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“They WORK 1
while you sleep” ■
A Dependable Physic
when Bilious, Headachy,
Constipated and Upset.
10, 25, 50c —drugstores.
/
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NO MONEY
A] M ADVANCE
y Organ Oiler
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more than 100,000 of these famous organs
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| NAME |
| ADDRESS.
Thousands Cured By
Drinkiiigjteal Water
The Famous Perlax Mineral Springs
at Excelsior Springs, Mo., Makes
Generous offer to Sufferers
Every year as manv as 250,000 peo
ple visit Excelsior Springs, Mo., to
drink the wonderful waters found
there. Invalids from all over the
■country, given up by their home
■doctors, find health and vigor in
■the mineral and curative agents
■compounded far underground by Na
■ture.
a Probably the most famous waters
■are those found in the Perlax Min
■eral Spring, and many thousands
[who have suffered from Gout.
■Rheumatism, Constipation, Diver
Bind Kidney troubles and similar ail
■wnts have been permanently re
lieved by drinking it.
£ So confident are the owners of
■the spring that this water will ben
lefit you that they offer to send
Ba 31 carton of Perlax Mineral Salts
■to anyone who will write for it.
■When dissolved in water this is
■equal to ten g” lions of Perlax Min
■eral water. Their offer is that It
■is to be paid for only if it benefits.
■The person taking it is to be the
Bole judge and report results within
■thirty days’ time.
B If you sutler from any of the
■above diseases write for a carton to-
Blay." Send no money—just your
■kame and address to Perlax Mineral
■Springs, 470 Perlax Bldg., Excelsior
■Springs, Mo.—(Advt.)
I A GREAT EGG PRO
'S DUCER SENT FREE!
BGETS 36 EGGS A DAY —40 HENS
■ Mrs. A. Eustin, Hastings, Nebr.,
■writes: “I was getting hardly any
■eggs when I commenced using Ban
■iy’s Egg More Tonic. Now lam get-
Bing 36, and sometimes more than 36
■eggs a day from 40 hens.” You can
■io as well. COSTS Y r OU NOTHING
■TO TRY. Just send your name and
Kddress to C. E. Bandy, Poultryman,
■’arsons, Kans., and he will send you
■absolutely FREE and PREPAID a
■ackage of Egg More Tonic, just to
■onvince you of what it will do. It
■ill double this year’s production of
■ggs. Write for free package.
gg (Advt.)
■ No Experience Needed
BBEI-Vl Professional chine and
complete outfits sold on
easy payments. Openings
■ everywhere. Start now.
Monarch Theatre Supply
CO., Dept. 506, 420 Mar
■MjmrMir?fri L r i k et st., St. Louis, Mo.
wrt Treated One Week
■ FREE. Short breath-
Sb3kl®Jl b 3 1 >“« relieved in a few
" ■ hours, swelling re-
■ueed in a few days, regulates the liver
Kidneys, stomach and heart, purifies the
Blood, strengthens the entire system. Write
■or Free Trial Treatment. COLLUM u«ur-
By remedy co., dept. o. Atlanta, ga.
Bong-o-phone cornet, solid metal, highly
Anyone can play it. Given for selling 25
Novelties at 10c each.
Kaole Watch Co.. Dept. 461. East Boston. Mass.
ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Kidnaper’s Victim
Is Only a Dummy
NEW YORK. —After Patrolman
Gandert of theMorrisiania sta
tion, prevented the kidnapping of
a woman and arrested a man as
the abductor, he found that the
victim was a clothing store dum
my. Then he changed the charge
to burglary, and the man was
held in $2,500 bail for examina
tion today.
The policeman explained to
Magistrate Tobias in the Morrisa
nia court that the story began
with a fire in a cellar on Melrose
avenue. Mrs. Catherine Samsel
haw men break the plate glass
' window of David Jacoby’s cloth
ing store at No. 2969 Third ave
nue, enter the store and come out
carrying a woman. Then she gave
the alarm.
The prisoner said he was Ed
ward Gleason, twenty, of No. 611
East 179th street. The policeman
said two others escaped.
