Newspaper Page Text
2
DODSON SOUNDS
CALOMEL S DOOM
The “Liver Tone’’ Man
Warns Folks Against the
f Sickening, Salivating
Drug.
Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. It’s
horrible! Take a dose of the dan
gerous drug tonight and tomorrow
you lose a day.
Calomel is mercury! When i<
comes into contact with sour bile, it
crashes into it, breaking it up. Then
is when you feel that awful nausea
and cramping. If you are sluggish,
if liver is torpid and bowels con
stipated or you have headache, diz
ziness, coated tongue, if breath is
bad or stomach sour, just try a
spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver
Tone tonight.
Here’s my guarantee —Go to any
drug store and get a bottle of Dod
son's Liver Tone for a few cents.
Take a spoonful and if it doesn’t
straighten you right up and make
you feel fine and vigorous, go back
to the store and get your money.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying
the sale of calomel because it can
pot salivate or make you sick.
(Advt.)
SQUEEZED
TO DEATH
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it is usually an indication that the
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t Ad vert.’sement)
Rupture Kills
7,000 Annually
i' ———
'■ Seven thousand persons each year are laid
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t 'learn how to close ttie hernial opening as
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trial Piapao and the Information necessary.
(Ad*t.)
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THE ATLANTA THI-XVEEKLY JOURNAL.
GOMPERSATTACKS
RECOMMENDATIONS
DF ROUND TABLE
WASHINGTON, March . 20.—(8y
th© Associated Press.) —Recommen-
dations by President Wilson’s con
ference for the settlement of indus
trial unrest were attacked today by
Samuel Gompers. president of the
American Federation of Labor.
The labor leader in a prepared
statement said the machinery for ad
justing’ disputes between employes
and employers “which has for years
been in existence in practically ev
ery organized industry In the United
States is superior to the machinery
now suggested by the industrial con
ference both in point of simplicity
and in point of effectiveness.”
“The conference,” said Mr. Gom
pers, “has devised a mass of ma
chinery to be made effective’ by law.
composed of a national industrial
board and local aild regional con
ferences and boards of inquiry. The
whole situation in this respect may
be summed up as follows:
“Tried and tested machinery for
conciliation and arbitration between
employers and employes exists wher
ever employes are organized.
“This machinery functions per
fectly wherever employers forsake
the spirit of dominance and the at
titude of autocracy.
"Through the use of this machin
ery it has been found possible to
maintain industrial peace with no
Stoppage of work of any kind for
periods ranging from ten to forty
years. No machinery devised by the
government or its agencies or su
pervised by the government or any
of its agencies, could achieve results
superior to the results achieved by
machinery which has long been in
operation in our industrial life
Organization Essential
"In industries where the employes
are not organized, no machinery of
any kind, whether supervised by gov
ernmental agencies or otherwise, can
produce industrial justice. Organiza
tion of workers is the fact upon
which must be predicated the exist
ence of any machinery for the set
tlement of disputes or the extension
of the principles of democracy in
industry.
“Surely no intelligent agency can
hope to achieve progress in Ameri
can industry without organization of
the workers.
"With organization of workers, no
structure of machinery need be thrust
upon it from the outside. Organiza
tion brings with it machinery which
is both adequate and practical, the
result of experience shorn of any of
the fantasies of pure theory.
"Th© report of the industrial con
ference merits criticism of a very
serious nature in connection with the
emphasis which it places on what it
terms 'employe representation,’ un-
- which generic term it groups
those distinctly local shop organiza
tions known as shop committees, shop
councils, works councils and repre
sentative government industry. It
is to be feared that the commission
views industry from th> viewpoint
of the single shop and builds Its
machinery on the theory that dis
putes are to be settled shop by shop.
If such a viewpoint is to be actually
carried into operation it would be
-nost disastrous.
Alleged Leader of
Burglar Gang Is
Arrested in Macon
MACOSf, Ga„ March 20.—The al
leged leader of the band of burglars
that stole thousands of dollars worth
of groceries from wholesale houses
here recently, was arrested Saturday.
He made a full confession, officers
say. He is Will Clyde, a negro, who
recently completed a twelve months’
term on the chaingang for stealing
an automobile. Clyde said, accord
ing to officers, that he was assisted
by another negro, but he refused to
give his name.
