Newspaper Page Text
i wenty-Eighth Year. \
Attractive People
' Your clothes ought add
t 0 >OUr attractfons not by
b in S noticeable but by be-
Jjjgr" in £ correct. If you come to
£*4' os and ask for Hart Schaff
nCr arx c * otb es you’ll
8> "bat you want; it will
r, be correct in style, all wool
11 in quality, and all right in
p ice. Look for the label
l tpT a small thing to look for, a
big thing to find.
Copyright 1906 by
Hart SchaiFner cS’ Man
W. D. BAILEY
Arrow Brand Collars in Quarter Sizes
Forsvth St. and Cotton Ave. Americus, Ga.
“You've Tried the Rest Now Try the Best!"
MENARD’S
liquid Coffa - Febrin.
Brain Ease
For headache, Neuralgia and Noth
ing Else. 25 cents
A world of relief wrapped up in
one bottle Give it a trial and you
will become a warm friend.
Rembert s Drugstore.
Next to Postoffice.
WARE & LEIAND
Americus, Georgia.
New York, New Orleans. Chicago.
MEMBERS:
New York C vtton Exchange,
New Orleans Cotton Exchange,
Liverpool Cotton Association.
Chicag * Board <*f Trade.
Chicago StocK Exchange,
New York Coffe-*- Exchange,
St. Louis Merchants Exchange.
Milwaukee Chamber ot Commerce,
Private wires to principal points.
Local office 104 Forsyth street, next door to
Cotton Avenue, Phone 21,
W. C. WIMBISH, Mgr.
SOAPS.
We Have Nice Assortment.
Try our specially prepared Soap
for Artesian water. 3 Cakes 25^.
ELDRIDGE DRUG COMPANY.
PHONES:—Jackson Street 33. Lamar Street .0.
fl, D gHBFZWU). CM&***'
Bank of Commerce,
AMERICUS, GEORGIA.
A norjr»lbankingbnatne*Wneactedandgl-g-t «•£•*.
Wended to oatrona. Certiiie»to. of deposit tanned beanag »«>
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
1 " - ' f
ROOSEVELT URGES
. REMEDY FOR EVILS
Which Have Been Disclosed In
Beef Scandal.
SPECIAL REPORT TO CONGRESS
Tuberculosis Germs Mingle With Filth,
Dirt and Grime and Grease from the
Floors Are Made Into Product La
beled “Government Inspected.”
To the senate and house of repre
sentatives: I transmit herewith the
report of Mr. James Bronson Rey ;
nolds and Commissioner Charles P.
Neill, the special committee whom I
appointed to Investigate into the con
ditions in the stock yards of Chicago
and report thereon to me. Tuis report
is of a preliminary nature. I submit
it to you now because it shows the ur
gent need of immediate action by the
congress in the direction of providing
a drastic and thorough going inspec
tion by the federal government for all
stock yards and packing houses, and !
of their products so far as the latter
enter into inter-state or foreign com
merce. The conditions shown by even
this short inspection to exist in the
Chicago stock yards are revolting. It
Is imperatively necessary in the in
terest of decency that they should
be radically changed. Under the ex.
isting law it is wholly impossible to
secure satisfactory results. When my
attention was first directed to this
matter, an investigation was made un- 1
der the bureau of animal industry of
the department of agriculture. When
the preliminary statements of this in- I
vestigation were brought to my atten
tion they showed suers defects in the \
law and such wholly unexpected con
ditions, that I deemed, it best to have
a further immediate investigation by
men not connected with the bureau;
ana. accordingly, appointed Messrs.
Reynolds and Neill. It was impossi
ble under the existing law that satis
factory work should be done by the
bureau of animal industry. I am now. |
however, examining the way in which!
the work actually was done. Before
I had received the report of Messrs, j
Reynolds and Neill, I had directed!
that labels placed upon any package
of meat food products should state !
only thac the carcass of the animal!
from which the meat was taken had j
been inspected at the time of slaugh- 1
ter. If inspection of meat food prod
ucts at all stages of preparation is
not secured, by the passage of legisla
tion recommended, I shall feel com- 1
pelled to order that inspection labels
and certificates on canned products
shall not be used hereafter. The re
port shows that the stock yards and
packing houses are not kept even rea
sonably clean and that the method of
handling and preparing f</od products
is uncleanly and dangerous to health.