. 300ZE WITNESS
, COLLAPSES AFTER
HIS CONFESSION
I
CHICAGO, Oct. 14.—Crazed by
fear, H. A. Sadler, the government’s
chief witness in the investigation in
to booze traffic in Chicago, was sent
to a sanitarium Wednesday. Sadler
confessed yesterday and his mind
collapsed while he was undergoing
further examination today.
Sadler told authorities his life had
been threatened after he made a com
plete confession of an alleged $30,-
000 bribe paid to high officials.
Judge K. M. Landis, of federal
court, announced he will issue a
call for a federal grand jury inves
tigation of the Chicago “whisky
ring.”
Colored Labor Finds
North Disappointing;
Returning to Georgia
MACON, Ga.—Thousands of Geor
gia negroes who migrated to the
north and east soon after /the
outbreak of the war, lured by high
wages offered in industrial plants,
are returning to Georgia, and hun
dreds of others, unable to make the
homeward trek because of lack of
funds, are sending appeals to their
former employers for tickets on
which to travel back to Dixie, ac
cording to figures gtahered by the
Macon News.
Virtually all of those who return
and those who are writing for funds
state they have been thrown out of
employment and now find themselves
faced with the prospect of a hard
Winter in a strange land.
Returning negroes all tell the
same story. The high wages receiv
ed counted very little with them as
they were more than offset by the
high cost of living in the industrial
centers to which they went. Practi
cally all of them return to their old
homes penniless, glad to have saved
enough from their high wages to
purchase transportation back to the
land of cotton, sweet potatoes, free
quarters and free firewood.
Cow’s Rib Patches
Man’s Broken Spine
LYNN, Mass.—William Cosgrove
has returned home after undergoing
an operation at the Massachusetts
General hospital, where surgeons re
moved fourteen inches of his spine
and substituted a cow’s rib of equal
length.
The operation was necessitated by
a kick from a horse which Cosgrove
received ten years ago. While driv
ing a jitney bus the constant jolt
of the machine lately resulted in
partial paralysis.
The ordinary graft Is seldom more
than two or three Inches of bone,
and when it was decided that four
teen inches of bone must be substi
tuted. Cosgrove insisted that the
method of the operation be explained
to him. The cow’s bone was boiled
for forty-eight hours, then chilled
and filed into shape. Cosgrove watch
ing the work before going under the
knife.
Cosgrove was placed in a plaster
cast after the operation and is con
fined to his bed, but physicians say
it will be only a few weeks before
he will be able to walk with the aid
of crutches.
Ot [Mg wg
Calomel salivates! It’s mercury. Calomel '
acts like dynamite on a sluggish liver. When
calomel comes into contact with sour bile it '
crashes into it, causing cramping and nausea.
Take “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Instead!
If you feel bilious, headachy, con
stipated and all knocked out, just go
to your druggist and get a bottle of
Dodson’s Liver Tone for a few cents,
which is a harmless vegetable substi
tute for dangerous calomel. Take a
spoonful and if it doesn’t start your
liver and straighten you up better
and quicker than nasty calomel and
llustSendUsl
Your Name and Address
r I
| You promise spend risk
put yourself under no
obligation of any kindo
g We will gladly eend you the most
& beautiful assortment of cloth earn- fca ■
3 pies, the finest style book ever pub- **•/••* - »
Eg fished, and the lowest prices on O '" r, b - iyd pa ■
■ earth for guaranteed tailoring. > I" f O ■
| Your Own Suit FREE. jOftih 'asOhtO
A real, genuine, high class, guar- ■
n anteed, made to measure suit, a B
■ beauty in every respect, and far' E
■ ahead of ordinary tailoring. All we B
■ ask you to do is wear and show mjjnHCT
U your suit to friends and neighbors,
■ advertise our handsome tailoring,
■ take the orders that come your way,
■ and make $lO a day.
SIO.OO a DAY.
