Newspaper Page Text
A SEAT IN THE COMMONS
Going to Parliament a Co#tiy
For Englishmen.
Every Englishman who is not
nate enough to lie a peer wants to
come an M. P. Every man who
succeeded in business or
life feels that a coveted $eat in
commons is necessary to round out
career. But many men of
means are deterred from
their ambitions by tbe big expense
tailed- No salaries are paid, and.
sides supporting himself, an Mi I’.
called upon to meet heavy drains
Ills pocketbook during Ills entire term.
At the most moderate estimate
expense# of a campaign are $ 5 , 000 .
Once elected, the member must "nurse”
Ids constituents. Clubs and charities
tire tin; greatest beneficiaries of this
nursing, but many individuals come in
i' >r assistance also. Not less than
OCA a year is required for this Item,
Which for a term of five years repre
s; nts an outlay of $10,000.
All toid, then, a prospective member
faces an outlay of $20,000 in addition
to bis living expenses, which in Lon¬
don are far from moderate when he
maintains himself in keeping with the
dignity of his position.
Many of the commoners of course
spend far more than the above amount
And, in addition to tbe cash outlay,
some of them find their lives embitter¬
ed by the worries and exactions of
their positions.
BALLOONING.
With an Experienced Pilot In Charge
It I# Not Dangerous.
The uninitiated are prone to look up¬
on tiie balloon ns a sort of country
fair attraction, whose principal Inter¬
cut lies in tbe risk the aeronaut takes.
Tills is a mistake.
Like the automobile, the balloon re¬
quires an experienced pilot, and when
such a one is in charge serious or fatal
accidents are never recorded. Most
balloon clubs require oil ascensions to
be made under a regularly licensed
pilot, who receives his certificate from
the dub only after having demon¬
strated his fitness. The pilot who is
willing to go up only in favorable
weather and to come down at the
proper time need never endanger lives,
lie knows he has only to open the
valve and he can descend. lie has only
to throw out a handful of sand, and
he can prevent his balloon from com¬
ing down or can send it up. When he
is ready to land lie picks out a favor¬
able. spot ahead of him, lets his bal¬
loon come, gradually down near the
ground, cuts loose the anchor which
f lops his progress, then opens the
valve again if necessary. When the
ear touches the ground he tears out
the ripping strip, and the balloon
stretches out on the ground, a flat and
empty bag.—F. P. Lahm, U. S. A., in
Outing Magazine.
The Lovs of Nature.
A Japanese friend of mine lived in
Paris for a year. Waking on a win¬
ter’s morning, he found that snow had
fallen in the night. As a matter of
course be took his way to the Bois de
Boulogne to admire the beauty of the
snow upon the trees. What was his
astonishment when with his compan¬
ion, a compatriot, lie nrrived in the
Hols to find It entirely solitary and
deserted. The two Japanese paid their
vows to beauty in tbe whiteness and
the stillness of the morning nnd at last
beheld in the distance two other fig¬
ures approaching. They wex-e com¬
forted. “We are not quite alone,”
they said to themselves. There were
at least two other “just men” in that
city of the Indifferent and the blind.
The figures drew' nearer. They
were Japanese.—London Saturday Re¬
view.
The City of Hose#.
Ispahan, Persia, is known as the
“city of rases,” but « traveler says
that the streets “are only alleys be¬
tween two high mud walls, without a
sfbgle window or opening to he seen—
merely here and there a low, narrow
doorway, always Impenetrably closed.
The ground is thickly coated with dust,
the streets arc rarely straight, and nev¬
er Iv.w they got any name. The sense
of ruin is everywhere—hero a wall Is
falling down, there n palace Is In
ruins, a little farther a deserted
mosque Is skirted. Such is Ispahan,
whiclt from having at one time a pop¬
ulation of 1,000,000 is now reduced to
barely 100,000 inhabitants.”
The Slow Train.
A conductor on n certain train noted
for Its slowness asked a hoary headed,
white boarded passenger for bis ticket
“I gave it to you,” said tbe old man.
“I guess not.” the conductor replied.
“Whcre'd you get on?”
“At Buxby’s Crossiug.”
“Why.” the conductor cried, “there
wasn’t anybody got on at Buxby’s
Crossing except one little boy,”
“I,” said the aged one, “was that
little boy.”—Lippineott’s.
Cheesing a Husband.