Under existing law the national gov
ernment has no power to enforce in
spection of the many forms of prepar
ed meat food products that are daily
going from the packing houses into in
terstate commerce. Owing to an in
adequate appropriation the department
of agriculture is not even able to place
inspectors in all establishments desir
ing them. The present law prohibits
the shipment of uninspected meat to
foreign countries, but there is no pro
vision forbidding the shipment of un
inspected meats in interstate com
merce, arid thus the avenues of inter
state commerce are left open to traffic
in diseased or spoiled meats. If, as
has been alleged on seemingly good
authority, timber evils exists, such
as the improper use of chemicals and
dyes, tee i overnment lacks power to
remedy t:.< in. A law is needed which
will enable the inspectors of the gen
eral go- rr.iiuu to inspect aud super
vise from tiie hoof to the can the prep
aration of lie meat food product. The
evil seems., to be much less in tae
sale of dressed carcasses than in the
sale of canned and ether prepared
products. In my judgment, the ex
pense of the inspection should be paid
by a fee levied on each animal slaugh.
tered. If this is not done, the whole
purpose of the law can a: any time
be defeated through an insufficient
appropriation; and wfc never there
was no particular public interest in
the subject, it would not only be easy,
but natural to make the appropria
tion insufficient. If it. were not for
this consideration. 1 shodld favor the
government paying for it. The alarm
expressed in certain quarters con
cerning this feature should be allayed
by a reali-aM''- fact that in no
STRONG
YAx Again
' * s Mrs.
Stovall, of Tilton, Ga,
+ /) 1 said after taking
TYXy Kodol Dyspepsia
gjajfcAjL Cure. Hundreds
women are
W f wi iji stored to perfect
/ i 1 health by this rent
/ Trl edy. YOU may bv
1 well if you will take
Indigestion causes
nearly all the sick
ness that women
have. It deprives the system of nourish
ment and the delicate organs peculiar to
women suffer weaken, and become
diseased.
Kodol
Dyspepsia Cure
enables the stomach and digestive organs
to digest and assimilate all of the whole
some food that may be eaten. It nourishes
the body, and rebuilds the weak organs,
restoring health and strength. Kodol cures
indigestion, constipation, dyspepsia, sour
Usings, belching, heartburn and all stomach i
orders.
Digests What You Eat
tl 22*9 am Bich u tit* orivWry ®f X.C~D*WIU
jruu oy sis*.
W A. Bern tort’s. Americas Ga
AiWERICUS, (1A„ WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 6. 19116.
case, under such a law, will the cost of 1
inspection exceed eight cents per head. >
I call special attention to the fact *
that this report is preliminary, and *
that the investigation is still unfin- 1
ished. It is not yet possible to report
on the alleged abuses the use of de
leterious chemical compounds in con
nection with canning and preserving
meat products, nor on the alleged
doctoring In this fashion of tainted
meat and of products returned to the
packers as having grown unsaleable
or unusuable from age or from other
reasons. Grave allegations are made
In reference to abuses of this nature.
Let me repeat that under the pres
ent law there practically is no .meth
od of stopping these abuses vs they
should be discovered to exist. Legis
lation is needed in order to prevent
the possibility of all abuses In the
future. If no legislation is passed, thea
the excellent results accomplished by
the work of this special committee
will endure only so long as the mem
ory of the committee's work is fresh
and rescrudescenee of the abuses is
absolutely certain. I urge the imme
diate enactment into law of provisions
which will enable the department of
agriculture adequately to inspect the
meat and meat food products entering
into interstate commerce and to su
pervise the methods of preparing the
same and to prescribe the sanitary
conditions under which the work shall
be perfomed. J, therefore, commend
' to your favorable consideration and
urge the enactment of substantially
the provisions known as Senate
Amendment No. 29, to the Act mak
ing appropriations for the department
of agriculture for the fiscal year end
ing June 30, 1907, as passed by the
senate, this amendment being common
ly known as the Beveridge amend
' ment. Theodore Roosevelt.
I White House, June 4, 1906.
SLAIN BY A LITTLE NEGRO.
White Woman Is Stabbed to Death
at Little Rock, Ark.
Little Rock, Ark., June s.—Will
Gay, a 15-year-old negro boy, who had
been employed as porter at the Drum
mers’ hotel, has confessed to the mur
der of Mrs. Charlotte Leetham, pro
prietress of the hotel, by whom Gay
j had been employed for the past eight
years.
Gay reported the murder to the po
; lice, but told a seemingly straightfor
j ward story to them at the coroner’s
1 inquest, and was not then arrested.
When arrested later he made a com
-5 plete confession, in which he ac-
I knowledged that he had stabbed Mrs.
j Leetham to death. Gay said that the
motive for the murder was robbery.
