Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, April 03, 1920, Page 2, Image 2
2
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THE ATLANTA TRI-M’EEKLY JOURNAL.
SUMTER COUNTY
VOTERS EAGER TO
HEAR HOKE SMITH
AMERICUS, Ga„ April 1. —Efforts
to form, a Palmer club in Sumter
county were stopped short yesterday
by the announcement that Senator
Hoke Smith was to deliver an ad
dress In Americus next week, and
the whole political situation here
seems now to hinge upon the utter
ances of the senior senator in his
coming address. During the war,
many Sumter county friends of Sen
ator Smith differed with him in his
attitude toward the League of Na
tions and the peace treaty, but re
cently there has come such a decided
change of sentiment here that for
mer supporters of President Wilson
are now outspoken in their opposi
tion to the administration.
Senator Smith will have some ex
plaining to do when he talks to the
Sumter county voters, for his oppo
nents have been busy capitalizing the
idea that he is not sincere in his
candidacy for the presidency. People
here could not be induced to follow
the senior senator in any effort to
prevent their securing a free expres
sion of their choice for the presi
dency, yet it is universally recog
nized, even by Senator Smith’s bit
terest enemies, that he is really the
biggest man in Georgia and undoubt
edly the only presidential timber to
be found in'the entire south. Once
let him demonstrate his earnestness
as a presidential candidate, and Sum
ter can safely be counted in the
Smith column,
One of his closest friends here st(id
today that he had been considering
supporting Palmer as the best avail
able Democrat in the race, but that
should Senator Smith enter the race
earnestly and with the intention of
carrying his fight into the San Fran
cisco convention, he would support
him most heartily. L. G. Council,
Americus’ leading banker, who was
in Atlanta a day or two ago, Ijsaid
he was pleasurably surprised with
the growth of sentiment favorable to
Senator Smith in other parts of
Georgia, and that no doubt of his
earnestness seems to exist anywhere
except in Sumter county.
“The earnestness and sincerity of
Senator Smith impressed me as most
genuine,” he said, “and the confidence
evidenced by him in his success as a
presidential candidate was also pleas
ing to me.”
Hoover sentiment, which was wide
spread hbre until quite recently, has
almost completely disappeared with
the final decision of the state com
mittee in declaring him ineligible,
and with the withdrawal of Governor
Dorsey’S name, practically all ! of his
friends who want to see a Georgian
nominated declared for Senator
Smith.
HOKE SMITH HAS LOYAL
FRIENDS IN ABBEVILLE
ABBEVILLE, Ga„ April I.—The
voters of Abbeville and vincinity are
beginning to talk national politics.
Hoke Smith and A. Mitchell Palmer
are the only candidates talked about.
The senator has a lot of strong
friends in this tow nwho will back
him to the limit.
Campaign to Reduce
Cost of Living Is
Called ‘Camouflage’
WASHINGTON, April I.—The
cqmpaign of the department of jus
tice to reduce the high cost of liv
ing by urging consumers to buy
cheaper meat cuts was branded a”
‘camouflage” and a “crime against
live stock producers” by H. J. Mer
cer, of the Knsas live stoek commis
sion, in a telegram to Senator Cap
per, Kansas, today.
Sentor Capper read the telegram
in the senate and declared he con
curred in Mercer’s view’s. He urged
the senate agriculture committee to
investigate the “short-sighted and
unfair” policy of government de
partments affecting the high cost of
living. .
Germany’s is a republican form
of government modified by gen
eral strikes.
Bubonic plague and influenza are
raging in Europe. Also peace.
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LOST LAMBS ARE SAVED FROM
HUNGRY COYOTES BY FARM BOYS
%
"■ ,-g 4ML> ,
- ••• if : ■■
s
Hl w
. They were deserted weaklings this lad found in sheep trail.
SPOKANE, Wash. —Playing fthlier
to lost lambs abandoned by Spartan
hearted sheepmen as they migrate
with their flocks to pastures new, has
become a profitable recreation for
western farm boys, who live in
Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Mon
tana and Utah.
Flock owners have previously fig
ured that it was not worth their
while to bother with the weak lambs
which fell by the wayside when the
bands of sheep were' moved to sum
mer range, and these weaklings fur
nished feasts for the coyotes
which customarily trailed the flocks.
