Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, July 08, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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A guaranteed treat fl meat that cures when all others fall. ■ twriie for this book today. £ CBOWN MEDICINE COMPANY, I Dept. 95, Atlanta, Ga. Entirely New Book ■ VCT, d-vwa 00 Cancer. The most BL MB - FT a comprehensive ex planation of cancer tj and Its successful treat ment without the knife BJt .lS a ever published. The Book f is FREE. Send for a copy ■>. A. JOHNSON, M. D., Suite 462. 1324 Hain St.. Kansas City. Mo. Hoday and Learn the Truth about cancer. THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. PRESIDENT SENDS CONGRATULATIONS TOIMffIINE WASHINGTON, July 6.—Definite assurances were given at the Whitei House today that President Wilsoni plans to take an active part in the campaign to elect Governor Cox as his ’successor. ' It was indicated that if his health permits the president will make some stump speeches for the Ohioan, but otherwise will use all his influence as head of the party to win a Demo cratic victory in November. An early conference between Mr. Wilson and Governor Cox probably will be ar ranged, it was learned. President Wilson did not receive news of the nomination ofGovernor Cox at San Francisco until he arose shortly after 8 o’clock this morning. An attendant was waiting to hand him report of the closing ballots, which, with morning papers, he read at the breakfast table. Although those close to the ad ministration several times during the last week have indicated that Governor Cox would not be unaccept able, there is little doubt that the Wilson lieutenants favored the nomi nation of Mr. McAdoo. Governor Cox was not the first choice of vir tually all the cabinet officers at the convention and the same feeling has pervaded the White House offices during all the voting. Governor Cox, while at first the choice of convention forces which might be called anti-Wilson, is con sidered here to be a warm admirer of the president and has been a League of Nations advocate from the first. It is >elieved that Gover nor Cox’s view’s on this issue are fairly well expressed by the treaty plank in the platform. President Hands Off The White House again today em phasized t’- • the president at no time tried to dictate to the conven tion who the nominee should be and as far as could be learned no Wilson “order” of any kind was sent at any time. The president was sleeping during the crucial convention period of the last eight ballots, with orders that he was not to be disturbed. Go” or Cox was highly praised today at the White House and in high adminisu . >n circles as a pres idential candidate. The belief was expressed that he can carry the states . New York, Ohio, and New Jersey for the Democrats. Demo cratic leaders here Were supremely confident that Governor Cox can beat Senator Harding In their pivotal home state. The Ohio governor Is said by Dem ocrats hi a to be one of r - best campaigners In the country and the prediction was made that he would make an unusually vigorous cam paign, probably with an extended tour. News of the Cox nomination reach ed Washington at such an early hour that it failed to cause a ripple of ex citement. Cluttered around every telegraph wire fro mthe convention were many prominent government officials, while others were up all night keeping in close touch with newspaper offices. NEXT PRESIDENT WILL BE SIXTH OHIO EXECUTIVE SAN FRANCISCO, July 6.—Ohio, always a doubtful and important state in national elections, has as-; sumed added importance this year* because both parties chose as their presidential nominees men from the Buckeye state. It is the first time since 1904 that a similar thing has occurred. That year Roosevelt and Parker, both from the same state, New York, were the nominees. With Harding and Cox contending for honors in the national election Ohio is certainly to be hotly con tested this fall. Managers of both candidates already are making plans for a state campaign of unparalleled vigor. The next president will be the sixth Ohioan to occupy the White House Politicians commenting today on the situation said that Ohio’s reputation for electing whoever is nominated for president within her borders will again be upheld, as no matter which party wins, the president will be an Ohioan. GALLSTOITE TROUBLES A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad dock, 3832 Brooklyn, Dept. 58, Kansas City, Mo., tells of improved method of treating catarrhal inflammation of the Gall Blad der and Bile Ducts associated with Gall Stones, from which remarkable results are reported. Write for booklet and free trial plan.