A well known after dinner speaker
in Now York said the other day:
“Choosing a husband is like choosing
mushrooms. If it is a mushroom you
live; if . it is a toadstool you die.”—
What to Eat
Pertinent Question.
An English juror once asked the
judge after the verdict was returned
whether the fact that he differed from
his eleven brethren justified their
knocking him down with a chair.
Only Then.
"Does your husband snore in his
sleep, madam?’
“Well, doctor, I have never noticed
him snoring at any other time.**—Bal¬
timore American.
DOING EUROPE.
THi* Tourist Seemed to Have a Mania
For Souvenir#.
I hud met Jones before. In fact,
meeting him had become a sort of
habit. The first time I saw him he
was hanging by his feet, an apoplectic,
squirming mass, on the facade of Blar¬
ney castle, kissing the stone of elo¬
quence. My camera caught him In the
act. “Gad!” he sputtered when J told
him that his feat was immortalized.
“Is my face in it? Send me one. will
you? That'll prove to the folks back in
Zanesville that I did it.”
I had run across him again in Lon¬
don, where all ways meet I was saun¬
tering around the Whitechapel ghetto,
and through the window of an alley
tavern I noticed two men drinking
stout. One was a "bobby” in uniform.
His eyes were bleared and Ills face
purple. The profile of the other looked
familiar. I walked In and beheld—
Jones. The policeman, startled by my
intrusion, brought himself together and
wabbled out. Jones turned to me with
a look of vast reproach.
“Glad to see you again, old man, but
—why in the deuce couldn’t you stay
away a little longer? I’d have had it in
half an hour more.”
"Had what?”
“Why, his club. Lord, what a sou¬
venir that would have made!”
Our ways parted again for awhile. I
was riding a wheel over the crest of
the Black forest near Titisee, pumping
slowly to the top of the long, white
road. A pine cone struck my handle
bar, another knocked my lmt off, and
I looked up. An aerial voice emitted a
Tyrolean halloo with much unction,
and I saw a swaying speck silhouetted
against a cloud. My instinct told me it
was Jones.
“Hey, old mail!” he yelled, trumpet¬
ing through his hand, “take my pic¬
ture-quick. You’re just in time. Can’t
hold on much longer. Camera’s at foot
of tree. Lost it halfway up.”
IBs camera was smashed, so I used
my own. "Were you expecting me?” I
asked when he shinned down, with
harked hands and frayed trousers.
“No, not exactly. Look he re—big¬
gest pine cone In Germany, from the
tallest tree on top of the highest hill in
the Scbwargwnhl. There’s something
worth while!”
I admitted it, and we stood survey¬
ing the panorama of mounded hills
and deep cut gorges full of the sound
of falling water.
“Lovely!” I murmured.
“What? Oh. yes, I s'pose it is. But
say—I wonder if I couldn't find a big¬
ger cone somewhere in these parts.
Let’s move on.”—Wilfred H.- Alburn in
Outing Magazine.
Free Lunch For a Lion.
He was selling suspenders on the
street, but ho declared that in his
palmy days he had been i’rofessor
Pioeoiomini, the lion tamer.
“What made you give it up?” he
was asked.
“Well, you see it was this way. Once
I was engaged to tame a lion called
Frederick Barbarossa, who was cer¬
tainly a wild proposition.
“But I was equal to the task. By
slow and gradual steps I taught Fred¬
erick good manners. I used to walk
Into bis cage, snap a whip, make him
do stunts and all that sort of thing.
Everything went along beautifully.
But I got into trouble when I tried to
teach Frederick to eat out of my
hand.”
“How?”
“Why, he ate three fingers out of
my hand, confound him! Have a pair
of suspenders? They work without
hitching. Twenty-five cents." — New
York Times.
A Boomerang.
A very rich, very economical nnd
very parsimonious young squire was
making preparations for a tenants’
ball some years ngo and at his wine
merchant’s discovered a cheap brand of
champagne. “This,” he said, "is a
good brand of champagne. It is quite
good enough for those people who will
come to my tenants’ ball. They
couldn’t tell the difference, anyway.”
Accordingly he ordered a dozen cases
of the cheap wine. A day or two be¬
fore the event, picking up his news¬
paper, he noticed that his wine mer¬
chant had a half page advertisement.
He ran his eye over it nnd saw in big
black letters the paragraph, “Try our
celebrated champagne at 38 shillings a
dozen, as ordered by Gobsa Gold, Esq.,
for his forthcoming tenants’ ball.”—
Illustrated Bits.