Six years ago Upcle Sam organized
the Pioneer society to save the lost
lambs.
The club boys systematically fol
low the sheep drives which pass to
and fro through their localities dur
ing the grazing season in order to
rescue , the weaklings which can not
stand the exhausting travel. Tradi
tion is to the effect that anyone can
have the lambs who will take the
trouble to pick them up and care
for them.
The orphan lambs have to be fed
by bottle like babies until they are
old enough to wean, and this necessi
tates painstaking care and regular
Hospital Patient, Clad in Nightie,
Hides Sixty Hours in a Goal Bin
MINNEAPOLIS. Minn. —Barefoot-
ed, with onlj r a nightshirt covering
his body, Marlow Hutchins, fifty
two years old, who escaped from the
Minneapolis General hospital, hid in
a coal bin and defied the March
weather, but succumbed to hunger.
He gave himself up and was re
turned to the hospital, after being
out in the cold sixty hours,.
“I didn’t mind the cold, but I had
to get something to eat,” he told
physicians.
When Hutchins eluded the hospital
attendants he managed to make his
way, without being seen or reported,
to the northern part of the city/
where he crawjed into a coal bin.
He lay there quietly, he said, until
he was driven out by starvation.
Physicians said that Hutchins was
in a serious condition. His feet,
from walking barefoot in the snow
and ice, had been frozen, and he was
suffering from exposure.
Pretty Co-ed Loses Heart to “Doctor”
Before She Finds He Is a Lunatic
DES MOINES, lowa.—Before a
pretty Drake university co-ed loses
her heart again, she is going to de
mand to see the family tree for years
back of the subject of her infatua
tion And receive a report from a rep
utable detective bureau that ,he is
all he pretends to be.
This is why. This last month, the
co-ed in question lost her heart, but
without stopping to take the va
rious cautions mentioned. He was a
young medical student from the
State university of lowa, so he said,
and he, with some other students
from the same institution, was
studying cases at the insane asy
lum, at Clarinda, lowa, not far from
the cb-ed's home.
He came often, and fell into the
habit of talking his plans over with
her, not neglecting to hint that she
had a, large share in thsm.
6n the occasion of one of the
Locked in Tomb, Man Endures
Agony of Mind at Being Buried Alive
MILFORD, Mass, —Locked in a
tomb, with a score of corpses about,
ip a cemetery far removed from
habitation and almost submerged in
snow and ice, and without any ap
parent means of escape, was the
horrifying experience of Walter W.
Watson, a local undertaker.
Fop nearly half an hour, alternate
ly shouting in a desperate but vain
effort - so attract help and trying
with an iron bar to pry open the
tomb door, Mr. Watson said he was
confronted with a situation that
sorely tried his soul and gave him
a thrill whose memory will always
stay with him.
It was 2 o’clock in the afternoon
when Mr. Watson went to the re
ceiving tomb in Vernon Grove cem
etery. He had to work in the cham
ber for some little time, and thought
to draw the door nearly tq its fas
tenings, the better to be protected
from the cold’ To draw the heavy
door over the blocking ice he threw
all his strength into the pull, and
to his amazement the door closed
and the strong latch fell into its
catch.
Watson looked about for means to
force the door. When he espied a
heavy iron bar he thought luck was
with him. But all his efforts failed
to stir open the door. Vigorously
he applied the iron bar, but to no
avail. Then he shouted through a
10-inch-wide ventilator in the rear of
the vault. The only answer that
came to him was the echo of his
qwn voice.
With hope ahandoneij from this
quarter, Watson determined to force
his body through the small opening
in the wall. A stout, well-built man,
he had much difficulty in driving
his shoulder through the ventilator.
But persistent effort finally, after
a labor of about thirty minutes
brought him safely to the outside of
the tomb.
“Not for’ all the money in the
movies would I again go through
attention in order to give the young
sters a good start in life.