—(Advt.l Permits French Girl To Remain in U. S. A. WASHINGTON, D. C.—Warrants for the arrest and deportation of Madeline Babin and her mother and sister on charges that they entered the United States from France for improper purposes were canceled by Assistant Secretary Post. Evidence in the case presented at hearings at the department of jus tice and made public, said the women came to this country at the invita tion qf Lee Shippey, of Kansas City, Mo., formerly a Y. M. p. A. worker in France, Shippey, it was testified, lived with the Babin family while overseas and “an attachment arose between him and the eldest daugh ter.” "Evidently he wishes his wife to institute proceedings for a divorce and she refuses,” it was added. “Evi dently, also, if he were divorced he would marry the alien, who is the mother of his child.” Ideal Man Cannot Be Found, Says Woman Speaker, No. 7 WAUKESHA, Wis. —An ideal man Is impossible, but a man’s looks do not count, according to Miss Eliza beth Stroh, who spoke before the student body of Carroll College on ::An Ideal Man.” "Girls want a man whose faults are reduced to a minimum,” said Miss Stroh. “An ideal man must be kind, sympathetic and possess a sense of humor. Girls often set a high standard for the kind of a man they want, and then have to give up the ideal because they cannot find a man with such qualifications.” Miss Elizabeth Weld was the sec ond speaker on the subject, and she gave it as her opinion that an ideal man "need not be young but he must ‘be growing.’ ” “An ideal man must be one who does not swallow every thing and one who can render sober judgment,” she said. Powder Explosion Kills And Injures 4 at Plant SPRINGFIELD, Ill.—Two men were killed and four Injured serious ly by an explosion and fire which partly destroyed the Western Cart ridge company plant near here. Thirty employes, including seven teen women, were in the plant when fifty popnds of powder exploded. AH except the two men who per ished, escaped from the building, car rying the four injured, just before a second explosion came. £ye Wins Dog’s Love "A dog never becomes really at tached to a blind man.” That was the astounding statement recently made by a dog expert. Ask6d how he could prove that to be true, and, if so, why was it true, he asserted that a dog loves and understands more than anything else the eye of his taster. And, he said, quite truly, that the dog, worshiping his master, always looks up into his face. The expert agreed that it was quite possible that a dog should when he had gone blind, still show affection, but that it was impossible for a seeing dog, who had never seen the eyes of his owner, to be come really attached to him. He would be a faithful, willing slave, but there would not be a real deep affectiolL Intimate Stories That ■ Show IThat Kind of Man Governor “Jimmie’ Cox Is ■ •' \ ~Vz. m'L' • v<-nk i hMwKmmr ( H U.JIr fflggp / hL > a ■LtMtsflawi I y;Ti|fcfa. •s ••: •:.><<;K •zy.J Qi f < BY O. C. LYON DAYTON, 0., July 6.—One of Gov ernor James M. Cox’s cronies is Ed Antrim, of Hamilton, Ohio, recently retired as state law librarian. The two were boyhood friends In Butler county 35 years ago. —' “My earliest recollection of Jim mie Cox,” said Antrim, reminisenc- Ing, “was seeing him drive Into Jake Morner’s feed stable, near the old High and Main streets suspefislon bridge, in Hamilton, back in 1885.. “I was working in Smyers’ hard ware store, across the street, and Jim would often come into our store to buy nails or binder twine or other things needed on his father’s farm. “The family would send Jim Into town from Jacksonburg, where they lived, about once every two weeks to do the ’trading.’ He drove an old bay mare, hitched to a light buggy without a top. “Jake Moore, who ran the feed sta ble, was an old character, full of good stories and he and Jsmmie be came great friends. I’ve <4ten look ed out of the hardware store window across the street, and have seen Jim mie, sitting on a soap box, laughing his head off at one of Jake’s yarns. "When dinner time came, Jimmie would often come across to the store and say: ‘Come on, Ed, let’s go down to the Butler House and get some thing to eat,’ and I’d generally go along with him, if I happened to have the price. They served regular meals for 20 cents. “Not long ago, the governor and I were having a ‘fanning bee,’ and he said to me: ‘Ed, do you think there’s any place in Ohio today that serves such good meals as we used to get at the Old Butler House for 20 cents when we were kids?’ "After Jimmie got all his ‘trading’ done, he always went down to the meat market of Joe and Johnnie Fromn and bought a big hunk of bologna to eat on the 10-mile drive back to Jacksonburg. I used to say to him: ‘Jimmie, you’ll kill yourself eating all that stuff.’ "I was out with him a year or so ago and we passed a meat market that was displaying some very fine bologna in its window. The governor ordered his car stopped and he said to me: ‘Say, Ed, go in and get a pound of that, will you? I like it as well now as I did when I was a kid.’ Xilkes to Walk in Storms George F. Burba, a Columbus newspaper man, probably knows Cox better, personally, than any other man. For nearly 20 years Burba was associated with Cox as editorial writer on his Dayton newspaper and then as private secretary during the governor’s first term. "One of Cox’s most Interesting pleasures,” says Burba, “is to walk in the teeth of storms. He loves to tramp through the fields and along the highways when it’s raining tor rents, or in a snow or sleet storm. “Many a time he has called at my house in Dayton during a storm and asked me to go tramping with him. Sometimes we’d walk for four or five hours and cover as much as 10 miles of territory. “His wonderful vitality is due, in a measure, to the fact that he can sleep a few minutes any time he wants to. I’ve been hunting with him and, after eating lunch, he would say: ‘Call me in 15 minutes,’ and he’d be asleep almost instantly. “On his hunting trips to the wilds of Michigan he always sleeps one night out of doors, in the dense woods, with only blankets over him. ‘‘Years before he became pros perous he used to dream of owning a certain tract of land in the Miami Valley, four miles below Dayton, and building a home there. The tract 13 the present site of ‘Trail’s End,’ his magnificent home. It overlooks the valley and is the end of an old In dian trail. He loves the wild woods so much that he won’t allow the for ests surrounding his home to be touched.” Held Job as Sexton Cox got his first “pay job” when he vte.s twelve years old. The Urfited Brethren church at Jacksonburg, Butler county, Ohio, hired him at thirty-five cents a week to be sex ton; and afew weeks later he went on the payroll of the lodal school board at 25 cents a week as janitor of the district school. "The church was in a cemetery and in those days the kids all be lieved in ghosts,” the governor tells. “I used to be scared half to death as I would approach the church on dark Sunday nights to unlock it and light the lamps. “And then I’d have to sit in the church alone until the first communi cant arrived. It was always an old Mrs. Keister.” By the time he was fifteen, Cox had received all the schooling he could get in his immediate neighbor hood. At the same time he had be come tired of the farm work. His father, however, had a farmer’s ca reer mapped out for him. So the Cox boy “ran off” to Mid dletown and got a job, at $2 a week, as “devil” in the office of the Mid dletown Signal, running the press and sweeping out the office, after school hours. A week or so later his father located him, but didn’t take him back to the farm. "Go ahead and be a printer if you want to,” he said. At sixteen, young Cox secured a teacher’s license and began teaching in the village of Heno at S4O a month. At the same time he taught a night school in Middletown. It was while teaching in the night school that he met Paul Sorg, a mil lionaire tobacco man, who was pres ident of the school board. After teaching several years, Cox got a job as reporter on a Cincin nati newspaper. He was “fired,” how ever, for writing, a story that dis pleased a railroad official, and then -x. \ \ |I4M ............ .v./x5;;;.... / - v aI / MRS. JAMES M. COX, “who may be first lady of the land.” At top—“Trail’s End,” the beautiful residence of Governor James M. Cox at the end of an old Indian trail outside Dayton, O. Left— The Dayton News building, home of Cox’s Dayton newspaper. Right— The house in which Cox was born at Jacksonsburg, Butler County, Ohio, and below, Mrs. Cox and daughter, Anne. Sorg, by this time a congressman, made Cox his private secretary. Escaped From Hospital Here in Dayton, they still tell the story of how Cox, eighteen years ago, escaped from a hospital. He had been working day and night for months trying to put a run-down newspaper on its feet and he had been acting as editor, edi torial writer and business manager. When the nervous breakdown came