Business Hours In Honolulu.
Business manners in Honolulu lack
the strain and flurry of tbe mainland
city. The hard, white, anxious Chicago
face no man wears here. The dodging
and hurrying to go around the man in
front are never seen. Tbeaceentof life
is on men, not money or machines.
There is not much doing before 10
o'clock, and at 4 the safes are locked,
the desks are shut, and the men who
do things are off for a ride or a swim
or a game of tennis. Here a man does
bis business.—Chicago News.
Anothsn View.
Mrs. Tourist—I’m afraid that the
monkey wouldn’t please my husband.
Vender—But madam will find it easier
to find another husband than to get a
monkey like that for 3 piasters!—
Translated For Transatlantic Tales
From Le IUre.
It Regrinds.
“The mil? will never grind again
ivith water that is past,” remarked the
mournful citizen.
“That’s where a joke mill has the
bulge on a water mill,” enekied the
cheerful press humorist. — Pittsburg
Post.
Tbe big responsibilities of married
life are little ones.—Bohemian.
THE MURRAY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1907
SHORN LAMBS.
Way# af the Men Who Lose Their All
in Walt Street.
What becomes of the men who lose
in Wall street. They are seldom heard
of. The visitor to New York gets the
notion that the gay crowd of men at
the Waldorf—the “uptown ‘street’
comprises them all. But this crowd
is altogether misrepresentative and has
no true sign value, says a writer on
Wall street in the New Broadway Mag¬
azine.
You can retain your equilibrium easi¬
ly in watching them by remembering
that Runner of New Britain is hid¬
ing somewhere, a fugitive from jus¬
tice; that Jumper of Milwaukee is in
prison; that there are many other men
who went down hard with big crash¬
es, and that for every one of the big
men there are 10,000 little men whose
losses are smaller, but not a whit less
fatal.
You would find some of them tonight
in New York, if you knew in what
window to look, figuring anxiously nnd
endlessly, looking over insurance pa¬
pers to see if further loans are ad¬
missible.
Their wives are sewing; their daugh¬
ters are studying stenography. Y’ou
will find others hanging about betel
lobbies, and the moment you catch
their eye or grip their hands you know
that they are nervous, distraught,
broke, restless—typical Wall street vic¬
tims.
The others, professionals, parasites,
satellites, winners, you will find in the
cafes and hotel restaurants, making
up a large part of the crowds at Sher¬
ry’s and Delraonlco’s, Martin’s and
Rector's, the Waldorf, Manhattan, As
tor, St. Regis and Holland House.
Wall street by day demands the Great
White Way at night. From the mo¬
ment the market opens till its close the
game is a fast and furious one of
sharp trickery, clever dodging, raillery,
bluffing, hypocrisy, lying.
Nerves are constantly tense: the
brain must be clear and quick at ev¬
ery move. Successful lying uses up
gray matter, and the flash and festivi¬
ty of the Tenderloin at night are just
unnatural enough to fit. in and offer
the kind of recreation desired.
SAW HIS OPPORTUNITY.
The Reporter Seized It and Got His
Real Start In Life.
All the city traveling public loves a
strap hanger beeause it has • fellow
feeling for him. This is why the story
of how Frank Vanderiip, the banker,
got his start has an almost universal
appeal. It happened when Vanderiip
was a reporter on a Chicago newspa¬
per mid writing financial news. The
traction situation then, as now, was al¬
most impossible. Charles T. Yerkes
was traction dictator, and the stock¬
holders and the public never had a
word to say in the conduct of the
roads. Nor could they get any definite
idea of the financial condition of the
properties.
Tlie time for the annual meeting of
the stockholders of the principal road
came along. At all the meetings Mr.
Yerkes had rattled off the reports in
the usual undecipherable corporation
way, and no one knew what was do¬
ing. So Vanderiip planned a coup.
Ho bought a share of stock, which
admitted him to thy meeting. He had
been a stenographer before he became
a newspaper man. When Mr. Yerkes
sailed into his breezy explanation of
finances the young reporter took down
everything ‘lie said. Mr. Yerkes used
one striking phrase, and it was this:
“The passengers who have seats pay
the operating expense.s, but the strap
hangers pay your dividends.”
The next day the sentence topped
Vanderlip’s account of the meeting.