Mrs. Leetham made a desperate
fight for her life. When her body
, was found this morning it was lying
on the floor of her room with sever
al deep kuife wounds in her breast.
Fearing that an atempt would be
made to lynch Gay, the authorities
removed him to some unknown point
outside this county.
Music Plays Important Part.
Washington, June s.—Music is play. ;
ing an important part in the digging
of the isthmian canal. Laborers
from the West Indies are accustomed
to sing as they work and bosses who
are capable of leading a chorus have
much greater success than men who
don't have.that faculty. Reports the
commission has received from officials
on the canal zone indicate that one
boss has developed songs which have
inspired contentment and energy
among his men with the result that
he has outdistanced all rivals in the
amount of work accomplished. “Down,
men, down,” are the words for which
this music master has provided mu
sic that delights the Jamaican heart.
Other bosses are using the tradition
al “Yo. Heave, Ho.”
Rebels Are Defeated by Government.
Washington, June s.—The Guatema
lan minister here has received a ca
blegram from the minister of fore
eign affairs, Mr. Barrios, stating that
the revolutionary movement across the
Salvadorian boundary had met with
defeat. According to the cablegram,
the Guatemalan troops met the revolu
tionary party at Asuncion Mita, and
defeated them completely.. The gov
ernment forces, the cablegram says,
have been triumphant all along the
line and have not met the slightest
reverses anywhere. A cablegram has
been received at the state depart
ment from Mr. Combes, minister at
Guatemala City, stating that another
band of revolutionists has entered
Guatemala from Salvador.
. Take Census of ’Frisco.
San Francisco, June s.—For the in
formation of President E. H. Harri
man and Traffic Director J. C. Stubbs,
of the Southern Pacific, general pas
senger agent, James Horsburgh, Jr.,
and passenger agent, Paul Shoup, have
had a census taken of the persons tak
en in the camps of this city. It
J shows that on June Ist, 13,888 per-
I sons were in the permanent camps i
and 29,533 in the temporary camps.
It also shows that on June Ist rations
were supplied to 41,236\persons and
free meat tickets given to 9,169 per
sons. f
Wants Both Conventions.
Denver. June 5.—A movement was
launched Monday at a meeting of the
Denver Convention League to bring
both of the great national conven
tions to this city two years hence. It
was agreed that in the near future
Judge John I. Mullins, Democratic
committeeman for Colorado, and Hon.
H. M. Stevens, Republican commit
teeman for this state, will be officially
notified of the invitation of the league
and both will to use every
effort to bring the conventions here.
Sensations Are Looked For.
Tallulah, La., June 5. —The grand
1 jury did not make any report on the
-lynching of Robert Rogers because
it was a legal holiday, but one in
dictment and. probably three will be
presented to Judge Ransdell in a short
while. The police have offered a re
ward of SI,OOO for the arrest and con
viction of five members of the mob,
and adopted resolutions denouncing
tht lynching. Sentiment Is divided,
and sensations are looked for. i
l
[ McKinley Statue at Columbus. ,
j Columbus, 0., June 5. —The great
bronze statue of the late President
William McKinley, which will stand
at the west entrance of the capitol
grounds, arrived in Columbus Tues
day from R. I.
MILITIA CONTROLS
TOWN OF CANANEA
Outbreak Was of Revolutionaey
Character.
TROOPS CONTROL SITUATION
A Circular Addressed to Mexican
Workmen Discovered Which Shows
that Outbreak Was of Revolutionary
Character.
Bisbee, Ariz., June 5. —A telephone
message was received here Monday
night from Cananea to the effect that
the town is still under control of the
Mexican military authorities.
Mexican troops and rurales have
continued to arrive until General Tor
res and Colonel Kosterlitzsky now
have sufficient force to control any
outbreak that might occur. So far
there has been no disposition shown
on the part of the Mexican miners to
return to work, and the smelting plant
of the Cananea Consolidated Copper
company and the mines are working
short-handed.
The banks and stores were opened
for business after remaining closed
since Friday.