the doctors said he’d have to stay in the hospital for at least three weeks. He entered the place on Sunday. Early the next Saturday morning they discovered he had left during the night. But no trace could be found of him until about noon, when he telephoned the superintendent: “This is Cox speaking,” he said. “I’m all right now; I’ll not be back.” “But Mr. Cox,” pleaded the su perintendent, “the doctor says you’re avery sick man.” “That was before I was able to borrow enough money to meet this week’s payroll,” replied the patient. “You’d have a nervous breakdown, too, if you had my payroll to meet and nothing to meet it with. Silenced His Heckler In Carroll county, Ohio, where Democrats are few and far between, Cox was making a political speech several years ago to a crowd com posed largely of farmers. When he mentioned that he himself had been born and reared on a farm, one of his hearers, evidently a zealous Re publican, shouted out: “What do you know about mauling rails?” The crowd, thinking the gov ernor would have to confess himself ignorant, laughed uproariously. The frovernor insisted that his questioner come down in front where all might see him. "Now, my friend,” said Cox, “I’ll answer your question by asking you one. You tell this audience what a ‘glut’ is.” The fellow turned all shades, shift ed from one foot to another, and ap peared speechless. “Go on, now, and tell us what a ‘glut’ is,” Cox tormented. The Republican finally stammered: “Never heard of one.” “Well, I have and I've used one many a time in helping my father split rails down in Butler county.” Then addressing the crowd, the gov ernor asked all who knew what a “glut” was to hold up their hand. Quite a number of hands went up. "A ‘glut,’ ” explained the governor, “is a big wooden wedge that you drive into the log in splitting it.” He was not again interrupted dur ing that speech. Was Baring Publisher As a newspaper publisher, Cox has always shown great daring. Tw r enty years ago some railroad men, who were trying to build into Dayton without eliminating grade crossings, sued him for $425,000 criminal libel because of the hard fight his Dayton News had made against their project. Under a law at that time, when criminal libel was alleged, it was the duy of the sheriff to take pos session of the property unless the person sued was able to give bond in twice the amount sued for. The sheriff of Montgomery county, a Republican, locked up the News of fice, with Cox and his entire work ing force on the inside, engaged in getting out the day’s paper. If Cox failed to give $850,000 bond the afternoon issue wouldn’t appear While he was on the telephone soliciting aid from every friend he could think of, the opposition came out with an extra with a big head line, “News Is Suspended.” An hour later, howeyer, the News was on the streets with an extra, telling how its friends had come to the rescue with the $850,000 bond. Sixteen years ago Cox bought a newspaper in Springfield, Ohio, and in one day he did three things to Changed its name from Press-Re public to the News. Changed its politics from Republi can to Democratic. Changed its time of issue from morning to evening. Instead of wrecking the paper, these radical changes started the paper on the road to great pros perity. Won Barrel of Apples Cox won a barrel of apples from a Van Wert county farmer a few years agg>. At Delphos he was tell ing his audience that a new tax law, but recently enacted, would reduce their taxes. “Governor," said an old farmer, who arose in the back part of the house, “we’ve heard that story be fore. You’ve got to show me.” friend,” said the governor, 111 bet you ass hat to a red apple that the new law reduces your taxes.” “I’ll make it a barrel,” the old fellow replied, while the crowd laughed. Some months later the governor was speaking at Lima. While he was eating his supper at the hotel the colored head waited stepped up and said a man was outside and wanted to see the governor. The governor had him shown in. It was the Van Wert county farmer he had bet with. “I just wanted to say, governor,” he began, “that I’ll ship that barrel of apples to Columbus tomorrow. The new law saved me just $15.20 V} °f the fact that I turned in $l,lOO more of personal property. Has Aided Veterans Cmx was the first Democrat ever to carry the National Soldiers’ Home, at Dayton, in an election. Ten years ago the nprmal voting population was about four to one Republican. During his first term as congress man, Cox discovered that the Repub lican appropriations committee of the house had increased the allow ance for food for the animals in the National Zoological Gardens at V ashington on account of increas ing costs, but hadn’t increased a penny the allowances for food for the soldiers’ homes throughout the country. When the bill was under discus sion, he produced the menus of the Dayton, home, the Dayton jail and the federal penitentiary at Leav enworth, Kan., and showed that the DRY PARTY WILL PUT OUT TICKET, STATES HINSHAW CHICAGO, July 6.