SIO.OO a day Is dead easy. Many
make more. One man made $426.00 »'>
last month. Fred Jones. Columbus, && ' .4
Ga., made 363.25 the first day. 18,000 S
others make big money. Nq experl- O
ence needed, no money needed. "We - :
teach you how and furnish every- fly
thing free. Your own suit and our
liberal offers get the business. O
Everything shipped on approval. We \
pay delivery charges and guarantee 1 S 3
satisfaction. No sale unless custo- fL ><- ~ m
mer is pleased. ■
WRITE US TODAY.
A postal wUI do. Send no money—
just your name and address. No matter where you live or what you I
-do,-write-us a-eard at onee before you--turn" this page.'before you do B
another thing. Do not delay or you may forget all about it and lose this ■
wonderful opportunity. Remember, everything tree, and no obligation B
on your part.
THE PAUGOH TAILORING 00., Bept. 753 3Msaxe |
Son’s Violin Melodies By Telephone Cheer Invalid Mother
I • '
" s| ne W YORK. —Every day Maurice |
f noted violinist, plays the old '
' f Z melodies and airs of long ago that /C v
‘he knows his mother loves, over the | X - • 1
telephone from his room to the cot
3 yll where she lies seriously ill, at Flow- ....... . : 1/ /
er hospital. Afraid lest the music
* disturb other patients, Nitka adopted
< this novel method of playing the ’SbE?"*’* /' * .•«•••
% music his mother wished. Physi- • ’ z ’ ,?V'-
< clans say that Mrs. Nitka has shown *SSETi. a— ••' • ??' . I-’':' • •••' ''’
V great Improvement since the daily ■ V . z . ‘ Z
:• % concerts Actually, musicians, say, I * fp. ' 1—
>. some violin music is improved by n IV
tV •? telephonic transmission. X V '
. v s.
iwra
Ninety Prohi Officers
Raid Thirty-One Saloons
In 10 Minutes, Hold 25
NEW Y’ORK. —Edwin Waters,
chief prohibition enforcement agent
for the western district of New York,
with headquarters in Bu&alo, yester
day, swooped down with almost 100
men upon Yonkers, whose wet wick
edness recently has been called to
the attention of the world by William
H. Anderson, state superintendent of
the Anti-Saloon league. He raided
thirty-one saloons and arrested twen
ty-five men.
Six of the places searched yielded
no liquor and at two of them the
raiders were baffled temporarily.
One of the latter was Henry Diet
rich’s saloon at 105 Yonkers avenue.
The searchers found nothing incrimi
noting in the place but decided before
departing to glance into a safe which
stood in a corner of the room.
They asked Mr. Dietrich to open
it. Mr. Dietrich scratched his head
and said he couldn’t for the life of
him recollect what the combination
of that safe was. He hardly ever
opened It, he said, and what with the
excitement and all, the manner of
doing so had slipped his mind com
pletely.
The thre emen assigned to search
Mr. Dietrich’s premises are men of
muscle and determination. They
looked at Mr. Dietrich and they
looked at the safe, which stands
Disappointed Thieves
Destroy Costly Goods
$5,500 Robbery Takes Place Near
Police Headquarters
NEW YORK.—The proximity of
police headquarters meant nothing
to thieves who, on Tuesday night,
forced a window in the hat factory
of Isaac Holoschutz, at 206 Center
street, and stole, or destroyed,
property valued at SB,OOO. It was
the third time the loft had been
robbed in twenty years.
According to the manufacturer,
new hats valued at $5,000 were stol
en, $2,000 worth were slashed with
knives and SSOO in cash, with sev
eral Liberty bonds, were also taken.
It is believed that the thieves
destroyed the property in anger,
because they failed to find $15,000
which Holoschutz had deposited in
the bank only a few hours before
they entered the place.
without making you sick, you just
go back and get your money.
If you take calomel today you’ll be
sick and nauseated tomorrow; be
sides, it may salivate you, while if
you take Dodson’s Liver Tone you
will wake up feeling great, full of
ambition and ready for work or play.
You can give it to children, too.
(Advt.)
about two feet high and is built just
as solidly as Mr. Dietrich is. They
informed Mr. Dietrich that so long
as he didn’t use the safe much they’d
just take it along and if he happened
to remember the comhbination
could drop in at police headquarters
and they would open it together.