Fart of the stolen goods was re
covered, but he declined to tell how
he disposed of the others. A but
ton from a coat found in a stolen
automobile led to the arrest of Clyde
by detectives. He admitted, it is
said, the car was used to haul the
loot away. The detectives declined
to say where they found the stolen
goods other than they were not in
Macon.
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HERE’S A STACK THAT IS A STACK
< KIEL, Germany.—lt looks like
J g ' ' j it might be a tunnel for the Hud-
B - son river - ' However, the great
tower shown in the above picture
' i s merel y a smokestack that is be-
ring built here. It is to be mount-
I ed on the S. S. Columbus. The
peace-time industry of shipbuild-
F&lpOßg*4. i- * ng as taken tlie P laee o£ war
work at Kiel.
JMk- |\\ <s 3“
“Hanging” at the Polls
Favored by Women for
Violators of Promises
NEW YORK. March 20.—Women
appear to favor political capital pun
ishment for political offenders.
Two speakers,' addressing the com
mittee of one thousand Democratic
women here late today, declared that
if male officeholders violate their
.pre-election promises, "we ought to
hang ’ein—at the polls.” The mem
bers indorsed this sentiment by vo
ciferous applause.
Talk of political lynching began
when Mrs. John Sherwin Crosby,
chairman, referred to defeat of the
peace treaty by the senate as “a
disgrace.”
"If we women had gone down to
Washington and said ‘do this and
do that’ we would have accomplish
ed something and saved th© country
this disgrace,” she declared.
"Ordinarily, I am not in favor of
capital punishment, but in the case
of public servants who wilfully dis
regard the desires and welfare of the
people I believe they should be
hanged—at the polls.’’
Later, Mrs. Anna M. Cross, secre
tary, took occasion to berate office
holders who failed to tvork for their
constituents and asserted “we ought
to hang ’em at th© next election,”
and if we organize the way we should
we should be in position to do it.”
Further indication that women have
No Palmer Sentiment in
Gainesville; People Want
Hoover, Says H. H. Perry
Editor The Journal: The members
of the little “subcom” no doubt think
they are very "smart.” Whenever
they get into a corner they discover
some old rule, real or pretended, and
arrived at the “fifty-fifty” point in
politics was given when Mrs. Cros
by proceeded to scold Judge Abram
I. Elkus when he failed to keep his
appointment as a speaker.
“We women are not going to be
satisfied any longer by men calling
us up five or ten minutes before a
meeting and telling us they cannot
keep their appointments to . speak,”
she said.
"Judge Elkus may have a very
good reason for not coming, but the
time has gone when men can pull
the wool over women’s eyes. If they
want our vote, they’ve got to work
fov’dt—and our vote counts just as
much as the men’s.”
Miss Elizabeth Marbury, one of the
four Democratic delegates at large
from New York, who will attend the
national convention, declared against
ind'«e<rement of presidential candi
dates by Democratic women at this
time.
"Why, all the present candidates
maybe dead —politically—by con
vention time,” she said.
Miss Marbury said that several
women with the interest of certain
candidates at heart had talked with
her recently, generally prefacing the
conversation with rne statement
that they intended to “lay all their
cards on the table.”
make a fancied escape by some such
rat-hole. But no rule committee can
make any rule, it matters not when
made, which usurps all authority not
delegated. The servant is not above
the master. Can any agent make a
rule depriving his principals of the
right to direct their own business?
The committee members seem to be
all active supporters of Mr. Palmer
and their course is simply a fraudu
lent abuse of their position to pro
mote the interests of their special
candidate.
The end should never be sacrificed
to the means. The very object and
purpose and aim of the Democratic
party is to preserve government by
the people. But we can make such
a fetish of mere party machinery as
td destroy the very principle the
party is organized to promote.
Shall we kill the horse to save the
saddle? Just think of it! This
country and its institutions belong to
the people. Yet under our present
political methods, while the people
by their votes must elect a president,
how little voice have they in deciding
for whom they shall vote!
This question In which they and
their children and children’s children
are so vitally concerned is taken out
of their hands and the party pro
cedure arranged with such diabolical
ingenuity, that it is left to be at
last entirely controlled by a few de
signing politicians, and the balance
of us forced to vote, if we vote at all,
for some one we have had no part in
selecting.
Is this democracy? Or is it in
fernal trickery?