It aroused a storm of discussion, for It
laid bare some of the traction methods;
also it got Vanderiip a raise in salary
and a promotion.—Saturday Evening
Post.
Nothing Like That In America.
“This was told me the other day,”
said a man, “by a friend who has just
made the tour of Ireland. He wns at
the lakes of Killnrney, and a jarvey
driving one of those side seated cars
yvas telling him of a visitor who was
Attempting to masquerade as an Amer¬
ican. but had all the outward signs of
being an Englishman.
“ ‘You say, sorr,’ said the jarvey,
‘that you live in the United States.
Were yez iver in Dubuque, la.?’
“ ‘I was,” said the traveler. ‘I was
there for a fortnight.’
“ 'Off wid ye!’ said the carman. ‘Ye
were niver there. Divil a fortnight do
they have in America.’ Iudiauapoiis
News.
Getting It Right.
It was on a street car in the city of
Washington. Two colored women in
cheaply gorgeous splendor were talk¬
ing. and one chanced to mention a Mr.
Jinks in her conversation.
“Excuse me,” said the other woman,
“but his name is not Jinks. It is Mr.
Jeoks.”
“Oh, I sees,” said the other woman
complaisantly. “I sees that you puts
de access on de pronoun.” — IJppin
cott’s.
A Bit of Sarcasm.
A young mau who bad prolonged his
call on his sweetheart a few nights
ago was surprised when a window in
an upper story was raised as be left
the house and the voice of the mistress
called out. "Leave an extra quart this
morning, please!"—Argonaut.
Her Fourth.
Lawyer—As your husband died in¬
testate. you will of course get a third.
Widow—Oh. I hope to get my fourth.
He was my third, you know.—Town
and Country.
NOT GOOD PATIENTS.
Doctor# Are Hard to Manage, Says a
Trained Nurse.
"I suppose it is treason to my supe¬
rior officer to say so, but doctors are
certainly not easy patients to man¬
age,” remarked the trained nurse. "At
least, this has always been my experi¬
ence, and most nurses, you will find,
agree with me in the matter. I have
recently been nursing a physician
through typhoid, and my experience
with him was typical of the cases of
the profession in general.
“Doctors know altogether too much
for their own peace of mind, you see.
Each new symptom is recognized, and
If it is an unfavorable one, why, the
patient’s weakened condition usually
leads him to lay great stress upon it.
Then, since be has always been in a
position to issue orders to the nurse,
he cannot easily bring himself to take
orders from her. and he is disposed to
criticise and take exception to treat¬
ment which the ordinary patient re¬
ceives as a matter of course.
“But perhaps the most troublesome
thiug of all is the mania which the
doctor has for taking his temperature.
If he has a moderately high fever and
is allowed to use the thermometer as
often as he wishes he can tret and
worry over the result enough to send
his temperature up materially. -More
than once rather than exasperate a
physician patient by a refusal to Set
him have the thermometer and rather
at the same time than let him know
just how high liis fever was 1 have
dropped the instrument just as 1 was
in the act of handing it to him. Of
course I apologize for ray carelessness
at such times, and the regret realty
does not have to be ail assumed, for I
am at the expense of buying myself a
new thermometer.
“At one time I had an inaccurate In¬
strument, which never registered high
enough, and 1 used to call it my doc¬
tor’s thermometer. By a little dexter¬
ity I could substitute this for the one
I actually used -myself, and the en¬
couragingly low' temperature it would
show would greatly please the patient.”
—New York Times.
SHOWING OFF A GUEST.
The Innkeeper Was Determined Fes¬
senden Should Appear.
One night while ex-Seeretary of the
Treasury Fessenden was on a political
mission to the northern part of Maine
he stop lied at a small hotel.
In the center of the house was a big
stove that warmed two rooms. In one
of the apartments Judge Fessenden
established himself nnd prepared to
take proper comfort during the even¬
ing. Just as he had got well located
with a book the landlord, a six foot
French Canadian, came in.
“Excuse me. ’seir,” said he, “but Mr.
Ed Wiggone of Mnysville, she be in de
odder room, an’ she wan' to see Mr.
Fessendeen.”
"Tell Mr. Wiggin I’ll lie In a little
later,” said Judge Fessenden, turning
another leaf in bis book.
The landlord went out. He returned
in a moment. “Mr. Wiggone she send
his compliments, an’ she say dat she
wan’ Mr. Fessendeen right away.”