Whisky Stored in Cans
While Mr. Dietrich gazed aston
ished at such industry the three pro
hibition agents trundled the safe
across the sidewalk, boosted it into
a motor truck and departed.
The other place at which the raid
er’s struck a snag was Nathan Benja
min’s saloon at 66 Riverdale avenue.
No liquor was to be found there.
Chancing to step into Angelo Turei's
shoe-shining establishment next door,
however, , one of the seachers saw
several large tin cans which bore no
labels and seemed too large for shoe
polish. Angelo couldn’t remember
what was in these cans. Somebody
had left them there and never had
called for them.
The prohibition agents opened one
of the cans. Its contents smelled
like W'hisky and tasted like whisky,
so they took Angelo and the cans to
headquarters. Twenty-four other
prisoners were assembled there. They
were released in 5500 bail each for
arraignment tomorrow before the
United States commissioner.
H. B. Baylor Outlines
Principles of Platform
In Governor’s Race
Making formal announcement z“f
his candidacy for governor of Geor
gia, H. B. Baylor, of Sans Souci cas
tle, has just issued a statement in
which he outlined the principles of
his platform.
Mr. Baylor describes himself as a
“Virginian by birth, a Georgian by
adoption and an American by the
grac6 of God.” His announcement
and statement of his platform fol
lows:
“Sans Souci Castle, Atlanta, Ga.
“October 13, 1920.
“Men and Women of Georgia,
“My fellow Citizens and Democrats:
“I, H. B. Baylor, of Sans Souci
Castle, announce my candidacy for.
governor of Georgia, a Democrat on a
Democratic platform.
“Election slogan—‘Dieu et Droit.'
“Object—To redeem Georgia from
her disgrace and rid her of her uo
litical parasites.
“My stand—A Democrat. Will
support, the Democratic platform, the
constitution of the United States and
the state of Georgia. Am for the
League of Nations subject to the
constitution and the certain reserva
tions to explain it and protect the
United States from foreign aggran
dizement.
“If elected governor, will defend
Georgia and will enforce all laws
upon the statute books without fear,
favor or affffection.
“Will meet any man, anything,
anywhere to defend Georgia, the em
pire of the south, from her political
parasites and to redeem her from
her disgrace into which she has sunk
m the last years, from anarchists
and Bolshevists and to bind her in
a League of Nations which will
faring to her peace, prosperity and
plenty and will keep her from unholf
wars either for aggrandizement or
for ambition to rule or ruin.
“I am for my Gofff my state and
my country and if necessary will
pour out my rich, red blood in their
defense upon their soil.”
I, Immigrants Are
Due on Turkish Ships
One thousand Greek, Armenian
and Jewish emigrants sailed from
here Saturday for America on board
the Turkish ship Gul Djemal, the
first steamer departing for an Ameri
can port from Constantinople since
the war.
They departed without consent of
the French authorities in control
here, and many did not hold Ameri
can passports. Charles E. Allen,
United States consul in this city, is
understood to have notified the State
Department in Washington that the
steamer does not bear a proper bill
of health.
The ship, which was formerly the
Germanic, of the White Star Line, is
the property of a Turkish company,
but is under charter by Greeks. She
has been the subject of involved dis
putes for the last fortnight. French
officials demanded that she be re
turned to Turkish jurisdiction before
departting, while the British assert
ed that the French attitude was
blocking Turkish commercial devel
opment and criticized Consul Allen’s
attitude in objecting to the vessel’s
departure without complying with
American regulations.
During the turmoil preceding the
departure of the vessel the passeng
ers were without food, but finally the
captain made a speech declaring the
British had guaranteed the ship
would sail. With the passengers
provided with Italian and British
passports and with a band playing,
the steamer left the harbor.
GALLSTONE TROUBLES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Fad
dock, Box 55201, Kansas City, Mo., tells
of improved method of treating catarrhal
inflammation of the Gall Bladder nnd Bile
Ducts associated with Gallstones from which
remarkable results are reported. Write for
booklet and free trial plan.—(Advt.)
