Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, July 17, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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CALOMEL DM mSOUTH “Dodson’s Uver Tone” is Taking the Place of Dan gerous, Sickening Drug You’re bilious, sluggish, constipat ed and believe you need vile, dan gerous calomel to start your liver and clean your bowels. Here's Dodson’s guarantee! Ask your druggist for a bottle of Dod son’s Liver Tone and take a spoonful tonight. If it doesn’t start your liver and straighten you right up better than calomel and without griping or making you sick, I want you to go back to the store and get your money. Take calomel today and tomorrow you will feel weak and sack and nauseated. Don’t lose a day’s work. 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, so let them eat anything afterwards. —(Advt.) 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I tried everything but found no permanent relief until my druggist rec ommended D. D. D. I beg every eczema sufferer to begin using D. D. D. at once. MISS MYRTLE HAHN, Nurse. Instant Relief About three years ago an itching, scaly eruption appeared on my head. I tried several waives and remedies but it kept spreading. Night after night I walked the floor unable to sleep. A friend recommended Three D. I tried it i and the first application gave me great relief, stopped the itching so I could sleep. After applying It for sev eral months I was entirely healed. D. W. HANNA, Burlingame, Kan. TRIAL BOTTLE Sent on Request Send your name and address for a generous trial bottle of D. D. D. Prescription. The first touch of D. D. D. will give you in stant relief. Send today. Enclose 10c to cover cost of packing and postage. _ w , 3845 E. Ravens- 8.8. 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We show you how to make big money in your spare time. Don’t compareour outfit with any you ever saw. It’s new—different—a sure hit, an order-getter, sells clothes like wildfire. Big cloth swatches on hand- I I some cards. Easy to display. A few orders bring $50.00 weekly profits, hundreds ■ I earn more. We make selling so easy you must win out. You can’t fail. > GET YOUR OWN CLOTHES FREE \ Your profits on only a few orders pay for a handsome suit for yourself. Select from ' I almost woeautiful samples, get yourdothesat lowestatrents’pricea.saveaboutone-half. (You run no risk Money Back Guarantee. Ask for Our FREE Clothing Insurance Policy. i ■ nir *?i<r (Jllfrif Free contains handsome Karotol leather salesman’s carrying case, almost 160 Will arlg yUUII I Icc big cloth samples, latest fashion styles, measuring tape, order blanks, business cards, oar wonderful Clothing Insurance Policy and complete instructions to teach you euc cesaful clothes selling. Write at once for your fine outfit. Sand no cash. Everything Absolutely FREE. Young Flanders earned 639.62 in 3 days spare time, you can do as well. Build a £3? "'-Tt uTS® -WldF 7 paying business at home. We furnish v 1 ESSMiSBjK 85?.® —. outfit and will teach you free. Big Oufjjt Charges , THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ASSEMBLY BODIES CONSIDER MANY . VITAL MEASURES House and senate committees put in a busy afternoon on Wednesday, considering many measures of vital importance. The house appropria tions committee heard arguments on a bill appropriating $50,000 for a new dormitory at Bowden college and an other measure asking for $20,000 maintenance fund. A subcommittee from the same committee considered the various enducational appropria tions sought this year and came to the conclusion that all such bills should be classified as to their de gree of necessity. The present condition of the state treasury precludes the appropriation of the full amount asked by the va rious educational institutions of the state an«i it is proposed to appro priate the minimum amount that can be named for the present, with the hope that the revenues of the state may be increased through the tax re form measures now under considera tion. If these constitutional amend ments are approved by the people, a special session of the general assem bly can be. called this winter and additional approprations made for the state’s educational institutions. The educational committee of the house voted to report adversely on a bill by Mr. Covington, of Colquitt, to designate "Frances Willard” day as a legal holiday in Georgia. Fa vorable reports were ordered on bills to co-operate with the federal gov ernment in vocational rehabilitation for persons injured in industry; to establish illiteracy schools; to per mit the increase in the tax rate for retirement of school bonds. J?he workmen’s compensation bill, tne provisions of which have been agreed upon by the Georgia Manu facturers’ association, the Georgia Federation of Labor and the insur ance companies, was favorably con sidered by the house committee on commerce and labor. The same com mittee killed a bill providing for two field agents for the department of labor. The senate committee on privileges and elections unanimously recom mended the passage of two enabling bills by Senator Elders, which would permit women to vote in the