Newspaper Page Text
Tfcsn, Pale, Weak—
She Testifies
Ft. Myew; Fla.;—"Dr. Piercc’a Golden
Medical Discovery and ‘Favorite
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weak end listless with very little ambition
to be about the house. I was told by a
physician that the derangement of my
nervous system During was the cause of the dys¬
pepsia. my expectancy I took the
‘Favorite Prescription’ alone, and it
relieved my nervous condition and appre¬
hension and prepared me for motherhood,
relieving I me of its many distressing features.
by hope other expectant mothers may profit
comfort my testimony, but, not only to give them
baby.”—MRS. to strengthen them to nurse
I. M. PELLICER, c /o
Carson’s Market.
'to Augusta, Ga.:—“It 13 a pleasure to me
give this testimony of Dr. Pierce’s Gold¬
en Medical as a
__
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Csv I _ k
4 **
f [| / / \ L
|\ fWiuwf. j; 'V-i
J? t i> n |
_
Golden Medical Discovery for these
ailments. 1 could see the improvement from
day to day. 1 was really afraid for a while
that I would lose one of my babies as the
intestines had bled for four weeks, but his
health improved right from the start and he
G. has F had Ti'UNK, no such trouble TalcotSt. since.”—Mliii’O.
10H
BAD BREATH
Often Caused by
Add-Stomach
How can anyone with a sour, g-'assy
stomach, who Is constantly belching, has
heartburn and suffers from Indigestion have
anything but a bad breath? All of these
etomach disorders mean just one thing—
Acid-Stomach.
EATON1C, the wonderful new stomach
remedy in pleasant tasting tablet form that
you eat like a bit of candy, brings quick
relief from those stomach miseries. EATON-
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for that nasty taste, congested throat and
"heady feeling” after too much smoking.
If neglected, Acid-Stomach may cause you
a lot of Rerious trouble. It leads to ner¬
vousness, headaches, insomnia, melancholia,
rheumatism, sciatica, heart trouble, ulcer
and cancer of the stomach. It mukes Its
millions of victims weak and miserable,
listless, lacking in energy, ail tired out. It
often brings about chronic invalidism, pre¬
mature old age, a shortening of one’s days.
You need the help that EATONIC can give
you If you are riot feeling as strong and
well as you should. You will bo surprised
to see how much better you will feel just as
soon an you begin taking this wonderful
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your money If you are not satisfied.
FATONIC
Croft Y OUR ACID-STOMACH)
Clear Your
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with This
Old Reliable
Remedu —
'Hancock
Sulphur Compquud j
For pimples, black-heads, freckles, blotches, j !
and tan, as well as for more serious face, scalp
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a few drops in a iilass of water—it gets at the
root of the trouble and purfics the blood.
Physicians agree that sulphur is one of the
most elective blood purifiers known. Re¬
member. o good complexion isn’t skin deep
—it's health deep
Be sure to ask for HANCOCK SULPHUR
COMPOUND. It has been used with satis¬
factory results for over 2 5 years.
60c and $1.2G the bottle
at your druggist’s. If he can’t supply you,
send his name and the price in stamps and
we will send you u bottle direct.
HANCOCK LIQUID SULPHUR
COMPANY .Sfv'va.
Baltimore. V.d.
Hencoch Sulphur Compnmd ....... Olr.l- c
mmt — 25 c end 50 c—for ....... uu with the
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I 90 K FCfi TNI’, T*l\ TSHfMMW
says Piles all mm
m m mm egze m
"I had eczema for many years on my
head and could not get anything to stop
the agony. I saw your ad and got one ;
box of Peterson's Ointment and I owe you
many thanks for the good it has done me. j
There isn't a blotch on my head now and
I couldn't help but ’hank Peterson, for
tile cure is great.” Miss Mary Hill, 430
Third avenue. Pittsburgh. Pa.
‘‘I have had itching piles for 15 years
and Peterson’s is the only ointment that
relieves me, besides the niles seem to
have gone.” A. B. Huger, 1 127 Washing¬ :
ton avenue, Baeine, Wis,
Use Peterson’s Ointment for old sores,
salt rheum, chafing and all skin diseases.
60 cents. Druggists recommend it. Mail
orders filled by Peterson Ointment Co.,
Buffalo. N. Y.