That the outbreak of Friday was of
a revolutionary character was prov
en by the discovery of the following
circular, copies of which had been
distributed among the Mexican mi
ners :
“Mexican Workmen: A government
is elected by the people to guide them
and satisfy their necessities in all re
quirements. This Mexico does not
possess. On the other hand, a gov-,
ernment exis: s which is composed of
ambitious persons, who criminally
contemplate oppressing the people,
being elected by the worst of them in
order that they might assist them in
enriching themselves. This, Mexico
does not need. That the people elect
their officers to govern them, not to
ridicule them, is what the republic
should be. People, arouse yourselves
and act; learn that which you seem
to have forgotten. Congregate and
discuss your rights. Demand the re.
spect that is due you. Every Mexi
can whom the foreigners despise is
worth just as much or more than those
foreigners if he will join with his
brothers and assert his rights. Curse
the thought that a Mexican is worth
less than a yankee; that a-negro or a
Chinaman is to be compared with a
Mexican; that this is a fact is a re
sult of a very bad government which
gives the advantages to the adven
turers rather than to the true owners
of this unfortunate land. Mexicans
awake! The country and our dignity
demands it!”
Killed by an Explosion.
N w York, June 5. —An explosion,
said to have been carbois of vitriol,
wrecked a freight car which had tak
en fire in the Pennsylvania railroad
yard Monday, and Charles Gordon,
a freight clerk, was beheaded by mis
siles from the explosion which crash
ed in the side of the house in which
he was standing. Another missile
grazed the head of Captain Roger
Doyle, of the fire department.
Quiet Reigns at Mines.
Steubenville, 0., June 5.-—Quiet
reigned Tuesday at Plum Run, and
throughout the mines of sub-district
No. 5. The first detachment of mi
litia numbering 300 men reached Dil
lonvale at 6 o’clock and marched at
once to Bradley, the scene of Mon
day's conflict. On their way to the
mines, the soldiers passed several
groups of strikers, but the latter made
no demonstration.
250 Refugees Sail for China.
San Francisco, June 5. —Nearly 230
refugee Chinese will be sent home at
the expense of the Chinese govern
ment on the steamer Hong Kong
which sailed Tuesday for the Orient.
The Chinese lost heavily in the fire,
and as there is no immediate prospect
of their being permanently located in
this city, they expressed a desire to
return to their native land.
$200,000 Fire Loss.
New York, June 5. —A second fire
within a space of two weeks Tuesday
destroyed two more warehouses of the
American Cotton Dock company at
Tompkinsville, Staten Island, and
caused a loss estimated between $159,-
000 and $200,000. The buildings were
partly filled with manila hemp. The
origin of the fires is unknown.
Edward Baring. Gould Dead*
Cape Town. Cape Colony. June 5.
Edward S. Baring-Gould, a cousin of
Rev. Sabine Baring-Gould, the novel
ist, died on board the steamer Norman,
dy at Port Elizabeth Monday. A con
fusion of names led to the cabling
Monday night as to the death of the
author. The latter is in London and
In good health.
Found Dead Beneath Horse-.
Crowley, La., June 5. —Aurelien Cor
nier, a farmer, was found dead under
his horse on the Marias Bouleur road
It is believed that while trying to
untangle the harness the animal fell
on him and crushed him to death
When found the animal was hopeless
ly entangled.
Stung: Him.
Two very great swells, one a young
duke and the other a young viscount,
brushed against each other one night
at the theater. The duke, anxious to
snub the viscount, pretended to take
him for an usher and said, holding out
his hand, “Have you a programme?”
But the viscount, too quick for the
duke, smiled and replied: “Yes. thank
you. my man. I got one from the other
fellow.”
How He Told It.
Papa—ls the teacher well satisfied
with you? Toby—Oh, quite. Papa—
Did he tell you so? Toby—Yes. After
a close examination he said to me the
other day, "If all my scholars were like
you I would shut up my school this
very day.” That shows that I know
enough.—Uudianapol is Star.
gi-| ■ w _ Yes! We bad noticed that your hair
t L * *| J • was looking pretty thin, and that it
M fit // A MLi / # lacked luster and life. But we didn’t
" like to speak of it! Os course you know
that Ayer’s Hair Vigor is a regular hair-grower, makes the hair soft and
smooth, gives it life and. strength. This isn’t the kind of hair that fails out!
And, too, it keeps the scalp so clean and healthy.
■bmowmm—* wwwMwwwaaw—fc- wi -rim wwtaa—xi——
ROTTEN MEAT IS
WORSE THAN BULLETS
So Declares General Nelson A.
Miles.
DISCLOSURES NO NEWS TO HIM
Says that Fuliy Three Thousand U.
S. Soldier Lost Their Lives Because
of Adulterated, Impure, Poisonous
Meat. •
Kansas City, Mo., June 5. —General {
Nelson A. Miles, on his way to Colo- j
rado, Monday night, said:
“The disclosures about the packing
house products now being exploited
are no news to me. I knew it several j
years ago. I told what I knew then. I
Had the matter been taken up at that
time, thousands of lives would have !
been saved.