state primaries and elections this fall if the thirty-sixth state ratifies the equal suffrage amendment to the na tional constitution. Under the Geor gia law the registration books close six months ahead of the date of election, thus disqualifying women who might vote undei’ federal suf frage legislation. Two bills affecting the state uni versity were also given favorable reports by the University of Georgia committee of the senate. The first of these measures makes Franklin college, which is the academic de partment of the University of Athens, co-educational. The second bill re peals the act authorizing the appoint ment of three members of the state university board as members of the boards of trustees of the various branches of the university system. Women Will Demand That Cox Aid Them In Fight for Vote COLUMBUS, Ohio, July 15.—Suf frage leaders in their conference with Governor Cox tomorrow will demand that the first work of his campaign be to force Democratic legislatures in Tennessee and North Carolina to ratify the nineteenth amendment, and thus give all women a vote next November. Miss Alice Paul, head of the Na tional Woman’s party, who arrived hero today, stated that the delega tion will be satisfied with nothing less than a promise from the gover nor that he will make energetic ef forts in the two states to complete ratification. The same delegation will make a similar demand on Sen ator Harding next Thursday. “The outcome of this conference will be one of the most important events in Governor Cox’s campaign,” said Miss Paul. “It’s the oppor tunity to accomplish more than can be obtained on any other issue, for to give freedom to half a country is a chance that has never come to a party before.” “Fruit Queen” Picks 58 Gallons of Cherries From Just One Tree ASHEVILLE, July 15. —Mrs. C. E. Mease, of Cruse, Haywood county, holds the record for the cherry crop for this year, for she has just brought to the city fifty-eight gal lons of cherries which she states she gathered personally from one tree. Mrs. Mease, who is known as the “fruit queen” of her section, says she has 15,000 apple trees which are bearing this year. Americans Caught in Triest Hotel Fire TRIEST, July 13. —Francis Flynn, of San Antonio, Tex., who escaped from a burning hotel during the anti- Slav demonstrations here Tuesday, is an American sailor and head of the United States navy communica tion service, Triest. Flynn was trapped on the fifth floor and made his escape by jumping twenty feet to the street. Several American families who were caught in the burning hotel had’ just arrived from America and were awaiting trains to Jugo-Slavia. Scores presented themselves at the American consulate today quite des titude, having lost all their belong ings. Among them was Rufus Ryman, of Nashville, Tenn. Ryman was dec orated by the Italian government for bravery in the Durazzo fighting dur ing the war. Gets $500,000 in Wedding Gifts Br f “ I .;x - . J HBk, ■ j p IM II OiSw I Kißw I i Ih i -Mi DETROIT. —The wedding gifts of Mrs. James H. R. Cromwell (Miss Delphlne lone Dodge), whose father, Horace Dodge, made millions building automobiles, filled a whole floor of the Dodge t’palace” here, and are said to be worth $500,000 or more. Not the least of the little trinkets showered on the bride was a SIOO,- 000 pearl necklace, shown around Mrs. Cromwell’s neck, and a fur nished mansion in Philadelphia. Both were given by her father. ARMED MEN LOOT POSTOFFICE AT DUBLIN, IRELAND DUBLIN, July 16.—Fifty armed men raided the main postoffice here early today, seizing all government mail. Several police constables were wounded in a fight with Sinn Fein ers at Foynes, County Limerick. The Sinn Feiners ambushed the con stables on. the outskirts of the town. Military authorities seized 580 rounds of ammunition at Bunratty castle, County Clare. The railway strike was assuming serious proportions today as a re sult of refusal to handle munitions or work trains carrying armed sol diers and police. At Clones, County Moneghan, five railwaymen were kidnaped by armed men and convey ed in a motor car to an unknown des tination. It was believed they were kidnaped because they -worked on trains carrying ammunition in the places of dismissed men. Georgia Legion to Hold Convention in Augusta August 19 The Georgia division of the Ameri can Legion will meet in Augusta for its second annual convention on August 19. The official order of the state executive committee fixing the date was issued yesterday, and many Atlanta legionalres are planning to attend. At the first state convention in Atlanta last October the Louis L. Battey post, No. 4, of Augusta, won the second convention after spirited competition with Macon, Columbus and other cities. Landon Thomas, Jr., commander, and George Hains, vice commander of the Augusta post, have been at work for many weeks completing; all arrangements for the big meet, which will be held in the commodious clubrooms of the Battey post. Veterans of the war who attended the Atlanta convention last year re member the heated debates which were precipitated by motions to in dorse the League of Nations and compulsory military training, and by other important discussions. The ma jority of these matters went over as unfinished business, and are likely to be features of the Augusta ses sion. The Atlanta legionnaires who con template attending the convention and who desire further details con cerning local arrangements are re quested to communicate with Lan don Thopias, Jr., Augusta, Ga. Every Member of Fire Department of Memphis Walks Out MEMPHIS, Tenn., July 15.