The interruption just at that mo¬
ment rather nettled the judge, who
was in no way accustomed to dictator¬
ship. He sent back such a sharp re¬
ply that it was easily seen that the
landlord was cut by his asperity. In
just thirty seconds the landlord was
back. Judge Fessenden raised his
eyes to find the man staring at him
with a look of desperate resolve. With
suppressed excitement in his tones the
tall landlord spoke.
“Mr. Wiggone say she wan’ see Mr.
Fessendeen quick, an’ she guee’ o’ de
house, on’ 1 say she gon’ to see him.”
Forthwith the big landlord swooped
down on tbe astonished gentleman,
seized him. tucked him under his arm
and strode across into the room of the
peremptory gentleman from Maysville.
“Mr. Wiggones,” calmly said the
landlord, as matter of fact as though
he had just delivered ■’a stitcher of ice
water, “here be Mr. Fessendeen." lie
set the indignant “euller” down on a
chair and retired, smilingly.
Power of imagination.
Illustrating the strange power of the
imagination, E. F. Benson, author of
“Dodo,” tells this Incident; A doctor
he kuewjtad found it necessary to give
a patient for many evenings an injec¬
tion of morphia to enable him to get
some sleep. After awhile the doctor
thought it advisable to step the mor¬
phia. and for two nights lii.s patient
was unable to sleep, owing to great
pain. On the third night the doctor,
being still unwilling to administer mor¬
phia. injected plain water instead.
The man slept perfectly and awoke hi
the morning with what is known as
a morphine mouth.
Inopportuna Advice.
Mrs. Ascam—Miss Crahbe is a mem¬
ber of your suffrage club, isn’t she?
Mrs. Gaddie— No. we bad to expel bur
We were discussing the servant girl
question the other day and she had the
impudence to say that if we only stay¬
ed at home and attended to business
the servant question wouldn’t bother
us at ail.—Philadelphia Press.
Sensitive.
Motorist Cooniey — Beg pawdon, sub.
but kin yo’ infobm me how many miles
it am tell JayvIUe? Tbe Farmer —
Waal, ... . the files— Motorist , .
as crow
Coonlev—Doan’ git pussonal, sub, doau’
git pussonal. T>„.1- I Uck.
Gets it Weak. .
Biuks— Does strong coffee keep ‘ you
-
awake? , , Jinks—How I, do . T I know? , I .
board.—Somerville Journal.
Happy is the man who does all the
he talks of.—Italian Proverb.
Modestly Priced Overcoats
It’s not every man that
cares to invest a very large
sum of money in a Winter
Overcoat.
For the man who gives his
!:■ >! Overcoat hard service and yet
A*-?! wants style, lit and durability,
Eg at a moderate cost, we have
*fl§4 lines of Overcoats at
fapp iiStSi $5.00,7.50,10.00 lip 10 $25
i ;* ;
V These Coats are difficult to
distinguish from their higher
I i - M priced and more pretentious
relatives. They are well tail¬
II m ored from good fabrics, lined
«j **?-.*. with durable Serge, and carrv
all the style of the more ex
ti 2 ’f members of our Overcoat
Family.
For a good Overcoat—a satisfactory Overcoat at
a moderate price-—-we’re at your service.
THE .STORE OF LITTLE PRICES
WE Are Here to Give
¥
Our patrons what they want. We do not try to induce
them to take something else. If a customer wants Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, lie gets Hood’s Sarsaparilla. He is not im¬
portuned to take our own make. We like to treat our
customers right. It is both pleasant and profitable. We
have built up the largest drug establishment in Dalton by
gratifying our patrons’ wishes. There is no reason why
everybody in Murray County should not trade here. We
can give them decidedly the best service and our prices
ate fixed altogether according to what tilings are worth.
JFincher & Nichols...
Legal Notices
Sheriff Sales.
StaTJJ OF GEORGIA. Murray County
Wil| he sold on the first Tuesday m January
next at public outcry at the Court House in said
county within the legal hours following of sale real to the
to-wit: highest bitter for cash the estate
§7,000 feet of lumber, more of less, which is no w
.-hacked on lhe lumber yard of Stuart Br.
Murray county Georgia, Said lumber levied
upon as the property of John Beavers by virtue
ot and to satisfy a ‘foreclosure of a saw' mill
men s lien in favor of Stuart Bros. vs. John
Beavers. Said lumber will be sold as it stands
on the saw mill site above mentioned.