Swindler Nets $4,800
On Original Scheme
EVANSVILLE.—PoIice here are
trying to trace the man who swin
dled the Citizens’ bank out of $4,800
by a device said to be unique. The
stranger deposited $4,800 in the bank.
He returned and withdrew this
amount, presenting his counter check
to Teller A. P. Daum. Daum was
summoned by telephone to go to a
hospital. Hg left. Stranger returned
and cashed another check for the
same amount with the teller who
took Daum’s place and who had no
knowledge of the previous check.
Hospital call turned out to be a ruse.
“King of Hoboes”
Calls on Wilson
Ml
'i W. J/i
WASHINGTON. —The hobo
vote will gc Democratic. So says
“Jeff Davis,” .“king of the ho
boes,” who called on. President
Wilson to pledge the “Hoboes of
America,” of which he is presi
dent, to Cox. Although Davis is
a Democrat, he says he was re
ceived at the White House by
three Republican presidents, Mc-
Kinley, Taft and Roosevelt.
“Mike,” the only hobo monkey in
the world, travels by express
while Jeff rides the rods. Jeff
says he swung he hobo vote for
Wilson in 1916, making speeches
from the tops of freight cars.
“Mike’s” greatest achievement
was raising $75,000 in a Salva
tion Army drive.
Colleges Set Record
In Increased Rosters
As New Term Starts
American youths entering colleges
and universities have increased in
numbers to such a degree during the
last six years that if the proportion
ate growt his continued to 1950
there will be 1,138,000 students in
210 institutions, where 294,000 were
enrolled last year. These figures,
the institute for public
service, of which Julius H. Barnes
is the chairman, have raised the
question of where the money to edu
cate these larger groups of students
will come from.
Mr. Barnes finds that this year’s
increase in the number of students
enrolled „in the college sets a new
record. Colleges which in 1914 had
187,000 students and last year 294,-
000 will enroll 471,000 in 1930, and
831,000 in 1950, if they continue the
same increase each year. If they
grow at the average percentage rate
of the last six years they will have
659,000 students in 1930 and 1,138,000
twenty years later.
Taking the lower estimate for
1950, says Mr. Barnes, it means
finding facilities for more than three
times the total for 1920, at six or
seven times the salary cost. It
means, too, he asserts the adding
of 644,000 students, or 200 colleges
the size of Yale last year: z “Will the
money to provide education for the
increased number of students come
from taxation, endowment, private
gifts and larger fees?” he asks.
‘‘Must present universities grow or
more universities be built?”
The largest increase "within the
last six years is credited to the Col
lege of the City of New York, with
a gg-owth of 6,800. The University of
California follows next, with an In
crease of 6,200, and. then Boston
University with 4,700. Yale was one
of the four institutions which had
fewer students than six years ago,
its decrease being eighty-one.
Alabama Department
Os Agriculture Shows
Increase in Receipts
MONTGOMERY. Ala.— (Special.)—
Receipts of the state department of
agriculture increased $51,193.45 dur
ing 1920 over 1919, according to a
compilation completed by W. B. All
good, chief clerk. This is the best
showing made by the department
since it was organized. Receipts
from the sale of fertilizer tags in
creased $28,14.5.3, while other in
creases were shown as follows: .
Food, feed and drug bureau, $21.-
078.50; market bureau, S4O; miscel
laneous, $189.69. The bureau of in
secticides and functicides organized
under a law enacted in 1919 collect
ed $1,190.73.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1«, 1920.
Thirty Thousand Coffins
Every Month in
Unfortunate Petrograd
PARIS, Oct. 6. — (By Associated
Press.) —A graphic, eye-witness de- I
scription of the fearful conditions ex
isting in Petrograd is given by the
Finnish Red Cross in an appeal just
issued to the Red Cross societies,
of the world. It is accompanied by
documents prepared by Prof. Zeidler,
formerly head of the Petrograd Red
Cross, but row a refugee in Finland.