—The entire fire department of the city of Memphis struck at noon today. Half an hour after the noon hopr reports received at central headquarters in dicated that no one man had remain ed at his post. When the noon gong rang the veteran firemen ,old and young, pick ed up their belongings, with cheers, and walked out. Soviets Offer Reward For Head of Ex-Czar LONDON, July 15.—The Soviet government is offering a reward of two million rubles for the head of a man claiming to be Czar Nicholas of Russia, according to information re ceived by the Jewish Correspondence bureau today. The advices say the claimant, who is in Siberia, has raised a consid erable following. In accounting for his escape from the hands of the Bolshevik! he asserts it was a serv ant impersonating the czar who was killed at Yekaterinburg, where the czar and his family are understood to have been executed. River Turns About And Runs Upstream HICKMAN, Ky.—Without visible cause, the water in the Mississippi river near the shore became turbu lent, began to whirl and then ran upstream a short distance. Waves, which were ten feet high, sank a fishboat, nearly overturned a barge and filled it half full of water, tore loose small craft and broke heavy lines that held boats to shore. The phenomenon, which lasted sev eral minutes, was witnessed by a number of persons. There was no wind and the rest of the river was calm. Fourth Plague Victim Reported in Pensacola PENSACOLA, Fla., July 15.—John Henry Hudson, Jr., nineteen, today was Pensacola’s fourth sacrifice to bubonic plague. Young Hudson died last night after a week’s illness of the septasemic type of the disease. Out of 5,000 rats trapped and ex amined only twelve have proved posi tive plague-bearers, health authorities report. All buildings rapidly are be ing rat-proofed. THIRD PARTYITES ARE NO PARLOR REDS AT ALL BY DAVID LAWRENCE (Copyright, 1920, for The Atlanta Journal.) CHICAGO, HL, July 15. —Parlor socialists have met the real Bol shevists at the third party conven tion here, and will probably go home sadder but wiser men. For the committee of Forty-eight was largely a group of progressives, called radicals and Bolshevists by their conservative friends, but real ly conservatives themselves when ranged alongside the farmer and la bor groups with their extreme de mands and errant psychology. But the reader must understand at the outset that by the terms “farmer” and labor as used in the third party convention, a small min ority of agricultural workers and a small minority of toilers in factor ies and railroads is meant. So radi cal and Bolshevistic are the aims of the so-called farmer and labor groups gathered here that even the much condemned non - partisan league of North Dakota farmers has hesitated to get behind the farmer groups here whole-heartedly and join in the orgy of agitation and destruction which the platform of the majority of the committee repre senting the so-called farmer and la bor alliance asked the third party to adopt. Even Robert M. La Follette, re garded as the radical of radicals in the United States senate, declined to run on the extremist platform. Want Bolshevism The truth of the matter is that the extremist plainly asked for the nearest approach to Bolshevism that has yet been suggested in a pasty convention or political gath ering to their bosoms nearly all the they went a step further in gath ering to their bosom? morly all the malcontents in America, including the people who in one breath de nounce the League of Nations as an entangling alliance and a provoker of wars and who in the next breath would risk war between the United States and Great Britain unless rec ognition of the Irish republic is granted by both, and the people who want to stir up the race problems of America anew by granting equal social as well as political rights to negroes and who want to affiliate with the revqlutionists in India and Egypt and ehter into a hearty kin ship with soviet Russia. Every mention of the Russian soviet was cheered, and every ref erence to Imitating what the work ers had done in Russia was ap plauded. It was a gathering of agitators from all parts of the United States, including men who started the out law strike on the railroads a few months ago and the men who have been threatening to overthrow Sam uel Gompers and the conservative of organized labor as a part of their program of chaos and revo lution. Small wonder that Mr. Gompers has had trouble repressing radicals in the ranks of labor. And if the minority had a sincere purpose in trying to get possession of the labor organizations throughout the country, it might be a different story; but the writer was assured by members of the Committee of Forty-Eight that this convention was indeed a revela tion to them