Petitions have been individually cir
culated in Gainesville and surround
ing country simply requesting Palmer
to speak here. There is no objection
to this. They were signed as a mat
ter of courtesy. But a dishonest use
of this fact was made by trying to
make it appear that the Hoover
movement had subsided. On the con
trary, every man on the original peti
tion, who was seen, except two or
three, signed the second statement
published in The Journal Friday. Two
or three, I recall, declined to sign,
on the ground that Hoover did not
declare himself a partisan Democrat.
Some are deceived by that view. But
there is positively no Palmer senti
ment in Gainesville.
H. H, PERRY.
Dutch Are Kicking on
Crown Prince’s Pet Dog
WIERENGEN, Holland, March 20.
A huge mastiff which the former
German Crown Prince Frederick Wil
liam has adopted as a pet and which
accompanies him on his daily strolls
through the village, has been made
the subject of an official complaint to
the village council. Schoolmaster de
Ruyter charged that the dog bit him
and wanted it declared a nuisance,
but the petition apparently was
tabled.
FOUR STEPS OPEN
TO PRESIDENT ON
TREATYPROCEDURE
WASHINGTON, March 20.—Presi
dent Wilson’s next step as the re
sult of the senate’s rejection of the
treaty of Versailles will be to nego
tiate temporary agreements with the
allies and Germany to protect Amer
ican interests and allow a virtual re
turn to peace, it was believed to
night, pending a decision by the peo
ple on the League of Nations in the
November elections.
Four steps that the president can
now take were outlined as follows:
One —He can send the rejected
treaty back to the allies, with the
declaration that the United States
cannot now reach an agreement on it.
Two —He can let tfie state of war
continue while the question of rati
fication goes into the campaign.
Three —He can negotiate a sep
arate peace with Germany, either
sending another peace delegation to
Europe, or accepting the Knox reso
lution for declaration of peace,
should that measure be passed |>y
congress.
Four—He can negotiate temporary
agreements—or a modus vivendl—
with the allies and Germany to
bridge the period from now until the
treaty is voted on by the people.
Os the four courses outlined, it
was believed that the last would be
the one decided on by the president.
The first course is not expected
to be favored in view of the posi
tion Mr. Wilson has taken that the
people of the United States want
the treaty. It is not believed he will
adopt the second course, as this
would leave the country in the half
way position between peace and war.
The third course, to negotiate a
separate treaty of peace with Ger
many, the president has frequently
denounced.
A satisfactory modus vivendi ne
gotiated between the United States
and the allies and Germany would
allow a return to virtually normal
conditions and would protect Amer
ican rights under the treaty of Ver
sailles, should the United States
later agree to the pact, it was
pointed out.
Under such temporary arrange
ments, it was believed, diplomatic re
lations could be resumed between the
United States and Germany for tem
porary expediency. Travel probably
would be permitted between the two
countries, whereas at present the
United States does not admit apy
Germans except in isolated cases
where their presence is in connection
with urgent business needs and would
be beneficial to this country, and the
state department does not issue pass
ports to Americans to go to Germany.
Passports are issued, however, for
surrounding countries with the un
derstanding that the Americans can
go into Germany at their own risk.
A more normal economic condition
also would be effected, it was said.
At present there is some trade be
tween this country and Germany. But
the large quantities of food and raw
materials greatly needed by Germany
can only be obtained in this country,
it was pointed opt, and capital will
not extend credit for such purchases
under the existing uncertain rela
tions.
The United States could safeguard
its interests, such as rights in the
German ships now held with a "gen
tlemen’s agreement” with the allies,
until it had been decided whether
this country would adopt the Ver
sailles treaty.
RIGID ECONOMY TO
BE WATCHWORD
OF CONGRESS
WASHINGTON, March 20.—With
the peace treaty disposed of, con
gress today began clearing decks for
the national campaign which soon
will be in full swing. Leaders in
both houses plan to speed action on
the remaining domestic measures tn
the next two months so politics can
have the right of way, from the time
th© national conventions meet.
Republican leaders will insist on
jamming through the ten or more
regular appropriation bills and the
other important measures. Among
the latter are. the waterpower bill,
the army reorganization bill, the bud
get measure, and several tariff bills
to protect the dyestuffs, chemical
glassware and magnesite industries.