Wfcen Stomachs do their work,—
end Bowels ptove naturally.
fin. TCTPS LIVER FILLS
I make tl.? stomach digest load
and Bowel* mave as they should*
ippr HAIR PARKER’S BALSAM
lUrac vc 3 Dandruff - S t opsH airFsil Ire
Restores Color and
Faded Ha
e.l drurrists.
tehor me. K. Y.
lour-ea, HINDERCORNS Rernave* Corn*. Cnl
etc flops ail pam. ensures comfort to the
feet, makes walking easy. Iftc. t»y tna.I or at Druip.
«****■ kli sees Cdemlc&i Works, PatciiveTie. Ji. X.
tion’ are my mother’s
remedies for numer¬
ous and ills, and as tonics
In nerve medicines.
ience my with own exper¬
certainly both, they all
were
that was needed to
bring desired. about what W3 s
I was suf¬
fering tion, from indiges¬ !
so much so as
to become very thin
and pale, and grew
I have twin baby |
months b °y 8 old, ©>eh‘t
both
have had tho
whooping and cough
one of them
had bronchitis
along with it and
intestinal trouble
as well. I have
never known a
medicine as fine
as Dr.
in Armenia, the report said.
As the league council does not meet
again before autumn, it will enter into
communication with the supreme coun¬
cil to ascertain what provisional fi¬
nancial arrangements can be made to
facilitate a solution of the Armenian
problem.
| Count Bonin-Longare, Italian ambas¬
sador to France, read a report on the
prisoners of war in Siberio. The coun¬
cil resolved to investigate the facts of
the situation and to study measures
which can be taken to expedite the re¬
patriation of the prisoners.
) Baron de Gaiffiar d’Hestroy, the
Belgian minister, read a report on
the minorities in Turkey affecting the
fate of (wo million non-Mussualmans.
The council agreed to accept a request
of Earl Curzon of Kedleston, the Brit¬
ish foreign secretary, asking the
council to consent to guarantee clauses
in the Turkish treaty of peace now
tinder preparation concerning the pro¬
tection of minorities. ■ As the guaran¬
tee clauses have not yet been settled,
however, it is announced that the coun¬
cil had found it impossible to evolve
a practical solution until the treaty is
finished.
ANGLO-FRENCH CLASH j
REGARDING RHINELAND
IS SOON TO BE SETTLED
British Note To France Is Said To Be
Conciliatory And Renewal Of Re¬
lations Is Expected
I’aris.—The Earl of Derby, British
ambassador to France, handed to Pre¬
mier Millerand Great Britain’s reply to
the last French note concerning the
French invasion of the Rhineland,
i The note is animated with tiie spirit
of conciliation, according to a serni
official communication, and allows of
the hope that within a brief time the
difficulties which have arisen in the
past few days will be smoothed over
) The note will not be made public
by the French government, hut it is
1 turned that it attaches special import¬
ance to the interpretation of the last
sentence of the Mreach noie made pub¬
lic recently, the British assuming that
France is reserving liberty of action
in all circumstances without the ap¬
proval of or consultation with her al¬
lies, and also that it considers Great
Britain not duly informed by France
before the occupation of the Rhine
I owns.
' The text of the last sentence of the
J .'ench note, on which Great Britain re¬
quests an interpretation, was as fol
Ijws:
I “The preceding considerations be
ng stated, the French government does
tot hesitate to declare that in all inter¬
allied questions arising from the ex¬
pectation of the treaty, it foresees no
case in which it should not be glad,
before acting, to make sure of the as
ent of its allies.”
Attempt To Land Arms In Ireland
London.—An attempt to land arms
end ammunition in Ireland from two
vessels,- one from Hamburg and one j
from a Russian port, is reported in a
dispatch from Edinburgh. Both ships,
.according to the reports, have beeu
detained in a port on the east coast of
Scotland. The arms and ammunition
were concealed under the heaps of
< oal in the bunkers, the dispatch said. |
The ship front Hamburg also carried
a whippet tank camouflaged on the
eck, it was reported.