and that many of the leaders of the labor groups here were merely playing a game of labor poli tics intended to help them gain the big offices in organized labor for themselves—simply a case of per sonal ambition which is so much derided when individuals give vent to similar human aspirations in the Republican and Democratic parties. Like a Safety Valve It was a good thing all the ex tremists in America were gathered together in a single room or at least representatives of every extremist faction, for the whole thing was like a safety valve. It was well to al low all the steam to blow off. The extreme radicals revealed their own hypocracies. They refused even a courteous hearing to the progressives and liberals who tried to furnish po litical sense to the third party pro gram and guide it along rational lines in away that, it was contended by George L. Record, of New Jersey, for instance, would convert millions of citizens who might otherwise close their minds and refuse even to listen to the third party argument. The progressives like Amos Pinchot and Mr. Record argued that as a matter of pilitical expediency it was not wise to go too far in the first year of the third party’s program. But the word “expediency was like waving a flag in front of a bull. Speaker after speaker from the ranks of labor rose and shouted that as between expediency and principle they preferred principle no matter where it led them —a splen did manifestation of fighting spirit, but as valuable in a political meet ing as it would be at the battle line if troops refused to retreat when a commander advised it for strategic reasons or as a maneuver toward ul timate victory. The labor group said plainly they didn’t even care wheth er La Follette accepted the nomina tion, though most of them must have realized he was their best champion on the stump and their best vote-getter. Misguided Energy They would insist, they said, on making a platform first and then getting a candidate who would run on it. They were ready to denounce La Follette as out of sympathy with the aspirations of subject peoples, and they did Indeed shout down sev eral speakers, although one of the planks of the platform referred in emphatic terms to free speech. Time and again the chairman of the con vention 'had to intercede with the audience to permit an individual to speak who had been given the floor in accordance with the rules of pro cedure. Cries of “sit down” and “throw him out,” - which one would have suspected took place only in capitalistic gatherings when a lib eral thought is uttered, were the commonest occurrence in the third party meeting. All the passion of the mob, all the misguided energy of some sincere reformers and pro gressives, all the menacing theories of the economic revolutionists were let loose here without interference by federal or state police and as a consequence the extremists have shot their bolt and no one need fear that they will hereafter get even the aid and comfort they have been getting at the hands of the intel lectual socialists. The radicals demanded not merely Democratic control of all industry and a share in the management of enterprises, but they demanded gov ernment ownership and operation of all public utilities as well as natural resources. They never said a word about com pensation for those mines, stocks yards, oil wells, etc., which would be taken over by the government from their individual owners. Nor did they suggest a means whereby the millions of citizens whose money is invested in natural resources were to get compensation and thus prevent panic and misery to the whole coun try by such economical upheaval. Government Ownership They demanded government owner ship of most everything and the workers management of most every thing and offered Soviet Russia as a concrete example of their aims. Small wonder some of the mem bers of the committee of forty-eight, reluctantly but indignantly admitted that they had encountered the real Bolshevists and drew away from them with the same disdain that their conservative brethren have felt for such radicalism in the past. It was an hour of disillusionment for patriotic, order-loving progressive and a repetition of what always has happened when liberals try to accom plish reforms through extremists and noise-making agitators. The ex tremists killed what might have been a moderate program of liberalism in a campaign containing no small bur den- of studied conservatism and avowed reaction. Acquitted of Murder YORK, S. C.. July 15. —Oliver N. Dawson, forty-four, a loom fixer em ployed by the Carhartt Manufactur ing company at Rock Hill, was ac quitted here yesterday of the killing of M. S. Butler, another textile worker, in a pistol fight. Dawson, who claimed self defense, was con veted of carrying a pistol and was fined SSO. h i ij 1 £ O Tallest Man in A. E. F, Weds t ihl _ lIMIpB 1 M'lh H ii FLINT, Mich.