Also at the same time and place two bales of
cotton and M bushels of corn more or less.
Said property levied upon as the property of J.
)>. Brown bv virtue of and to Satisfy a mortgage
5 fa issued from the superior court of the alwve
mentioned county and state iii favor of b. W.
Thompson the vs. of j. the I). Brown said and levied This upon as
th property J, D, Brown, Dec.
5 1907 .
Also at the same time and place forty-five
thousand feet of oak, pine and poplar lumber,
now stacked at the mill of T. M. Whitson, on
the la .id of m M. Howell in 27 f h Dial, and ‘2nd
section of said county and to satis’y a lien 11 fa
from Einrrav Superior court, in favor of T. M.
Wni'sou vs. M. m, Howell. I, urn her will not be
brought to place of sale.
», H. WIU,RANKS, Sheriff.
To Be Dismissed.
GEORGIA. Murray county.
Ut rv. A^Fitschyr Fincher, ribain'^trator late upon the estate of
: :y n, o: al comity deceased,
having filed his petition for discharge. This is
to e tc alt panics concerned to show cause
agaimit the granting of the discharge at the
regular term of .'he court <tf Ordinary for said
county to be held oh the first Monday in January
K. M, GUDGKK. Ordinary.
To Be Appointed Guardian.
GEORGIA. Murray County,
John W. Martin a resident of said sta*e and
county guardian having of duly applied to be appointed
the property of Thomas Mat tin, a
minor residing* in said county. Notice is hereby
given that said application will be passed on at
the next court vi *tnlinarv for said county to be
held on the first Monday iu January .DOS. Wit¬
ness my hand and official seal this the 28, day of
Nov. ifcOT,
R. SI. GI’DgKR, Ordinary.
To Be Appointed Guardian.
GEORGIA, Murray County.
—J. T, Smith - resident of said state and coimty
of hsvjug the duly applied and to he appoiutea guardian '
person property of Alford Keys a
minor under the age of it years resident ta said
county. Notice is hereby given that sard appli¬
cation wilt he passed on at the next court of
Ordinary of said county tc. he held on the first
Mend«v iti January I its! Witness mv hand an.:
official seal this sue day of Nov. lwtf.
R. M. GUDCeR,O rdinary.
Application To Open Road.
CE Murray County.
in J amenciug and "uw£hm™t' at the in ereeccion of ! a P Ecw of (Sfiiic n*d'
co the Leonard
oriage road and me .and line between B. F,
Peeples and John umsta* Koilondm the i'7 district, di’
sridccuntv. them* m a northerly
recuou through lands of D. F, Peeples, John
Holland, J ' Stanford. <\ 1, Hexirv. R. M.
Codger, and Perdley Brick company.,- hd term
inatinir at south tad of cud avenue, Chstsworth,
Ga , length < f said road being about one mile,
»«« width thereoi rofeet.
Notice is hereby the given 3I1 that saidat>ph«ation JaaSaiy
wifi-be sufccient granted-os davof JtM>
fi : • cause is shown to the contrary.
C. v. T- e. Keith,
Owens.
T.M. Hemphill,
Commissioners
MONUMENTS
Georgia Marble Is Our Specially.
For the convenience of
our customers we will
send one of our represent*
atives to show our designs
and quote prices. Best ma¬
terial and workmanship
Eaton & coffey
Slop and Yard Dalton,
HE WORLDS GREATEST SEWING MACHINE
J
GRj
o V
* 3 " a
If you want either a V ibratlng Shuttle, Stitch] Rotary
Shuttle or a Single Thread [Chain
Sewing Machine write to
THE NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE COMPANY
% Orange. Mass. •
Many sewing machines are made to sell regardless Ol
Quality, but the Xew Home is made to wear.
Our guaranty never runs out.
Sold by authorized dealers only.
FOR SALE BY
Dealer Wanted.
World. Service afloat, ashore, and in our
island possessions. Age 19 to 35 years.
Salary $13.00 to $*7.00 per month; $237.00 clothing
allowance. Board, lodging and medical attendance
free. Excellent opportunity for promotion. For
full information apply in person or by letter to
U. S. MARINE CORPS RECRUITING OFFICE,
Cor. Peachtree and Auburn Ave., Atisnta.G*. Post Office
Building, Rome, Ga. Cannon Building. Dalton, G*.
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stops the cough end heal* lunge.