Seceding Sonora Expels The Soldiers j
I Nogales. Sonora.—Customs houses!
and all property of the federal govern¬ !
ment of Mexico were formally seized
I n the name of the “Republic of So
nora” here, simultaneously w.th the
eceipt of a report of a clash between
■Carranza soldiers and Sonora state
roops at Guaymas. The report said
, arranza soldiers at Guaymas were ex
pelled from the town in a short fight, j
durins which two Carranza soldiers I
cere killed. Sonora troops control the |
(entire state, according to official re
Ports. j
URGE FREEDOM
FOR ARMENIANS
CONSTITUTION OF FREE STATE
OF ARMENIA ADVOCATED BY
THE SUPREME COUNCIL
LEAGUE DISCUSSES BESTWAY
__
Did Not Consider It Expedient To Ex¬
amine Into The Military Situ¬
ation In Armenia
Herbert A. L. Fisher, British min¬
ister of education, representing Great
[Britain, read a report on the Amenian
situation, advocating the constitution
} Paris.—The fourth public sitting of
(the council of the League of Nations
jtook place in the Luxemburg palace.
jLeon Bourgeis. president of the
(French Association of the Society of
(Nations, presided.
of a state of Armenia on a free and
(independent basis. The best means
( for reaching such a solution, the re¬
port said, was Ihe acceptance of the
(mandate for Armenia by some state
under the League of Nations. As to
what state would be willing to accept,
this responsibility would depend, ac¬
cording to the opinion of the council
of the league, partly on the military
measures necessary to liberate the soil
from the enemy, the financial consid¬
erations and the maintenance of the
state afterward. The council did not
consider that it was in its province
to examine into the military situation
THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTON, GEORGIA
LONDON AND ROME WORRIED
French Troops Occupy Cities More
Than Hundred Miles From
Ruhr Troubles
London. — French occupation of
Frankfort and other German cities, to¬
gether with civil conditions in the
Ruhr district, is being considered by
the counsel of ambassadors at Paris,
it is learned here.
It is declared at the' foreign office
that the British are not fully decided
as to what course to follow, because
of conflicting reports, but are inclin¬
ed to give Germany benefit of doubt
thus far.
France Notified Of Attitude
A dispatch from Coblenz says that
it is learned at the office of Pierpont
B. Noyes, American Rhineland com¬
missioner, and representative of the
state department in the American oc¬
cupied area, that several days ago
Mr. Noyes formally dissociated him¬
self from any action the high commis¬
sion might take involving it directly
or indirectly in a possible French
advance into unoccupied territory. It
is also stated at the office that Mr.
Noyes has notified Washington of his
action.
Germans She!! French Patrol
A dispatch from Mayence says the
only incident in connection with the
occupatioiiV>f North Frankfort by the
Frencli consisted of a few shots fired.
According to reports, by aviators, Ger
men gun detachments fired two or
three shells on a French cavalry pa¬
trol before which detachments of the
reiehswehr and the security police
were retiring. The latter, although
knowing that occupation had been de¬
cided on, refused to believe it would
be carried out, one of the officers
saying that the British would not let
the French come in.
At Darmstadt, the reception of the
French troops was almost cordial, and
the population at Frankfort was in¬
clined to be friendly to the French.
Allied Capitals Apprehensive
London.—Greatest apprehension pre¬
vailed here in official and diplomatic
circles as to the eventualities involved
in the German invasion of the Ruhr
district and the subsequent French
retaliatory measure o*f occupying sev¬
eral points in the Frankfort region.
While admitting that the Germans
technically have violated the peace
treaty, British government officials
were inclined to regard France’s head¬
strong, ill considered one-handed
game.”
England, Italy and the United States,
it is learned, will not acquiesce fn
the French coup, which comes as an
unexpected jolt. , •
ARMY REORGANIZATION
PLAN IS ATTACKED;
IS CALLED “MILITARISM”
V
“Would Euild Up Military System
Equal To That Existing In Any
Country,” Says McKeilar
Washington.—The army reorganiza¬
tion bill was attacked as a measure
that “would build up a military sys¬
tem equal to any that ever existed in
any country at any time,” by Senator
McKeilar, Democrat, of Tennessee,
during consideration of the legislation
in the senate..
The Tennessee senator’s criticism
was directed principally at provision
of the bili for a large general staff,
the creation of the office of under
secretary of war and for the organi¬
zation of a war council to consider
policies affecting military and lpuni
tion problems. Senator McKeilar in¬
dicated his opposition to universal
military training but reserved his at¬
tack upon it until the general fight
on the plan is brought to the senate
floor.