—Sergeant Homer Parks, ex-soldier, recently married Miss Lelia Moore, of Yoakum, Tex., in the Memphis, Tenn., Y. M. C. A. Now he thinks the whole world should look up to him. And, believe us, that is some job, for Paris is 6 feet 9% inches tall—just a foot higher than his bride. He was the tallest man in the A. E. F., and led the American military parade through Paris. Cantonment Expert Will Discuss Housing Problem at Barbecue W. E. Minter, of Huntington, W. Va., an important figure in the con struction of America’s cantonments during the war, will discuss the na tion’s housing problem from a view point of conditions at home and abroad as the guest of honoi' at a barbecue next Saturday afternoon at “The Jack Rabbit’s Nest,” a recrea tional resort just off the Campbell ton road near Ben Hill. Mr. Minter comes to Atlanta at the invitation of James L. Logan, chairman of the committee on in dustrial promotion of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce and head of a similar committee of the Atlanta Real Estate board. After his work in connection with building camps during the war, Mr. Minter was call ed to Europe by the Greek govern ment and spent several months across the Atlantic as counsellor in solving post-war housing problems there. The barbecue at “The Jack Rab bit’s Nest,” a 300-acre resort pro moted by a number of leading At lantians. begins at 12:30 o’clock Sat urday afternoon and invitations have been extended to a large number of guests. 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BROWN & WILLIAMSON TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C. | I HARDING RESENTS SUFFRAGE ATTACK ON REPUBLICANS MARION, 0., July 15.—Senator Harding in a statement last night resented what he characterized as "persistent misrepresentations” of the Republican party’s attitude to wards woman suffrage and said to his party belonged the credit for . that reform ever having a chance of . success. He deplored, however, efforts to I make political capital out of the sit uation and said he hoped ratification would be accomplished before Novem ber, no matter whether a Democratic or Republican state was the thirty sixth to approve the suffrage amend ment. "Even if a Democratic state shall finish the business, the record will j still show that twenty-nine Repub | lican and seven Democratic states made up the roll of honor,” Senator i Harding said. “That is good enough for us.” “My patience is sorely tested some times over the persistent misrepre sentations of the Republican party, its state governors and legislatures in this matter of woman suffrage. “Whether it emanates from mere mischief-makers, or from partisan desires, I cannot help resenting it. We must insist on having fair treat ment of the party without whose persistent support the great reform would never have had a chance of success. "A Republican senate and a Re publican house submitted the consti tutional amendment for equal suf frage. A Democratic senate had pre viously refused to submit it. Twen ty-nine Republican and six Demo cratic states have ratified it. "Six Democratic states have re jected the ratification resolution, and another, Louisiana, has just re fused to give it consideration. One Republican state—just one, Dela : ware—has rejected it. The first i eight states to ratify were Repub- "When in 1919 the Republican sen ! ate finally mustered the necessary majority to submit the amendment there were thirty-six Republican and only twenty Democratic senators vot ing for it, but there were seventeen Democratic and only eight Republican senators voting against it. “Whether in the senate or house, in congress or state legislatures, the record shows that the Republicans have been the persistent and effec tive supporters of this measure. In such circumstances —circumstances " that are thoroughly familiar to ev erybody—it is simply amazing that Democratic managers should now have the audacity to be assuming that they are the friends on who the cause must depend if It is to succeed. "For myself and for the Repub lican party, I earnestly desire that ratification may be accomplished in time to give the whole body of American women the ballot next No vember. I am wearied with efforts to make partisan advantage out of this situation. I hope there will be ratification, and I do not care a fig whether it is secured through a Re publican or a Democratic state. I will rejoice if North Carolina will do it, or if Tennessee will do It, just as I would rejoice if a Republican State did it. , . “There will be glory enough for the Republican party no matter whether the thirty-sixth state is Re publican or not. If any word Ox mine could possibly be Influential with any Republicans in the North Carolina legislature, the word would be ‘vote for ratification and don t worry about who gets the credit of putting it over.’ ’’ Another quiet day was in pros pect today when Senator Harding resumed work on his speech of ac ceptance. No visitors were expect ed. The Republican presidential nominee hoped to have the speech ready to turn over to the news serv ices on Saturday for distribution to the newspapers of the country. 