The docurfients, which reached the
Paris bureau of the American Red
Cross today, tell the story of the
agony of a dying city. Petrograd’s
present population, based bn the food
cards, now is from 500,000 to 600,-
000, and the former capital of the
czars is described as having shrunk
to one-fourth its pre-war size. The
report says:
“Death stalks on every side, wait
ing for winter to aid in the grim
work of mowing down the silent,
hungry, sick and dying thousands.
With streets and houses choked with
filth that already is spreading spot
ted and intermittent typhus, the cold
weather will finish the task with
penumonia and abdominal typhus.
“The fuel situation never was so
bad. Wooden houses have been torn
down for fuel. The material is dis
tributed equally among the popuia
t on, but during the nights the more
active citizens steal the quota of
wood from others.
“The wood yards have been na
tionalized.. One of them has been
given up entirely to the manufactur
ers of 30,000 coffins monthly. But
even this number is insufficient. The
people have not time to bury the
dead, and the bo Fes take their turn,
waiting several days
“Only one important tramway line
is in operation, and that runs to
the suburbs. In the center of the
city, either there are no street cars
or they run very rarely. On the
Sadovoya, gnly one branch line is
in operation.
“Attempts to repair the streets,
which are full of holes owing to
bursting water pipes, have failed
because the wood blocks for pave
ment have been stolen during the
night for fuel. Lighting is allowed
only two half hours each day, and
then hot all houses are supplied
on the lines furnished by the author
ities.
“Kerosene costs 450 rubles a
pound. There are no candles. Most
homes are in darkness. There is
no means of transporting things by
waterway, because the barges long
since were demolished for fuel. The
railway transportation is devoted
almost exclusively to the distribu
tion of flour.
“Only 200 persons are permitted
to leave Petrograd daily by pas
senger trains. Workmen receive a
half pound of bread daily, and
sometimes other food is given. The
prices of foodstuffs continue to
rise to incredible heights. Many
products have disappeared almost
completely from the markets.
“The mortality has reached a
startling rate owing td the lack of
food and unsanitary conditions of
houses and streets. Fat has left
the majority of f the population long
ago. At present the muscular tis
sue is concerned. The faces have
taken on a war-like color.
In order to fill their stomachs
with something they drink differ
ent substitutes for tea and coffee,
Iron Will
fTEat great strength of mind and
body, that exhaustless energy, that
IRON WILL that make a famous
merchant out of a humble clerk, a
millionaire out of a penniless immi
grant, a Lincoln out of a wood
chopper—often come from red blood
—rich in iron.
“Do you lack power of decision,
energy, and stamina? Are your
ambitions greater than, your
strength? You need not be dis
couraged, says Dr. James Sullivan,
formerly of Bellevue Hospital (Out
door Dept.), New York, and West
chester County Hospital. “By feed
ing the blood pure organic iron—
Nuxated Iron —many a weak, run
down, discouraged man has changed
to a red-blooded American, full of
force and energy that win success.”
Nuxated Iron is used and endorsed
by former United States Senators
and Members of Congress, and by
such world-known men as Pader
ewski, ex-Premier of Poland. It
often increases strength and en
durance in two weeks’ time.
NUXATED IRON
Used By Over 4,000,000 People for
Red Blood, Strength and Endurance
j Rheumatism Comes s
X
| From Tiny Pain Germs |
• **♦
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First of all, get it firmly fixed in
your mind that all the liniments
in the world have no effect what
ever on Rheumatism.
A very common form of Rheu
matism is caused by millions of
tiny disease germs which infest the
blood. The one and only sensible
treatment, therefore, is one which
cleanses the blood of these germs,
and routs them entirely out of the
circulation.
Young Postal Clerk,
Arrested for Rifling
Mail, Begs for Gun
Edgar Crow, 23 years old, a clerk
in the Atlanta postoffice, begged
postoffice inspectors for a gun with
which to commitjphicide when they
arrested him Wdnnesday night on a
charge of robbing the mails. The
inspectors declare that they caught
Crow In the act of opening a letter
and taking money from it. They also
say he confessed to having rifled
mail matter for the past four nights.