Senator Wadsworth, Republican, of
New York, in charge of the bill, and
Senator Frelinghuysen, Republican, of
New Jersey, answering Sentaor Mc¬
Keilar, declared the legislation sought
only to adopt lessons learned from
the world war, “and was designated
to eliminate “red tape” and promote
efficiency in the war department.
Labor Demonstrations For France
Labor demonstrations of a most im¬
posing nature are expected here on
May 1, and it is declared extremists
may seek to foment serious trouble.
Building trade unions have voted to
order all constituent organizations to
give support to whatever action the
general federation of labor may decide
upon relative to the May day manifes¬
tation.
Tax On French Bachelors Approved
Paris—The finance committee of the
chamber of deputies has approved the
budget proposal for a tax upon the in¬
comes of bachelors of 10 per cent over
the normal rate. The question of at
what age the tax should he imposed !
has not been _ decided, but Frederic !
Fvancois-Marsal, minister of finance,
expressed' his personal opinion that
thirty years is the proper age at which
to begin. The bachelors are said to
be “rushing” the girls with the aim
of marriage.
Labor Forms Model Machine In W, Va.
charleston W Va_A. political or
ganiaation that will be “a model of
thoroughness and effectiveness’ is be¬
ing perfected for the coming election
by the West Virginia Federation of
Labor, according to the campaign
plans, made public in Charleston by j
F. Kearney, district president of the !
United Mine Workers. The organi
zation will function in every political
subdivision of the state from the con- j
gressional district tc the precinct, Mr.
Keaney said.
SWITCHMEN ARE
GOING TO WORK
CENTERS OF TRANSPORTATION
FROM COAST TO COAST
ARE TIED UP
SENATE WILL PROBE STRIKE
Over Twenty-Five Thousand Men Are
Reported To Be In State
Of Idleness
Chicago.—Switchmen who have been
on strike here for nine days are re¬
turning to work.
Brotherhood officials who have been
fighting the “illegal” walkout of their
men, do not claim that the strike is
broken, but were much encouraged by
reports from several roads that the
men in small groups are reporting
for work.
Reports show railroad centers from
coast to coast either partially or com¬
pletely tied up by tte spreading wave
of strike. Cities which have reported
estimate a total of 25,437 men to be
idle. To this number must be added
hundreds of thousands of men and
women forced out of employment, in¬
directly, by the railroad walkout.
Factories in many cites are closing
down because of lack of coal or raw
materials. In Chicago fifty thousand
packing house workers are idle. Many
[railroads who have part in the strike
j I have likewise been lockout f••eight o yards. it bo
cause of t ie tie-up in the
Yardmen in Cleveland, Hornell,
N. Y„ and Denver, Colo., are to vote
cn the strike question. In several cit¬
ies where meetings have been held,
the men voted to stick to the old bro¬
therhoods and have nothing to do with
the “outlaw” organizations behind the
present walkout.
In Kansas Governor Allen has in¬
voked the new industrial court law
against the strikers in the Rosedale
yards at Kansas City.
John Grunau, president of the insur¬
gent union, the Chicago yardmasters’
association, declared that the question
of wages and hours had become of
secondary importance and that the
real fight was for supremacy over the
older brotherhoods.
DEMOCRATS MAY SHIFT
THEIR NATION CONVENTSON
TO OAKLAND, CALIF
The Chairman Of The National Demo¬
cratic Committee Says Meeting
Will Be Held In San Francisco
Chicago.—Fred Lynch, national com¬
mitteeman from Minnesota, says that
dissatisfaction of Democratic party
leaders with the convention accommo-,
dations at San Francisco will be aired
at the national committee meeting to
be held here April 20, wlun a proposal
to move the convention across the bay
A dispatch from Waterbury, Conn.,
says the democratic national conven-;
tion will be held in San Francisco.
This statement is direct from Homer
S. Cummings, chairman of the Demo¬
cratic national committee.
Cummings made this declaration,
when he was shown a dispatch saying
it was proposed to hold the convention
in Oakland. “I strongly doubt that
Mr. Lynch has been correctly quoted,”
he states. “There is always a cer.
tain amount of dissatisfaction and
complaint at this stage of the game.
The convention will be held in Sap
Francisco and not across the bay as
proposed. I have a personal represen¬
tative in San Francisco at present and
he will go ahead with the program ay
planned.”