187 Killed in Streets NEW YORK. —Automobiles and other vehicles "were responsible for the deaths of 187 persons in the streets of New York during June. This is the largest number of fatali ties from such causes ever recorded. SATURDAY, JULY 17, 102 b. CROP PROSPECTS HERE ARE GOOD, BRADSTREET SAYS The agricultural outlook is highly favorable, building activities are continuing at a lively clip, notwith standing the high price of material, cotton is thriving and a bumper crop of sweet potatoes is predicted, says J. E. C. Redder, southeastern man ager for Bradstreet’s, in his sum mary of financial and Industrial con ditions for the past week. Sharp reductions in prices of men’s furnishings are noted, and it is shown that retailers in all lines are exercising extreme caution in making purchases. The peach crop is described as somewhat short, al though the report adds that the high price will more than offset the shortage. Mr. Pedder’s complete report fol lows: “Wholesale and retail trade is quiet. Jobbers say retailers are buying with extreme caution, al though cancellations appear to be de creasing. Marked-down sales con tinue and reductions in men’s fur nishings are almost general. Satis factory business is being done in the general hardware and implement line with prices high. Collections gen erally are slow and many accounts are reaching attorneys’ hands. Build ing is active and all materials are high. Real, estate is also active and numerous transfers are being made daily. The warm weather with, oc casional showers has been very beneficial to all growing crops. Cot ton especially is doing well and fruiting fast.' The boll wevil is do ing some damage in certain sections, but prospects for cotton are much improved. Corn is doing well, al though worms have appeared in places and are doing damage. Pea nuts and sweet potatoes have been planted. Fruit crops, especially peaches, will be reduced, although the high price will more than off set the shortage. Some brown rot is reported.” Chauffeur Attacked Mrs. Cordova Before Slaying Her, Is Claim NEW LONDON, Conn., July 15. Mrs. Florence De Cordova, wife of a New York broker, who was slain by her chauffeur, Bernard Geisler, near here, was attacked before she was killed, authorities said today. Marks were found on her throat indicating she was choked until un conscious, Dr. F. I. Payne, who ex amined the body, informed Prosecut ing Attorney Benjamin S. Hewitt. . Geisler’s body was claimed by his wife and taken back to New York. said she had quarreled with her husband because of Mrs. De Cordova before they separated. She found him carrying a lock of Mrs. De Cor dova’s hair, she said, and also learn ed he had two pictures of the woman. Mrs. Geisler said she called Mrs. De Cordova on the telephone at the time and remonstrated with her but would not repeat what Mrs. De Cor dova sajd in reply. U. S. Death Rate Falls; More Twins Bom and Centenarians Increase WASHINGTON, July 15.—Despite jazz music, the strain of presidential elections and rising living costs, Americans are close to becoming the longest-lived race, reports to the vital statistics bureau indicated to day. The national death rate has taken a big tumble, according to the fig ures. Plural births are occurring in greater numbers than ever before Approximately 30,000 twins are born per year. Census reports show that nearly 4,000 persons can be found any time who claim to be 100 years old or more, while the number past ninety is well over 30,000. Incidentally more women live to be 100 than men. SAY “DIAMOND DYES” Don’t streak or ruin your material in a poor dye. Insist on “Diamond Dyes.” Easy directions in package. "CORNS” Lift Right Off Without Pain - 1 / V I Ira ' In Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift It right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, suffi cient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and calluses, without soreness or irrita tion.—(Advt.) er pwims * Prcßaid i i Guaranteed for 2 years solid Urr wear or your money cheerfully K v' ; r IwA re unded. Three p'ntss ea"Won nk 1-1 der-Velne” worth 35.50 sent to you / BSrITTi *® r • a - 4s as ° aampleof fine tailoring. jSI agents wannp Carn OO a week in your spare time. No experiencx necessary. Write today for our lllfilS FREE OUTFIT Mr r™ with downs of the newest styles an< UQ attractive woolen samples to ch-or. M wj from. Everything sent SRSE. 88 WASHINGTON TAILORING CO. 4E Chleego, HNtWto ARE YOU SICK? If you are suffering from Blood or Nerve Disorders, Rheumatic Symp toms, Stomach or Bowel Trouble. Skin broken out or rough and sore. Sore Mouth or Tongue, Giddy-Head ed, Weak, Nervous, Loss of Appetite or a General Run-down condition of Health—you should write at once for the most valuable and reliable in formation that has yet been pub lished about the strange disease— PELLAGRA Many people have this disease and do not know it until it is too late Do not wait. You cannot afford to take chances. You may not have PELLAGRA, but if your health is run down, or you suffer from one or more of the above troubles—yoq should protect yourself against this vile disease. Get rid of these trou bles NOW —do not wait until the sys tem is entirely undermined by dis ease. No matter what doctors or others have told you—no matter what you have tried—no matter if you have had these symptoms but a few weeks or several years—all we ask is just a chance to show you what the AR GALLEP TREATMENT will do. 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