No general revision of taxes is ex
pected. Rigid economy will be the
majority’s watchword from now on,
leaders say. Appropriation bills will
be cut to the bone. This is expected
to prevent action on the question of
soldier bonuses. Secretary Houston
already has dispelled any prospects
of lowering income taxes.
Several important investigations
are scheduled, chiefly the United
States grain corporation, the federal
trade commission and a continuation
of the Daniels-Sims controversy
probe, which will require several
weeks to complete.
Wholesale Prices
Throughout America
Increase in February
WASHINGTON, March 20.—Whole
sale prices generally increased
throughout the United States dur
ing February ai compared With Jan
uary, the labor department announced
today. The increase was slightly
more than .00 4 per cent.
Lumber and building materials
showed an Increase of nearly 12 per
cent, metals 7 per cent, and chemi
cals 4 1-4 per cent, while smaller
increases were reported for cloth,
clothing and fuel and lighting.
Farm products and food articles,
however, decreased generally in
wholesale price corresponding to the
Slight general decrease in retail prices
for the month announced by the de
partment yesterday. The decrease
in wholesale prices of farm products
and food articles was 3 1-2 per cent.
Reviewing the year ended in Feb
ruary, the department announced:
"Farm products increased nearly
9 per cent; food, 24 1-2 per cent;
cloths and clothing, 60 per cent; fuel
and lighting, 11 per cent; metals
and products, 12 1-2 per cent; lum
ber and building materials, 84 per
cent; chemicals and drugs, 6 1-2 per
cent, and house furnishing goods
nearly 49 per cent.”
Wants No Mourning
LONDON, England.—Thomas Hen
ry Whiteside in his will advised his
mourning children to play the piano
eight days after his death and start
to enjoy life as if he was still with
them.
CASTO RIA
For Infants and Children
in Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
He Found $1,200,000
And Gets $2 Reward
* ' fl
X’
HAJEIKr
NEW YORK. —Harry H. Hahn,
seventeen, a clerk for the Stand
ard Oil company, found an order
on the Bank of Montreal to give
the bearer $1,200,000 in railroad
bonds, while walking on Broad
way. He took it to a well-known
brokerage firm which had signed
the order. A reward of $2 was
handed over and Harry was told
that he was an nonest boy and
probably would make his way in
the world.
MRS INNES WILL
BE REARRESTED
ON HER RELEASE
Mrs. Ida Mae Innes, who, with her
husband, Victor E. Innes, Has been
a prisoner at the state penitentiary
after conviction on a charge of lar
ceny after trust in connection with
the disappearance of the Nelms sis
ters, will be released from state
custody on Tuesday. She will be im
mediately rearrested, however, by
federal agents and brought to At
lanta to stand trial under an indict
ment charging her with use of the
United States mails to defraud.
Mrs. Innej was sentenced to serve
three years and her husband ten,
but five months have been taken
off her sentence for good behavior
in prison. Victor Innes is now a
member of the convict gang in De-
Kalb county.
The federal indictment charges that
Mrs, Innes and her husband used
tjie mails to defraud Mrs. Eloise
Nelms Dennis and her sister, Miss
. Beatrice Nelms, out of several thou
sand dollars. It is alleged that the
Inpes couple wrote letters to the
Nelms sisters promising to make in
vestments with funds to be provided
by the Nelms sisters, in return for
which $50,000 would be "ortcoming
for every SI,OOO invested. The in
dictment, which was returned in 1915,
carries copies of letters alleged to
have been written to the Nelms sis
ters.
■ Victor Innes and his wife were first
charged with the murder of., the
Nelms sisters in one of the most
sensational cases in the, history of
American courts. Under the Jaws of
Texas, where the Nelms sisters dis
appeared mysteriously, it is neces
sary to prove the corpus delicti, or
in other words, to prove the victim
Is dead, before conviction can be se
cured. It was impossible to pro
duce the bodies of the Nelms sisters
and tbj murder charge was dropped.
Subsequently, however, the Innes
co tple stood trial in Fulton county
for larceny after trust and were con
victed of having misapplied funds
belonging to the missing sisters.
Occupation of Turkey
Is Only Provisional,
General Milne Says
LONDON, March 20.—General
Milne, commander of British forces
occupying Constantinople, has Issued
a statement declaring that allied oc
cupation of the Turkish capital is
only provisional, a dispatch here to
day said.