LEON TROTZKY FAVORS
COMPULSORY WORK FOR
PRODUCTIVE SYSTEM
Moscow.—Militarization is the
the only means to fully utilize Rus¬
sia's man-power, Leon Trotzky is re¬
ported to have said, when he address¬
ed the convention of the Communist
party. The address was chiefly direct¬
ed to defining the relation of the mo¬
bilization of industry to the industrial
rehabilitation of Russia.
Minister of War Trotzky declared
the working army, which is built up
on the principle of compulsory work,
is no less productive than was the old
system of competition and came out
in favor of personal rather than col
lective administration.
To Bring Back Dead U. S. Soldiers
New York.—Bringing from South¬
ampton (England) bodies of 87 Ameri¬
can soldiers who died in the service
of their country on foreign soil, the
army transports Nansemond clocked
here, her flag at half mast. The bod¬
ies were those of enlisted men, most
of whom died during the war at avia¬
tion and base camps in Great Britain.
They were brought home by the gov¬
ernment for delivery to relatives and
friends and for final interment in cero
eteries of their native land.
England Honors United States Navy
New York.—The sum of 6.000 pounds
sterling, subscribed in England for the
erection of a memorial to the Anier
ican navy for its asisstance in sweep
ing the English channel of mines and
patrolling it against submarines, was
brought to New York on the steam¬
ship Carmania by Maj. Evelyn Wrench.
He said he would ask Secretary Dan¬
iels to accept this tribute to Ameri¬
cans who helped keep the Straits of
Dover open for allied operations dur¬
ing, the war. *—i..
BIG APPROPRIATION FOR NAVY
Additional Funds For Naval Aviation
Will Be Provided And Experi¬
ments Will Be Financed
Washington.—Although standing on
the 1921 naval building program as
authorized by the house, the senate
naval affairs committee will recom¬
mend an increase of $39,000,000 over
house appropriations to enable quick
construction. The house bill author*
ized a total of $424,500,000.
The . senate committee, which vir¬
tually completed the naval bill, and
plans to report it to the senate, also
granted liberal increases for other na¬
val enterprises, including an increase
Df nearly ten million dollars for na¬
val aviation.
To complete the 1916 program as
decided on by the house, the senate
committee raised the appropriation
from $48,000,000 to $52,000,000. Items
of eleven million dollars for torpedo
boat construction and forty-five^, mil¬
lion dollars far armor plate were left
unchanged.
In providing additional funds for
naval aviation the senate committee
increased the house item for naval
aircraft from $3,464,000 to $6,500,000,
and that for new aviation stations
from $1,257,000 to $5,400,000. Funds
for experiments and developing all
types of aircraft w r ere increased from
$2,935,000 to $3,700,000.
MORE THAN FIFTY THOUSAND
RAILWAY MEN ARE IDLE IN
CHICAGO; R. R’s ARE HARD HIT
Mieged That Outlaw Unions Are Be¬
ing Formed To Enforce
Wage Demands
Chicago.—An unauthorized strike of
railroad employees, which started in
the Chicago switching district by the
discharge of a yard conductor, has
spread until it has affected twenty-five
railroads and in Chicago has thrown
more than fifty thousand men out of
work, either directly or indirectly.
More than ten thousand union rail¬
way men in Chicago and several hun¬
dred at Buffalo and at Champaign, 111.,
are on strike. Many hundreds of men
in Chicago packing houses were
thrown out of work for lack of live
stock.
Two “outlaw” organizations brand¬
ed by the established brotherhoods as
‘rump” unions, have sprung up to
:hallenge the right of the labor heads
to lead their men.
In the face of this opposition from
within, the brotherhoods of engineers,
railway trainmen, firemen and engine
men and the switchmen’s union of
North America, pledged their support
to railroad officers in breaking the
walkout, and to that end union rail¬
road men throughout the country
liave been urged to report to Chicago
to serve as strike breakers.
ALLEGED MURDERER, AFTER
HIDING FOR FOURTEEN YEARS,
SURRENDERS IN TENNESSEE
Athens, Tenn.—After fourteen years,
luring which time he has been living
n security somewhere under an assum¬
'd name, Richard Derick, astonished
Sheriff Lawson of this county by qui¬
etly walking into the jail and surren
lering for trial on the charge of hav
n g murdered Hugh Duggan near En¬
glewood.
The killing took place fourteen
pears ago this month and had been,
to a great extent, forgotten. Derick
vas indicted at the time, but he es
•aped arrest, left the community, later
sent for his family and, under another
lame, has lived and prospered.