“I believe that "6,000 United States j
soldiers lost their lives because of
adulterated, impure, poisonous meat.
There is no way of estimating the
number of soldiers whose health was
ruined by eating impure food.
"I have a barrel of testimony on
the subject in the way of affidavits
which I collected when I made my
investigation seven years , ago. The
investigating committee refused to
hear 2,000 witnesses whom I had
ready. At that time I could have se
cured the testimony of 100,000 men
that the canned beef sold to the army
was impure, adulterated and uirwhole- j
some.
“In my investigation of ‘embalmed’
beef during the Spanish-American war,
I found poisons were used to preserve
meat. I ordered an investigation,
and learned from the reports brought
to me that canned meats had been
sold to the army that had been for
months in the warehouses of the Bal
timore and Ohio railroad and at the
docks in Liverpool.
“This meat had been relabeled and
sold to the United States for sol
diers' rations. I turned the reports
over to the war department and a
whitewashing investigation was insti
tuted- and successfully carried out.
The official report was that a colossal
error had been made. As a matter
of fact, it was a colossal fraud, and
the persons who perpetrated it and
were interested in it should have been
sent to the penitentiary.”
Missouri Democrats Meet.
Jefferson City, Mo., June s.—The
Democratic state convention met here
Tuesday for the nomination of a state
superintendent of schools and a rail
road and warehouse commissioner.
Early this morning charges began to
circulate that bribery had been at
tem; <• 1. to influence delegates. It
was openly charged that an attempt
ha-1 been made to buy four delegates,
the sum of $230 being offered for
each vote.
K, of C. Convention Opened.
New Haven, Conn.. June s.—Follow
ing the celebration of a pontifical high
mass at St. Johns church presided
over by Cardinal Gibons, on Tuesday,
the national convention of the Knights
of Columbus assembled at the new
national headquarters. The conven
tion was opened by Supreme Knight
Edward L. Hearn, of this city.
Lands for Settlers.
Washington, June 5. —The house
committee on Indian affairs has au
thorized a favorable report on a bill
allowing settlers on 40,000 acres in
■what is known as “Pasture No. 3,” of
the Kiowa reserve in Oknahoma. to
purchase the lands on which they
have settled at an appraised valuation.
Bertha Claiche Sentenced,
New York, June 5. —Bertha Claiche,
who pleaded guilty to manslaughter
in the first degree for the killing of
Emil Gerdron. -was sentenced by Judge
Davis to not less than two years and
tw’o months, nor more than five years’
imprisonment. The maximum pen
alty is twenty years.
Town Is Washed Away.
Ironton, 0., June 5. —Scottown, a
village 25 miles north of Ironton, with
a population of £OO, was washed en
tirely away this morning. Not a house
was left on its foundation. Mrs.
Sayre and daughter were drowned.
Bridges were washed away, and tele
phone lines are down.
Mrs. Weber Drowns Self.
Beaumont, Tex., June s.—Mrs. Wil
liam Weber, wife of a prominent con
tractor of Pariersburg, and sister of T.
S. Reed, a wholesale merchant here,
committed suicide by drowniifg. The
body was recovered. Mrs. Weber’s
mind, it is stated, was temporarily
deranged.
Anarchist Placed Under Arrest.
Barcelona, Spain, June 3. —t Delayed
by the Censor). —A number of anar
chists, including the director of the
modern school, have been arrested
here on suspicion of complicity in the
bomb outrage of May 31, at Madrid.
Bank Closed Doors.
Zanesville, 0., June 5. —The Farm
ers and Trades’ bank in Roseville,
closed its doors Tuesday. It is said
the depositors will be paid in full.
No statement is given out as to the
cause of the closing or of the assets.
Had Heard It Before.
Mamma—lt is strange that girls have
not more sense. Grandpa—l think you
inherit that opinion. Mamma—What
do you mean? Grandpa—Well, it is ex
actly what your mother used to say
twenty-five years ago.—New York
Press.