The surplus milk of the farm sup
ply generally is the fundamental ar
ticle in the lost lambs’ dietary un
til the baby sheep are old enough to
nibble grain, hay and browse over the
fields. When pasture-broken, a fa
vorite practice of the lost lamb club
boys is to stake their lambs along
the banks of irrigation ditches, where
weeds which are keenly relished by
sheep are abundant.
of lost lambs have been
rescued by 'the club boys since the
missionary work began. Last year
in Utah alone it is estimated that
over 5,00 Q abandoned lambs were
saved from the coyotes and wolves
and were operative in keeping a
large number of regular boys out of
mischief.
Sheepmen are now coming to real
ize that it is profitable to care for
the weak lambs, and, even though
they do not bother to raise the ani
mals themselves, sopte of them now
have wagpns follow the spring drives
when the sheep are headed range
ward and pick up the weak lambs.'
These lambs usually are sold for
distribution among the boys’ cjubs.
The main thing is that the lambs
are saved and raised for food pur
poses or else* to produce raw mate
rial for clothing.
Hutchins escaped from the hos
pital when he cut the straps, which
bound him to the bed, with the
rough edge of a tin cup, and leaped
from an upper window. He was be
ing treated for a nervous'disease and
had been delirious. K
When Hutchins could not endure
hunger any longer, he came out into
the street, where he was seen by
a man driving an automobile.
“Please take me to the hospital,”
he pleaded.
The man, who did not give his
name, wrapped the nightshirt-clad
man in a robe and drove him to the
hospital.
“I hated to go out before,” Hutchins
said. "I was almost seen many times
before I hid in the coal bin. Men
passed close to me many times, but
I dodged and didn’t let any one see
me.”
visits, just as the Drake girl was
beginning to feel that he would pop
the question that very day, they
were interrupted by the tramp of
booted feet on the piazza.
“Excuse me, lady,” said one of the
two men who stood at the door,
“one of the trusties from the asy
lum has been slipping out, and we’re
trying to find him. Have yoa seen
him?”
The girl averred that she hadn’t
but allowed them to search the
premises anyway. They came at last
to the room where the young doc
tor was sitting. “This Is him, Jim,”
cried one, and they took the alleged
medical (Student away with them.
And s(>, while the co-ed still be
lieves that love at sight is all very
well, in the future she will demand
a doctor’s before she re
sponds to it.
such an experience,” said Mr. Wat
son when his thrilling experience
became known to his fellow citi
zens.
How to Heal Leg Sores
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Mcg ee, Kansas City, Mo. —(A d v t.)
Senator Smith Is
Strong With Voters
Os City of Toccoa
TOCCOA, Ga., March' 31.—The po
litical situation has been surveyed in
this town with the following re
sults:
Hoke Smith 41
Palmer 23
Hoover 22
Wilson 6
Edwards -i
Marshall 1
Bryan 1
McAdoo 1
A canvass was made of 100 men
who lived in the corporate limits of
the town, composed of lawyers, doc
tore, bankers and merchants who are
interested in the country. In this
canvass not one man was influenced
in his vote. It is entirely repre
sentative of the business life of the
town.
Hoover’s not getting on the ticket
will undoubtedly sweej EJoke Smith’s
majority. He was second choice of
more than half of those who voted
Hoover. Hoke Smith has easy
sailing in this town especially, and
a strops following in* the country.
MOVE BY HOOVER
IS DISCUSSED BY
DAVID LAWRENCE
BY DAVID LAWRENCE
< Copyright, 1920, tQr The Atlanta Journal.)
April I.—Her
bert Hoover has disclosed the condi
tions under which he would support
the Republican ticket and the cir
cumstances under which he would
accept the presidential nomination if
offered to him. • a
This is not a surprise, but a log
ical first move toward the effective
use of the name and personality of
Herbert Hoover to crush, not mere
ly the professional politicians in both
Republican and Democratic parties,
but to prevent the two parties from
adopting either an extreme reaction
or extreme radical standpoint in
their respective platforms .
There Is another move coming. It
probably will make it clear just why
Herbert Hoover could not accept a
Democratic nomination if offered.
After that may come another step—
announcement that the choices of
the two political parties do not satis
fy the liberal thought of the coun
try. and a willingness to support
a third and independent ticket.