He told ^the sheriff that two weeks
igo he promised his wife, who was
m her deathbed and has since died,
hat he would bring the children back
o Athens and give the mtheir right
lame.
Department Of Public Works Discussed
Washington.—The 1,305 member or¬
ganizations of the United States cham
>er of commerce are to be asked to
?ive their opinion by referendum on
he question of whether the federal
government should establish a depart
nent of public works. The referendum
will determine the chamber’s attitude
when the project comes up before con¬
gress. The engineering council, a
nember of the national chamber of
commerce, believes there is ned for
such a department to carry on work
)f an' engineering and construction
character.
Paris Says Wilson “Is Responsible’
Paris.—The French hold President
; Wilson partly responsible for the Ger
| j man entrance into the Ruhr basin,
‘His Ruhr note favoring admitting the
Germans into the Ruhr basin un
! loubtedly furnished the Germans with
the final encouragement,” says Ste
;:hen Lauzanne, editor of The Matin,
‘Flushed with their success in ten
previous treaty evasions and with fair
; reason to count on Wilson’s support
his time. Berlin evidently decided the
moment had come to risk the boldest
Evasion of all.”
(A^oman Animated Interrogation Point
New York.—The American woman,
m the aggregate, is an “animated in- j
terrogation point,"' in the opinion of j ;
Mrs. George Bass, head of the worn
m‘s il committee, division of who the Democratic nation- j
is opening head¬
quarters here. “The women,” she add
d. “are not concerned so much about
arty lines. They wish to know what
he candidates are going to do, how
hey are going to do it and why. And
because the Democratic party will be
noref luid. most of the women of the
.‘ountiv will be Democrats.”
.grocer, i 02
e kidn|j
“My s
fea-baek. #1 ful for it W as°L® J. 15 y
IJor bendTfe me '
tn
3,0 news acted u.,™'
- ---- —J'iDg nevRik"’® K
condition soon put my and back entirely and kid’’ mJ ,n f
complaint.” cured d me of
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■^ir-renurmBt^
U. b. Army Overalls and Khaki
Breeches, 95c per Pair
or $60 per 100. Army drab wool shirts $1.75
ea. or $16.50 doz. Russet shoes, worth new
$10, $3.05 pr. Hob nailed shoes, $2.05 pr.
These g’oods all used by army, but are clean
and serviceable. We carry complete line of
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( OW PEAS—FOR SEED; Brown and Blue
Whippoorwills $5.50 per bushel; mixed peas
$5.25; white peas. $5; send me an order
quick, as supply is limited. Cane seed 3c
pound. J. A. Collier. Boaz, Alabama.
UK A DETECTIVE—-$50-5100 weekly; travel
over world; experience unnecessary. Ameri¬
can Detective Agcy., 303 Syndicate, St. Louis.
Entertain for Pleasure
and Profit
“The Great Mysteries," an illustrated expose
that explains the secrets of the “Handcuff
Kings." Price 50 cents. "Vaudeville Ven¬
triloquism." an easily acquired art. Price
$1.00. “Vaudeville Magic." an abundance of
secrets, etc. Price $1.00. Send orders for
these books to the publishers.
R. XV. XV. DOIDGE
IB Elm St. Somerville, Massachusetts
Kill All Files! they spread
DISEASE
jrinisre
Guarantee*
. ________— at your dealer or
5 by EXPRESS, prepaid. Si ®. b. „ 1
IAROLD SOMERS, 150 De Kalb ATg- Brooklyn,
: Id Dempsey, Champions Ty for C’ohb the ami present, Dube but RoNj «r»
■FT HAMMER HAIR TOXIC” is a World
mpton not for an nee but for all •
guarantee it to positively cure the ■
_
born case of Dandruff in the w 5
nd your money. For local skin j
a sure remedy; cures shingles,
thing, pimples, tetter, eexemt.
and $1.25 hands. bottle. Once Dandruff a user altta^ Hammer H jf
2 per P. O. Box 61, Oadsu
e Co . Desk B.
To abort a cold
and prevent com®
plications, take
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain¬
ed and sealed improved. packag ^ c ‘ a
only in 35c.
Price
/ED
FRECKLES g^.ss£s ©’226® l£S»« >'
ATLANTA, NO. 16"' 5 *
W. N. U.,