
being cents.
'1 he receipts op to Thursday night, |
Octobers, 1903, were 4.633 bales, of 1
which 1,415 were in itock on hand.
Meeting of Cotton States
Commissioners Agricul
ture.
The fourth annual meeting of the
Cotton Stales Association of Uom
m’ssioners of Agriculture will be
held at Montgomery, Alabama, on
the 7th, Bth and 9th of this month.
The papers to bu presented will
be of urusual interest and value, as
leading authorities in the several
lines of work are to present them.
General discussion will follow all 0
the papers.
It is believed that this will be the
most largely attended and perhaps
the most interesting meeting the
association has yet held, and a cor
dial invitation is eXbendsd to all
connected with the work and inter-
■ ested in it, to attend the meeting.
■ The railroads have given a rate of
one and one-third fare forjthe round
trip’
The responses to the addresses of
welcome will be made by Commia
sioner O B. Stevens and Hon. J. B.
' Hunnicutt, of this b.’ite.
Among the twenty five papers on
the program to be read and dis
cussed will be one by Director R J.
Redding, of the Georgia Experi
ment Station, on "The Characteris
tics of the Best Varieties of Cotton. ”
A Cure For Dyspepsia.
I had dyspepsia in its worst form
and felt miserable most all the time.
Did not enj iv eating until after I
used Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, whioh
h is completely cured me.—Mrs. W.
W. Taylor, Hilliard, Pa. No appe
tite, loss of strength, nervousness,
headache, constipation, bad breath,
sour risings, indigestion, dyspep
sia and all stomach troubles are
quickly cured by the use of K idol.
Kodol represents the natural juices
of digestion combined with the
greatest known tonic and recon
structive properties. It e’eanses,
purffies and sweetens the stomach
Sold by all Druggists.
PAJNTER-S’THREATEN STRIKU*.
May Completely Tie Up Manhattan
Railroad.
Nww York, Oct. 3. —Threats are be
ing made by the Brotherhood of
Painters, that unless the members ot
their union are put back to work
in the shops of the Manhattan railroad
they will call a general strike in
volving employes of the system and
completely tie up the road.
Mayor Violated Union Rules.
Ntew York, Oct. 3. —While Stephen
dartres, the labor mayor of Ansonia,
Conn., and another carpenter were lay
ing steel beams in a new house in An
sonia, a walking delegate of the Iron
Wlorkers’ union from New York asked
nhem to quit on the ground that any
»uc<li work was for iron workers only.
Chartres and his fellow worker stopped
immediately. The mayor explained
that he did not know he was violating
union rules.
Signed Arbitration Agreement.
New York, Oct. 3.—Steam Fitters
and helpers to the number of 1,600 who
have been on strike here for several
weeks, have signed the arbitration
agreement of the Elmployers’ associa
tion and taken in as memebres of the un
ion 139 men who had been employed
to fill their pkmes. They will get $5
a day. It hasbeen decided to refer
the trouble between the old and new
unions of stone cutters to the Masons
Builders’ union for settlement, and th 3
threatened strike and lockout in that,
branch of labor, which It had been
feared would again tie up the con
struction work here, has been called
off.
ATTACK VALIDITY OF ACT.
“'Y
Chicago City Council and $40,000,000
Drainage Canal.
Chicago, Oct. 3. —Chicago’s city
council is preparing to attack the va
lidity at the act creating Chicago’s
$40,000,000 drainage canal. The fi-
Aance committee of tho council has for
mally advised Corporation Telman
to bring an action in the supreme
court 6f the state next weak. A
threatened depletion of the qity's wa.
ter sand with a possible deficit is the
strongest force behind the aldermen,
although Cicero was adtied to the
■janttary district.
By the provisions cf that act, Chica
go will be required to furnish the res
idents of Cicero water at 4 cents per
~000 gallons, while its own citizens pay'
10 cents. The aldermen say it would
nm» tho expenditure of $350,000 to ex
tend the mains. It is said ether coun
ty Wwns could demand the same con
cessions awarded Cicero. This the al
deser.'u say would be raiuous.
General ktbar Going to Panama,
New York, N.