This part of the program is not
yet admitted by Hoover supporters,
but in the that the epublican
convention does not adopt “a forward
looking, liberal, constructive plat
form on the treaty, on our economic
issues,” or if it fails to propose
“measures for sound business admin
istration of the country,” and Is
either “reactionary” or “radical” in
its approach to our great domestic
problems, or if it is not "backed by
men who undoubtedly assure the
consummation of these policies and
measures,” Mr. Hoover will not sup
port th© Republican ticket. He says
nobody has a right to dictate what a
party/Shall do, but an Individual has
a right to say what ticket and plat
form he ivill support.
Way Paved for Judgment
So Mr. Hoover has paved the way
fori a judgment of the Republican
contention upon its merits and not
by season of any previous obligation
to Support a party with which he is
“naturally affiliated.” He is free to
accept or reject the Republican plat
form or nominee so far as his /indi
vidual support is concerned.
Would that mean the Selection of
Mr. Hoover a week later by the
Democratic convention at San Frans
cisco? The chances are against it.
Mr. Hoover is not. a Democrat, even
though he supported Mr. Wilson’s
appeal in 1917 for a Democratic con
gress. He will apply to the DemO'-
cratic platform and nominee the
same test he has outlined for the Re
publican platfjrm.
The Democrats already have been
in power for seven years, and those
who are in a position to know Her
bert Hoover’s mind intimately say
he is disappointed with the way the
Democrats have administered the
government in those seven years.
He refers to incompetency in high
quarters and is unable to under
stand how the Democrats have any
right to call them selves “forward
looking” or progressive when Presi
dent Wilson has repeatedly ignored
not merely the overwhelming senti
ment of the Democrats of the coun
try expressed to him by Democratic
Chairman Homer Cummings, but the
demanl of non-partisans that Post
master General Burleson be removed
from office.
Hoover a “Dry”
Another thing: Mr. Hoover is a dry
—a thorough dry. He looks askance
at the wet inclinations of the Demo-;
crat&. Though he may have views
upon certain amendments to the Vol
stead act which would make that
law less offensive to individual lib
erty, he hasn’t any leanings toward
the wet side of the argument. He
thinks prohibition is a good thing
and that national efficiency will be
promoted by its enforcement.
Mr. Hoover’s declarations on the
treaty show that he doesn’t approve
of President Wilson’s uncompromis
ing position and in his letter to Mr.
Gregory, of San Francisco, just made
public, the former food administrator
practically draws himself away from
what he calls the president’s "ex
treme view on participation in Eu
ropean affairs.” This is even more
clearly emphasized in the letter writ
ten by Mr. Hoover in Paris a year
ago, which was “inadvertently” made
public ten days ago.
Mr. Hoover is neither President
Wilson’s choice nor in the good
graces of the White House. He has
committed the unpardonable sin of
differing with teh president on the
peace treaty. He has been of course
supported by the 'leading adminis
tration newspapers and by some in
fluential administration men.
But that support has not been of
his seeking. Nevertheless, there was
keen gratification in White House
quarters today because of the fact
that Herbert Hoover had entered
himself in the Republican primaries
of California on the League of Na
tions issue. This means he
fight it out against Hiram Johnson,
who wants neither league, nor treaty,
nor reservations.
Politically, this part of the Hoover
letter is the most important. It
means that Hiram Johnson probably
will lose in his own home state. For
under California laws, anybody can
vote in either Republican or Demo
cratic primaries without regard to
previous affiliation.
“The Way the Wind Blows”
So Democrats can vote for Hoover.
A combination of Democrats who
favor the league and Republicans who
think likewise is enough to defeat
Hiram Johnsno.
Many of the supporters of avowed
Democratic nominees like Palmer
and McAdoo were glad Hoover had
written a letter saying he was “nat
urally affiliated” with the Republi
cans. This removes their most
gerous competition—at Iflast they
think he has been removed. But the
most significant fact of the whole
business Is what is happening under
the surface in both parties—namely,
a demand for Hoover, irrespective
of party.
Here is something that shows
which way the wind blows:
Several members of congress who
have been “back home” sounding out
their constituents have come back to
Washington. A man who went to
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He’ll Get Your
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ffir ’ »•. •
bI w
Jo
WILLIAMS
William M. Williams, who
hails from Alabama, and who has
been clerk of the Senate Judi
ciary Committee, has been ap
pointed United States internal
revenue oemmissioner to succeed
Dan C.'Roper, resigned.