Price or Reason f
Hewitt—A doctor is going to perform
an operation on me tomorrow. Jewett—
What for? Hewitt—The usual rate,
s2oo.—Woman’s Home Companion.
jj “If you want to know what smartly dressed men will wear
i this, Sia-on. ask to see Techheimer-Fishel Smart Clothes.”
| Suits of Summer Serge
„ in co)l, rich, dark
I blue shades, cs
' **' l! *• grays ***
f ' •• VyA % i nhi! sr oillo'm. ;
Oar i r*re at- J
j | S' rtmtnt is f e?h
j%*' ifo'ni the tailor’s
Fashionable
IK W Ja 1/ Clothes
gk form two v *'® garments that
FORM ONE
outing nav d b qc mt: tam
owrigfctiaoa *ous lhe COUQtry
The rechheimer Fishel C 0.., *
New York, r . 1 j
«ppa ov e- for style and
>|#'jPi&jrr quality.
Eveiy pie eof material in these suits was most carefully
tested and pronounrfd perfect before l eing cut up. From the
designer’s pene l ti tin peters ir>n n t i detail ha* been
neglected to nnk tQfse »i.i> equal iu every respect to the
very highest t la ; s of exclusive cast m-tailor productions All
the new siaele aj.<. < ouble bivasttd (JJI P flfl *n COt* flfl
Sack Suits Mod l born iJIjiUJ IU O&UiUUi
Negligee Shirts. in , iu ■w*
u v ________ mate, ht, as reasonable iu price as the
most caTf-ful baj-er could expect. Extraordinary values at
50c and 75c, and our famous Ec ipse Snirts at sl, and $1,50,
Elastic Seam Drawers, in Nsinscok and Drill at 50c pair.
Lisle aud Lalbriggau Shirts and Drawers, uumatehable
values a- f O'* e ch.
Straw Hats, Panama Eats, Hawes Fur Hats, liest styles,
lowest prices.
Everything for the man and the boy at d in the greatest
vaiicty. . |
SEE AD ON FOURTH PAGE §
CHAB. L. ANSLEY,
*r to Wheatley <&
Motherhood^}
W (ft T\/fOTHERHOOD is the reward nature B
■ i/M l y l bestows upon healthy womanhood. m
■ V; Women whose vitality has been sapped W
m by disease cannot safely give birth to chu- m
m . dren. In pregnancy and in childbirth weak
m J| ness of the mother is revealed in the pain ■
A ]!■ and aeonv she suffers.
m * Mm This great medicine drives out every ves- m
m' tige of inflammation and weakness, and S
w* M gfves tone and strength to the delicate or- m
gans which mature the child. The pains of ■
pregnancy are banished by Vv ine of Cardui,' and mis-
carriages, which blast so many fond mother s hopes, W
are prevented. Flooding, which so often occurs aLer m
■ childbirth, is corrected when Wine of Cardui is used during pregnancy. ■
M Wine or Cardui babies are healthy babies, because, during the ffi
|5 months of pregnancy, the mother is able to give them accessary Titality ■
■ and strength. . f B
M With these facts presented to American women no expectant m
W mother should be satisfied without the re-inforcement that Wine of tardui m
I wifi give her. Every mother should be able to treat herself in her home j|
■ with this valuable medicine. aa.w+u 1
Wine oi: Cardui can be secured from any druggis. at f I.UU a ootue. ra
B Polycarp, N. C., Jan. 11,1902.
M I am the mother of seven children and while in pregnancy w ith the
m first six suffered untold misery until they were bom. One month oeioretne
seventh was bom I began to take a bottle of W ine of Cardui, which
1 relief after taking three doses. I used the remainder of the bottle until the ■
■ birth of the child .and was stouter in three days after the birth than I waam M
I .m«th after the ■
l WIWE CftRPUI J
Say Plainly to Your Grocer
Tliat you want LION COFFEE always, and he,
being a square man, will not try to sell you any
thing else. You may not care for our opinion, but
What About the United Judgment of Millions
of housekeepers who have used LION COFFEE
for over a quarter of a century ?
Is there any stronger proof of merit, than the
Confidence of the People
/vv and ever Increasing popularity 2
i&V* \sJgi LION COFFEE is carefully se
wiTwl lected at the plantation, shipped
JIM-' direct to oar various factories,
where It Is skillfully roasted and |
i /Jvi \ x carefully packed In sealed pack- 1
(' V if'l ages—unlike loose coffee, which
Is exposed so germs, dost. In- |
sects, etc. LION COFFEE reaches |
you as pore and clean as when
11 lett **»« factory. Sold only In |
° 1 lb. packages.
Lion-head on every package.
Save these Lion-heads for valuable premium*
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. I
‘IST AS GOOD" IS iriHE BEST" '
Buy Only the Genuine SHAW’S PURE MALT, sold by
E. J. McGreliee.
No. 27