—Nomination of Governor Cox as the Democratic pres idential nominee makes certain the placin gos an avowed dry ticket in the field, according to a statement here toddy by Virgil G. Hinshaw, na tional chairman of prohibition party. "The rum forces have certainly maneuvered well to secure nomina tions to their liking in both parties— Harding, champion of the seven-year clause in the eighteenth amendment, concocted by the wets in hoping to defeat it, and Cox, the implacable and schooled enemy of the dry forces of the country. “If Diogenes had returned with his lantern and searched the country over, he could not have found one better adapted to the fulfillment of the purposes of the liquor element than Cox." With both candidates of the major parties unsatisfactory, Mr. Hinshaw declared that if the prohibition party did not nominate a ticket of its own, it might co-operate with “another party." "Unless these gentlemen come out openly and decry all liquor support and announce their purpose of veto ing any measure intended for increas ing the alcoholic contents of liquors above one half of 1 per cent, as pro vided in the Volstead act, then the dry forces will be in a sad plight for a representative in the presidential race so far as the old parties are con cerned," he said. DRY LEADER PREDICTS THE ELECTION OF COX WASHINGTON, July 6. Indica- tions that the Democratic "drys” will not oppose the candidacy of Gov ernoh Cox because of reported anti prohibition beliefs were seen today when Senator Sheppard, Texas, dry leader in the senate, approved his nomination. Bryan Adds Nothing 1 o His Former Views Os Party Nominee SAN FRANCISCO, July 6..—Beaten in every battle he waged in the convention, William Jennings Bryan today had little to say regarding the selection of Governor James M. Cox as the party’s presidential nom inee. “I have already expressed my views on the candidate and what he stands for,” said Mr. Bryan. ‘‘Repe tition is unnecessary at this time.” The views Mr. Bryan referred to as having already been expressed in cluded sharp criticism of Governor Cox for his "wet” tendencies, also declaring the Ohio Governor lacked progressiveness, and said Governor Cox was lined up with Wall street. Mr. Bryan declined to say what part, if any, he intends to take in the campaign of Governor Cox. The Nebraskan not only made a losing fight to prevent the nomination of Governor Cox, -but he lost out in ef forts to shape the party platform to his ideas on the treaty, tne wet and dry issue, profiteering and other mat ters. Heat Does Damage-to This Man’s Wigs and Curls LONDuN.—Because the heat from a boiler is taking the curl out of wigs in his show cases, William Clarkson, theatrical wig maker, ask ed Justice Salter in the King’s Bench division recently to grant an injunc tion against the J. I’. restaurants to restrain the nuisance. Mr. Clarkson complained that the heat from the basement bailer in the Shaftsbury avenue restaurant pene trates the party wall to his War dour street premises and. takes the curl out of the wigs. J. G. Hurst, K. C., said that Mr. Clarkson had thousands of pounds worth of valuable property, and was in great fear that very considerable damage might be caused. He had a large show case nine or ten feet high standing against the wall. The wigs kept in one of the drawers weer found to be gradually deteriorating. Wax figures and masks on canvas suffered much damage, and the curl came out of the hair. The wall was found to be extremely hot. When tested with a thermome ter the temperature was found to jump in a fe wminutes from 63 de grees to 95 and 106 on different occa sions. , H. G. Leslie, architect, said the party wall showed cracks, fallen plas ter and shrunken woodwork. The flue of the furnace should be lined with firebrick for twenty-five feet or more. He estimated the cost at $275. His lordship thought the matter was one that might be arranged. After consultation the parties agreed to refer the technical building details to the district surveyor, who would report to his lordship, who could then give a final judgment.