Trial of Alleged
Bank Robbers Gets
Under Way at Seale
COLUMBUS, Ga„ April I.—Most
of the first day’s session of the
circuit at Seale, Ala., trying' cases in
connection with the Girard bank
robbery, was taken up in the argu
ing of to quash the indict
ments on the grounds that the venire
lacked one man less than was re
quired by law. Judge Williams over
ruled this motion and the jury was
procured Wednesday afternoon, thus
making clear the way for the trial
of Rufus Ford today, it being an
nounced that all cases would be
tried separately.
Hundreds of people were in attend
ance- at the opening of th© trials and
interest is still keen today, there be
ing another large crowd in Russell’s
county seat. It is expected that the
defendants pleading guilty will be
sentenced some time today. These In
clude Mrs. Roy Dickerson, wife of
the fugitive who is still at large,
presumably in California. Trials of
the Fordse and Sanders may take a
week, as many lawyers are engaged
on both sides, and indications are
that every inch of ground will be
fought to a finish.
Tennessee in the interest of the Mc-
Adoo candidacy came back with the
story that the Democrats want
Hoover.
A man who went to California for
Hiram Johnson, is back with a con
fidential report that “It’s all Hoover
in California.”
A man who knows the situation
in Minnesota, and is himself support
ing another candidate, says scores
of newspapers are coming out for
Hoover.
Only one returning observer —a
member of congress who looked into
the situation in North Dakota for
his own candidate —says the “Non
partisan League” Is against Hoover.
Burden of Tales Brought Back
The burden of the tales brought
back is that the nation is sick and
tired of the political maneuvering of
both parties ,and that the effect of
the failure of the treaty in the sen
ate is to hold present officeholders
responsible for being guided by pol
itics rather than the national in
terest.
That is something independent
newspapers throughout the country
have been telling congress for many
weeks, but the truth is only now
being realizezd, and the name of
Hoover has been seized upon as the
one means of expressing the resent
ment of the country against both the
Republican and Democratic machines
in the government.
The professional politicians in the
Republican party already are ridivul
ing Mr. Hoover's announced appeal
for a liberal platform and progressive
nominee at the Republican conven
tion, The Democratic politicians
have been doing it at the mention of
Mr. Hoover’s name for their ticket.
This will not hurt Mr. Hoover’s
prestige, but help it, for the friends
of Mr. Hoover would like nothing
better than a denunciation of Mr.
Hoover by the reactionary elements
both in the Democratic and the Re
publican parties, for they believe this
will not affect the rank and file who
are ready to support a progressive
leader,
On the contrary, they are sure it
will mean millions of independent
votes, no matter on what ticket Mr.
Hoover eventually makes the race.
.* WITT SEKD A PEMUY
%'• ORDER BY MAU/—Pay Postmaster
0,1 Arrival of Shoes.
Army' Shoes $j-
Money Back nnTIWI
If Not Sat- H K
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.Any Size. ’■ - r: - Gfi
Tan, Soft Toe and riiIOIIIO, MOa
You Caia’t It Away;
Rheumatism is in the Blood
Liniments Will Never Cure.
If you are afflicted with Rheu
matism, why waste time with lini
ments, lotions and other local appli
cations that never did cure Rheu
matism, and never will?
Do not try to rub the pain away.
Try the sensible plan of finding the
cause of the pain, and go after
that. Remove, the cause, and you
remove the pain.
You will never be rid of Rheu-
ffCH-ECZEMA ”
(Also called Tetter, Sait Rheum, Pruritus* Milk-Crust, Weeping Skip, etc.)