The entente does not wish to
weaken the sultan’s authority in
matters under him. General Milne
said. It does not wish to deprive
the Turks of Constantinople, but,
Milne warned, these decisions will
be modified if massacres by Turks
continue.
Important to all Women
Readers of this Paper
Thousands upon thousands . of
women have kidney or bladder trou
ble and never suspect it.
Women’s complaints often prove to
be nothing else but kidney trouble,
or the result of kidney or bladder
disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy
condition, they may cause the other
organs to become diseased.
You may suffer pain in the back,
headache and loss of ambition.
Poor health makes you nervous, ir
ritable and may be despondent; it
makes any one so.
But hundreds of women claim
that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, by
restoring health to the kidneys,
proved to be just the remedy need
ed to overcome such conditions.
Many send for a sample bottle to
see what Swamp-Root, the great
kidney, liver and bladder medicine
will do for them. By enclosing ten
cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, N. Y., you may receive sample
size bottle by Parcel Post. You
can purchase’ medium and large
size leottles at all drug stores.
(Advt.)
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can show it to your frienda. It will
he a big advertisement for us.
If you have a little spare time, >
you can easily make from vTrrLjgy
and besides that be the best- 4
dressed man io your town. It’s an jre '
opportunity you cannot anord to Bi iZjIM
overlook. Don’t delay a minute.
Write for thio Rio Offer at
Dropus a lino or send us your name
on a postal card and we will send tg
you absolutely Free* our wonderful FW
style book, containing dozens of sam
plea and fashion plates tochoose from. IS wW
Write Now. Everything sent Free iw
and postage prepaid. M
THE PROGRESS TAILORING CO. M
Dept. 355
WATCH AND RING FREE
n*ffh grade men's and
women s sizes. Thin mod-
Ten y? ar tniaranteo.
c f OGr beautiful
ttrt religious pictures
at Everybody wants
T?y m *. . When sold send uo tbo ?3.0J and choose watch or
other highly desirable prize fromonr bi? list. You can sell the
pictures in ono day. Send your nr.’no and address today.
c - • --*7
TUESDAY, MARCH. 23, 1020.
LEWISTON WOMAN IS
NOW WELL AND HAPPY
Mrs. Alice McCluskey Says
She Wishes She Had
Heard Os Tanlac Twen
ty Years Ago—Would
Have Saved Her Lots
Os Suffering.
“I have been trying for twenty
long years to find a medicine that
would overcome my troubles, but my
efforts failed me completely until I
commenced taking Tanlac,” was the
remarkable statement made recently
by Mrs. Alice McCluskey, residing at
No. 66 Park Street, Lewiston, Me., a
well-known and most highly respect
ed woman of that city.
“I just feel like I would give the
world to meet everyone who suffers
as I did and tell them about this
medicine. If I could only have got
ten Tanlac twenty years ago it would
have saved me a lot of suffering and
money.
“My principal trouble was indi
gestion, and for many years I could
not eat meat or pastries for I would
always suffer afterward. I would
most always have a distressed feel
ing after eating and nothing seemed
to agree with me. Then, to add to
the rest of my suffering, I contract
ed rheumatism in my shoulders and
hips and the awful pains I suffered
can never be told in words. This
trouble finally got so bad I could
hardly walk and my arms pained me
so I could scarcely raise my hands
to my head. I even had to give up
my housework and was hardly able
to get around at all.
“You can imagine how happy I
was when, after taking only a few
bottles of Tanlac, ’ I found such a
wonderful improvement in my con
dition! Why it was just the medi-
TUBERCULOSIS
was when P h y sl ”
||&hH|H cians said it was impoi
sible for J. M. Miller,
Rsb Ohio Druggist, to sur-
vive the fava K ea Tu-
I' berculoals, he began ex-
F RjS.--' ’’y ■, perimenting on himself,
N ' K dlscovere d the Home
.aSITjhUKI Treatment, known as
f' ~ kDDILINE. Anyone
SkO:- .vifh coughs showing tu-
.to pound. 188 Pound. L.t..t Phot. bercu i ar tendenc y or Tu-
berculosis. may use it
Send your name and address to under plain directions.