—Vancouver Sun. Kidnaped Girl Found 7 Hours Later on Farm Miss Josephine Grammatico, sev enteen years old and comely, who works at 693 Park avenue, Brook lyn was kidnapped. At 10 o’clock she was a prisoner in a farmhouse, at 3 o’clock she was released, and at 6 o’clock was restored to her parents. The girl was on her way to work when an automobile drew up along side the curb at Park and Tompkins avenue. A man leaped out of the car and grabbed her. She waJ placed in the tonneau, a handkerchief stuffed into her mouth and a cloak thrown over her head. Many persons witnessed the kid naping. A small boy scribbled down the number of the automobile. Captain Dan Morriety, with De tective Grieco and Adat, traced the car to 183 Troutman street, where they arrested Joseph Palozola and Albert Gelardo. The detectives then drove to Farmingdale, Long Island, and found Miss Grammatico and Joseph Pas tiglione, twenty-four, at a farm house. The three men were locked up at the Vernon avenue police sta tion, Brooklyn, charged with kidnap ing. Two Drift Far in Balloon Lieutenants John Muller and George Storey, of the army aviation corps, Hampton Roads, Va., were or dered to make an ascension in one of the army balloons shortly after mid night recently. When up several hun dred feet the balloon was caught by a strong wind which rapidly bore them north and east to the open sea. After drifting two hours or more the balloon was off Barnegat, N. J. when the wind shifted to the south east and blew shoreward. Finally, after four o’clock, the aviators made a landing on the shore Hear Prince’s Bay, Staten Island. "I never wsk so glad in all my life as I was when that wind shifted and we started for shore,” said Lieu tenant Storey, in telling of the trip. He vouches for the time made from Hampton Roads to Staten Island as slightly more than four hours. old soldiers were not faring as well as either the jail or the prison in mates. “If you can appropriate more money for the monkeys in the zqo, why can’t you give the old soldiers more eat eat?” was the text of his congressional speech. His fight was so vigorous that he forced into the bill a $250,000 in crease for food alone at the soldiers’ homes. At the next election he carried tha Dayton home overwhelmingly. CASTORIA For Infants and Children >N Use For Over 30 Years Always bears Signature THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1920. i a Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is « < \ mercury—quicksilver —and attacks your \ 1 \ bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel to- V’ I day and you will feel weak, sick and nau- \ seated tomorrow. Don’t lose a day’s Take “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Instead! Here-s my guarantee! Ask your druggist for a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone and take' a spoonful to night. If it doesn’t start your liver and straighten you right up better thc-n calomel and without griping or making you sick I want you to go back to the store and get your Spectacles > ON TRIAL ([ Sene? 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If you are fond of sewing, by v ill hand or machine, you will be happy to notice I J n that you can again thread your needle as • easily as if it were as large-eyed as the needle held by the lady in the picture along- / side hereof; they will enable you to do the / finest kind of embroidery and crochet-work, with as much ease and comfort as you ever x /£</ did in your life. •“ Will Help You To Read The Finest Print Thread A Small-Eyed Needle Or A Bird Off A Tree. .. r, / w 'LtU I f you go hunting occasionally or follow © B P k) other out-of-door .sports, just put on this W / n WffmwTm P air °f | arge-size "Perfect Vision" spec- If taeles of mine, shoulder your gun one of I these bright sunshiny mornlngsf and you W will find you can again sight your gun as clearly as ever, take perfect alrt || at your game, and bring down a sparrow just as if It were as big as the hen- II hawk shown on the tree in this ptethre; and in the evening when the g shadows .