ECZEMA CAM BE CURED TO STAY, and when I say cored. I mean jest what I eay-C-U-a-E-D, and not IB
merely patched up for awhile, to return wane than before. Now, I do not care what all you have used nor how IS
many dortnrtj have told you that you could not be cured-all 1 aak la just a ehrnee to ahow you that I Scow what M
I talking about. If yoa wll write sre TODA Y, I will send you a FREI TRIAL of my mild, soothing, gruaran- H
t?ed cure that will convince you more iu a day than lor anyone e’se could in a month's time. If you are disgusted K
and diccoureged. I dare you to give me a chance to prove mv cSaime. By writing me today you will esjoy more real nu
comfort than you had ever thought thia world holds for you. Just try it. and you will eee lam telling yoa tbe truth, ffi
DR. I. E. CANNADAY |
I 1X64 Park Square SEDALIA, MO. |
Beferorces: Third National Cocld you do a bettor »h*n to nand thia ootiea to *ocm
RQ Banh, Sedatta. Me. < poor auilerar ct Ecxacaa!
SATURDAY, AI’KU; 3, 192<»
Senator Reed Says
He Will Not Enter
Primary in Georgia
MOULTRIE, Ga., April I.
(the Associated Press.) —United
States \Senator James A. Reed, ini
a statement given out here Wed
nesday declared, he would not be a
candidate for the Democratic
nomination for president in the
Georgia primary. He said he
would wire Secretary Hiram
Gardner, of the state committee,
to have his name left off the prl
’ mary ballot. Senator Reed will
deliver an address hero this aft
ernoon,
1
General Simms’ Body
Found Hanging to Tree
By Road at Asheville
ASHEVILLE, N. C„ Ajrll X.—
County authorities reported last
night that they had cut down the
body of General Richard D. Simms,
aged fifty-ono, of Washington, D. C.,
a patient at a local sanitarium, from
a roadside tree, where it had been
found hanging some hours after life
was extinct. General Simms’ horse
was found jiear-by, and officials said
he had apparently ridden under the
tree, knotted the rope around his
neck, tied the other end to a limb
and then spurred his horse out from
under him.
At the sanitarium officials in charge
would say only that the body had
been bound at the roadside.
MEMBER OF GENERAL
WASHINGTON CLUBS
WASHINGTON, April I.—Brigadier
General Richard D. Simms, whose
death was announced from Asheville,
was a native of Washington. For
many years he was purchasing agent
for the District of Colunibia resign
ing in 1905 to .become treasurer of
the Capital Traction company. Join
ing the District National Guard in
1888 as a private, he was promoted
until he reached the rank of briga
dier general in 1918. He served as
captain in the Spanish-American war.
General Simms was prominent so
cially and a member of several clubs.
His wife and daughter survive,
Nevada Authorities
Are Investigating
Pickford Divorce
RENO, Nev., April I.—An investi
gation into the entire record of the
Mary Pickford divorce case by Rob
ert Richards, deputy attorney gen
eral of Nevada, was under way to
day.
The action was begun following a
meeting of the Washoe County Bar
association when resolutions were
passed, calling upon the attorney
general to investigate the divor'ee
proceedings at Minden, on March 2,
when, after a- brief hearing, Mary
Pickford was granted a divorce from
Owen Moore on the grounds of de
sertion.
According to reports here today
the resolution wafl later stricken
from the records and a motion to ap
point a committee to Investigate all
“short-term” divorces in the state
was substituted.
Irish Women Invade
Capitol at Washington
WASHINGTON, April I.—About
twenty women carrying flags and
banners urging recognition of an
Irish republic, gained entrance to
the capital building today by calm
ing to have appointments with Sen
ators France and Gore. They dis
tributed circulars asking congress to
abrogate treaties with Great Britain.
Drug Stores Sell
Five million peopleWhk
use it to KILL
HILL'S
Wbk Standard cold remedy for 20 year*
—in tablet form—safe, ante, no
opiates—breaks up a «old in 24
vJMk hours—relieves grip in 3 days.
Money back if it fails. The
ZCndflibkgenuine box has a Red
Mr. Hill’a
U/J |1 Uy/ picture.
At All Drug Star—
matism until you cleanse your
blood of the germs that cause the
disease. S. S. S. has never had an
equal as a blood purifier and scores
of sufferers say that it has cleansed
their blood of Rheumatism, and re
moved all trace of the disease from
their system.
Get a bottle of S .S. S., and get
on the right treatment to-day. Spe
cial medical advice free. Address
Medical Director, 111 Swift Lab
oratory, Atlanta, Ga.