Reports from EaanQUllla,
the effect that Sanetil Tooar, T
the nc’/iy appointed comaaEdcr
chiof of the Atlantic sml Pacl£..j naW
al forces, expected here soon JtaH
his staff of officers, cables
ma correspondent of Tee r-eralaJr. Ki
is on his w. totho isthmus, ■
-xi”. probably arrive Oct. 33. y ■
was formerly
Boh'ir. It is believed
that T'lbar has
tionary powers from
as he may 'com ex?e lientf«
leal, r.’.i.or civil mcr 'tl
iry the iittio-al interests! JPNK
mus. WL 4 |
r I
c’orste-'Sloes oi a > I j I
R v Jio 8 G>X. of eUJ®! ' ’JL
Wtte«. ‘ Fo- 13 years
from Yellow Jaundic-’. I
anutnber of physicians md
sorts of medicines, but g '»•
Then I began the us«Gt
ters and feel that, I am not* B
a disease that had me in Us gr Tta
for twelve years ” If you w * n Vk
reliable medicine for Liver and K W
ney trouble, stomach disorder »
senera Inbißty, get Electric Bin
ters, It’s guaranteed by Carlisle J
Ward and Brooks Drug Store.
ly 50c.
n
A Perfect Painless PUL
Is tb6 one that will cleanse tljg
system, set the liver to action,
mow the bile, clear the completaßF
cure the headache and leave
taste in the mouth. The famonta
btlte pi’ls f»r doing such work!
pleasantly and <-ff -ctuallv are De-1
Witt’s Little Earlv Risers. Bob!
Moore of Lafavet e Ind., say*:'
“All other pills I have used grijei
ana sicken, while DeWitt’s L’t Is
Early Risers are simply
So:d by all Diuggists. » 1
(’ C I
Dieting Invites Disease. }’ A
To cure Dyspepsia or indigSatlOta
it is no longer necossary to livei Ota
milk and toast. Starvation Jfl
duces such weakness that the wholfl
sj stem b< comes an easy prey to dial
ease. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure ena-1
bles the stemacb and digestive’
org ms u digest and assimilate all!
o f the whol ‘some food that one cares;
to eat, and is a never failing cuiJ
for indigestion, Dyspepsia and
sfcimirh troubles Kodol digeA j
what you eat—makes the
sweet. S >ld bv all Druggists.
UKUAT increase in family. >
Mother, Daughter and Granddaughter]
Present Husbands with Twins. J
New Yor’i, Oct. 3. —-Mrs. John Bea»
of Mitchellsville, N. Y., 65 years
age, has given birth to twins. fftfl
daughter, who lives la the neighbor-!
ing towFshlp, presented her
with twins about the same hour, .
Before congratulations were finished!
Mrs. Beam’s grandaughtev sent word’
that she had just become the mother
of two healthy children. 1
♦
bO YOU GET UP |
WITH A LAME BACK?
Kidney Trouble Makes You MiserableJ
’fc I
Almost everybody who reads the news-1
papers 13 sure to know of the wonderful
jl ij cures made by DiJ
' i Kilmer’s Swamp Roofl
J! I great kidney, liven
bladde, remedjr, |
” V ftlsthe great mcdil
‘ cal triump h of the nwM
\k_l_n k'jteenth century,v /J
i* i covered ye*e» o|
i'll Tj ' i scionflfic research bj
'J r Dr ’ Kilmer, the emfl
H-4; " ner, t kidney and b!a<fl
—‘ der specialist, and J
wonderfully successful in promptly ourinl
lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid troul
bies and Bright’s Disease, which 13 the worst
form o f kidney trouble. j
Dr, Kilmer’s Swamp*Root is not reel
ommended for ever ythn.g but if yov have kita
nov, liver or bladder trouble it will be fouM
just the racr.edy you neea. It has been testel
in sc many ways, in hospital work, in privafl
practice, among the helpless too poor
chase relief and has proved so successf jH
every case that a special arrangement flfl
been made by which all readers of
who have not already tried it, rnay
sample bottle sent free by mail, also a
telling more about Swamp-Root and how®
tmdout if you have kidney or bladder trout®
hen writing mention reading this
offer in this paper and I
send your address to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Bin
ghamton, N. Y. The
regular fitly cent and Home of Swamp-Roous
’icllar sizes are sold by all good druggistx I
Don’t make any mistake but vj
member the name Swamp-Root, J xl
Kilmer’s Swamp Root, and the addiflS
Binghamton, N. Y., cn every
A Weak j
StomacH
Indigestion Is often caused by itJ
sating. An eminent authority sail
the harm done thus exceeds that fron|
the excessive use of alcohol. Eat ata
the good food you want but don’t over!
load the stomach. A weak stomacta
tuny refuse to digest what you bl®
Then you need a good digestant 11®
kodol, which digests your food wit®
cut the stomach’s aid. This rest ad
the wholesome tonics Kodol contai®
soon restore health. Dieting unnfiC®
sary. Kodol quickly relieves the feel
ing of fulness and Moating frol
which soma people suffer after mealta
Absolutely cures indigestion. I
Kodol Nature’s Tonlo.