ADDIX.IKE, 194 Arcade Beliding, Columbus. Ohio
PROVED EFFECTIVE BY
1 w i FIFT¥ YEAas TS!M vW
OT I'J w TBe most widely uaed remedy in the
H }< : f world to overcome the stagnating $i
/’’ effects of catarrh. Catiirh is
■ wRBF silent and insidious, in its
a ravages, invades nearly ■ - FOR M
i WW’ J every household and CATARRH
S cossmoH#
S 11 •trite* «»* the root of ca- j
W tarrhal troubles by stimulating I
n digestion, enriching the blood,
H toning up the nervous system and H
H toothing the raw end inflamed mucous
■ mesa branes. Pe-ru-na sets every organ to M
a working properly and gives strength. Vigor ra
H ““d pcp t° whole body. Try it, and like M
thousands of othen, learn whet it means to be well. P
EVERYWHERE TABLETS OR LIQUID |
PELLAGRA
Can Be Cured
FREE PROOF TO YOU
PELLAGRA CAN BE CURED TO STAY CURED. When we say cured
that is just what we mean—C-U-R-E-D —not merely checked for a
while to return worse than before. No matter what you have used
nor how many doctors have told you that you could not be cured, all
we ask is just a chance to show you what ARGALLEP will do. Simply
send your name and address. Without cost or obligation we will send
you absolutely free and prepaid, a ten days’ supply of ARGALLEP.
We are confident that you will be amazed and delighted with the
quick improvement in health. ARGALLEP has restored thousands.
Let it do the same for you. Just try it and be convinced that we
are telling you the truth. Remember the two weeks’ supply of
ARGALLEP costs you absolutely nothing. ’Write for it today— sure.
ARGALLEP COMPANY, DEPT. 501, CARBON HILL, ALA.
THESE FREE
T |lis Victory Red Persian ivory
Pendant and Neck Chain, 30 Inches ('-’-M
<«irV )f long; these 4 Gold plated Rings
nlll ] this lovely Gold plated Laval-
Wfti!‘HHWjy Here and Nock Chain will ALL he
Given FREE by us tQ anyone se n. "W ///.//»
ing only 12 pieces of Jewelry at 10 cents each. Victory Red is all the rage. B. D.
MEAD MFG. CO., Providence, R. I.
FEATHER FACTJ jP3 jl j
SAVES YOU MOST MONEY I
I^ Write this minute for price-slyhlng catalog, B
“ FEATHER FACTS *b4 BEDDING BARGAINS* I
free /or the atkiny. No other bedding book like
I; it, every page crammed with special offer, under- M
II selling all middlemen. Why make dealers rich Q
J l » PURITY ill when you enn buy DIRECT
BEDPING CO| EKOM FACTORY nod keep /T\ UmaM«!
|M money j n your own pockets, A fl
I WE GLADLY SHIP C. O. D. J I Ageato fej
Send for this ri'RFTY book now. BEFORE you / I ~
write elsewhere. Yon cun’t afford to miss our bar g V - J ' * ?■
gain offers. Everything sold o.n MONEY-BACK F
GUARANTEE backed by four hanks >' od thousands l„.
of s 'tlsfied < nstonw-r.. C- O. P. orders filled. All L
shipments same day order la n-celwd. \u. ' Hi
PURITY BEDDING COMPANY if
Sl9 Sparkman Street Nashville Tenn.
BS The absolutely satisfying fragrance of Tube Rose Sweet AT L'l'34
S 3 Scotch Snuff makes you forget all your troubles. rW’isRS.'N I'iß
It suits the taste. Thousands cf snuff users are i rr
® coming to this better brand—TUßE ROSE. | ,a3
It completely satisfies, with less effect on the nerves. VVk \
Free from grit, pure, clean and good. —' fia
all If your dealer dose not handle it, give us a A
7? chance to convince you by sending ICc for a \ pTwU
■*S trial can. \ I
BRCWH & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO CO., Wmrtes-SjlraJlC
• Jin’ll ■»<'■** •.•■ •.. ' y
Mrs. Alic© McCluskey, Well-Known
Lewiston, Maine, Woman
cine I needed all the time and I con
tinued taking it until now I am per
fectly well again. I can truthfully
say that I am enjoying as good t
health now as I ever had in all my
life. I have gained about 14 pounds
in weight and can again .do all my
housework without the least trou
ble. I don’t get tired like I did and
after doing my work I can. get out
and walk for blocks and feel just
fine when I get back home. I earn
estly advise everyone who suffers as
I did to take Tanlac.”
All good druggists sell Tanlac.
(Advt.)