Whatiauses
L
An excess of aoid in the stomach
sours the food and starts fermenta
tion. Distressing gases form. Your
meals don't digest but lay like lumps
of lead. Then you have heartburn,
flatulence, fullness, belching, head
ache, and real misery In the atom*
ach and Intestines.
A few tablets of “Pape’s Dispen
sin'' bring relief almost as soon as
they reach the stomach.' "Pape’a
Diapepsin” costs little at dru<
stores.—(Advt.)
■M SWI mH iH 1 *1 MB ■I v*
NR Tablets tone and strengthen '
organs of digestion and elimina- .
tion, improve appetite, stop sick
headaches,« relieve biliousness, >
correct constipation. They act
promptly, pleasantly, mildly, yet ,
i
! fft Tonight, Tomorrow Alright |
Without An
Operation
Wonderful Healing of Rupture
How a New Jersey Man Got
Rid of a Severe, Obstinate,
Right Inguinal Hernia With
out the Slightest Trouble, j
Below is a picture of Eugene M.
Pullen, a well-known carpenter of
Manasquan, Now Jersey. If you
could see him at his work, particu
larly when he handles heavy timber,
jumps and climbs around like a
youth, you would scarcely imagine
that he had formerly been afflicted
with a rupture.
JBlMliljk
f ■ A
IT ® \
i ' Wt
f V'' WL i
i
' ■
Ruptured in Bight Side.
At an early age, Eugene Pullen
was an express driver. He handled
railroad baggage. One day after de
livering a heavy trunk on an upper
floor he felt a pain in the right (jroin.
The suffering increased and it was
not long before the young man no
ticed the swelling.
The doctor told young Pullen that
he was ruptured and that he ijtiust
either wear a truss throughout life
or submit to a drastic operation. All
surgeons know that hernia opera
tions, with anaesthetics, etc., are 1
dangerous; they may end fatally.
Moreover, it is a well established
fact that many rupture operations
are not successful; the bowel soon
breaks through the sewed-up opening
and protrudes worse than ever.
Afraid of Operation.
Like most others, Mr. Pullen de
clined to take the risks of an opera
tion; the expense and loss of time
had to be considered, too. Hoping
he might get a little better encour
agement, he went to another physi
cian who, to his sorrow, gave him
even less hope. It was pointed out
to the young man that unless the
rupture were perfectly held a)l the
time or the surgeon’s knife success
fully used, he might expect an in
crease or doubling in the rupture
with further complications, or the
dreaded strangulated hernia which
kills so many ruptured people.
Victim of Trusses.
The victim bought a truss, a hard,
spring-like affair, the best he could
get. It tortured him. He tried an- ■
other —still no relief. He was com
pelled to give up his express busi
ness. The hard tasks of ordinary
men were forbidden him. He became
an insurance agent, in which posi
tion he did not need to do bodily
work.
For six years Mr.’Pullen dragged
around, using various trusses, hard,
/elastic, etc., with never any content
ment. One day his mother told him
something she had just found out.
It was a simple and easy thing for
him to do. He lost no time.
Discarded His Truss.
Relief came at once; he almost
forgot that he had any rupture.
Afterward came a cure—a complete
healing—and, although years have
passed and Mr. Pullen is ap ener
getic carpenter, working on build
ings, climbing over roofs, lifting
lumber and such like, he is absolute
ly free from the old hernia. He
knows he is completely, lastingly
cured. There was no operation, no
lost time, no trouble —comfort and
contentment from the very outset.
He is a strong, cheerful-minded man.
Valuable Information Tree.
The valuable information which
Mrs. Pullen read in a newspaper
many years ago and gave to her son,
together with further important
facts, will be sent free to any reader
of this who writes to Eugene M.
Pullen, 929-F Marcellus avenue,
Manasquan, N. J., enclosing a stamp
for reply. Mention the kind of rup
ture you have, whether on right or
left side and what you have already
done in your effort to cure it. A
legion of cases of all kinds of rup- '
ture in men and wolnen, including
inguinal (groin). femoral, navel,
scrotal, etc., have been reported com
pletely healed. Age seems to make
no difference. —(Advt.) •