-re gathering in the dusk, you will have no trouble to distin 7 w guish your horses from cows and other livestock away out in the pasture || and as far as the eye can reach with the aid of a pair of my large-size “Perfect Vision" distance spectacles. " g L Don’t Want You To Send Me A Cent » Y° u Have Nothing To Lose. e Sit down right now, this very minute, and fill out the below coupon at 6 once; let Unde Sam deliver into your own hands, at your own door, a « pair of my handsome 10-karat gold-filled, improved soft-flexible bow, b large-size "Perfect Vision” spectacles in a velteen-llned spring-back, % « pocket-book spectacle case, for you to try on your own V j eyes in your own home fully ten days absolutely t free of V £ charge. Fill in this coupon, cut it out and mail it ut once without a cent of money, .i - St. Louis Spectacle House, St. —HfftCut Out This Coupon On This ST. LOUIS SPECTACLE HOUSE. Room ' ST. LOUIS, Mo’ I herewith enclose this coupon, which entitles me, by return mail, to a p4ir of your 10-karat, gold-filled, large size “Perfect Vision" spectacles, with the improved soft-flexible bows (like the ones shown In this advertisement), also a fine velteen-lined, spring-back, pocket-book spectacle case, with out cost to me, so I can try them out, under your own offer,. of a full ten days’ actual test—Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and three Says more. This free trial is not to cost me one penny, and if I like the glasses and keep them, I am to pay you $2.45 only —no more and no less. But ff. for any reason whatsoever, I don’t'wish to keep them (and I. myself, am to be the sole judge), I will return thenvto you without paving yqu a single cent for them, as you agreed in the above ad vertisement to send them on ten days’ absolute free trial. With this under standing. I mail you this certificate, and it is agreed that you will stick to your word and I will stick to mine. Don’t fail to answer the following ques tions'. How old are you?.'7.".'.'.How many years nave you used glasses (ff Name ..t.. Post Office"- Rural Route ~..T.80x N0...’.’ /..State.. ...3 Relief for Torpid Livers And Habitual Constipation The liver is the largest and most, important organ in the body, and when the< liver refuses to act, it causes constipation, biliousness, headaches, indigestion, gas, sour stomach, bad breath, dysentery, diarrhoea, pains in back and under shotffder blades and under ribs on right side. These symptoms lead to colds, influenza or other serious troubles unless corrected immedi ately. An Inactive liver places an extra burden on the kidneys, which over taxes them and causes the blood to absorb and carry into the sys tem the impurities that the liver and kidneys have failed to elimin ate. When you treat the liver alone, you treat only a third of your trouble, and that is why you have to take purgatives every few nights. Calomel or other ordinary laxatives do not go far enough. If you would treat your kidneys and blood while treating the liver, you would put your entire system in order and frequent purgatives would then be unnecessary. Dr. W. L. Hitchpock many years ago recognized these important facts, and after much study and research, compounded what is now known as Dr. Hitchcock’s Liver, Kidney and Blood Powders, three medicines combined in one. This was the Doctor’s favorite prescrip tion for many years, being used by his patients with marked success. It is a harmless vegetable remedy that will not make you sick, and you may eat anything you like while taking it. Get a large tin box from your If you suffer from Pellagra, get this remarkable free book on Pel lagra. A Good Clear Discussion of this fearful disease, written so any one can understand it. Tells how a big-hearted man has successfully treated Pellagra after it baffled science for 20(l» years. Describes all the symptoms and complications. Shows how Pellagra can be checked in early stages. Tells of the cures American Compounding Co., Box 587-L, Jasper, Ala. PELLAGRA GET THIS BOOKLET FREE of many southern people, rich anil poor alike, after thousands had been carried away by Pellagra. Pellagra can be cured. If you doubt, this book will convince you. And it will show you the way to a personal cure. If you are a Pellagra sufferer, or if you know of a Pella gra sufferer, then for humanity’s sake, let this book bring new courage and valuable knowledge. It will be sent Free for the asking. money. Take a spoonful of harmless, vege- • table Dodson’s Liver Tone tonight ■ and wake up feeling great. It’s per fectly harmless, so give it to your ; children any time. It can’t salivate, i so let them eat anything afterwards. • (Advt.) ■ 1 * : I il i '&n B PREPARED BY 1 : HITCHCOCK MEDICINE CO. P Atlanta. Ga. druggist or dealer for 25c, under his personal guarantee that it, will give relief, tone up the liver, stimulate the kidneys to healthy action and thereby purify the blood. Keep it in the home for ready use whenever any member of the family begins to feel “out of sorts.” It will prove a household friend and a val uable remedy.— (Advt.) 3