Crow was arrested by Inspectors
N. A. McKew and Clyde Fleming,
who were watching his actions wnile
on duty at the postoffice Wednesday
night. They say they found $250 in
his pockets and when they accom
panied him to his room at 94 Wash
ington street, they discovered $36
and a gold ring, which it is said he
admitted he had taken from the
mails.
The young man declared that he
had heard of the loss of money and
valuables in the mails and that it
was difficult to trace the thefts,
thereupon coming to the conclusion
that he might as well get some of
the money himself. He told the in
spectors, according to their state
ment, that he began opening mail
last Saturday night and continued
every night until arrested.
Crow came, to Atlanta from Corne
lia Ga., and' has been employed in
the postoffice for about three months.
He is unmarried.
or great quantities of plain water,
resulting in puffiness and dropsy,
which change the expression of the
face so that even old acquaintances
are unrecognizable.
PELLAGRA
CURED WITOUT A
STARVATION DIET
At a small<3COST
If you have this awful disease, and
want to be cured — to stay cured—
write for
FREE BOOK
giving the history of pellagra, symp
toms, results and how to treat. Sent
in plain, sealed envelope. A guar
anteed treatment that cures when
all others fail. Write for this book
today.
CROWN MEDICINE COMPANY
Dept 93 Ga.
, SALES AGENTS
wanted in every
county to give nil or
spare time. Positions
worth $750 to $1,500 yearly. We train the
inexperienced. Novelty Cutlery Co., 127 Bar
st., Canton, Ohio.
This is why S.S.S., the greatest
; known blood purifier is so success
ful in the treatment of Rheuma
tism. It is a powerful cleanser of
the blood, and will remove the dis
ease germs that cause your Rheu
matism, affording relief that is
genuine.
S.S.S. is sold by all druggists.
Free literature ana medical advice
can be had by writing to Chief
Medical Adviser. 154 Swift Labora
tory, Atlanta, Ga.
FLORIDA HMD IN
PINK 1 CONDITION
“I honestly believe Tanlac saved
me from a long spell of sickness,”
declared Harry Clarke, a well-known
farmer living on R. F. D. No. 2,
Tampa, Fla., recently.
“Something over a year ago I got
Into a badly rundown condition. My
liver was sluggish, my appetite fell
off to nothing and I felt
guid and used-up all the time. Break
fast had always been the meal I
most enjoyed, but I got so I would
wake up in the morning feeling al
most too tired to move, not caring
for breakfast or anything else.
“I went on this way for several
months, trying first one medicine
and then another but getting worse
all the time, and finally it looked
like I was right on the verge of a
general breakdown.
“This is just the shape I was in
when I got Tanlac, and sir, just four
bottles of this medicine have set
me right and restored my health in
away that is really astonishing.
My appetite these days is something
tremendous, and I have been
strengthened and built up until now
I am just in the pink of condition. 1
“All that miserable, languid feel
ing is gone completely and I can
get out and do as good a day’s work
as any man. I feel good all the
time and enjoy every minute of the
day. I never see people suffering
like I was without telling them
about Tanlac. It is the greatest
medicine for troubles of this kind I
have ever seen.”
Tanlac is sold by all leading drug
gists.— (Advt.)
30DaysHomeTrial
and Two Years Time to Pay
if you don't want to pay cash. That's the way yon
can buy a THIERY PARLOR ORGAN Uartal*w»k —>ir~
el ah organa. Now'a the lime to buy. too—fjkca arc nte a»
—you'll have to pay »1S .OO to «U.OO mere ok moatha from
now. Take your choice of Thlery Oryarw ahewn t> the cotae
printed Thiery Orsan Cataloo—then take M d»ya triella vow
home to prove thatit athe rml
CL w ’•mwfc-meker” ofalloiw
<■' then, alter the trial. V«e cam pav
-SJ'-er jiw cash in lull or hey on little -mv-
II H meme—two yean credit if pee
want n.
Save $25 to SSO
TWery Ogam ere aaelky
—Xkeraane—compared with other
ESIIK Wl I oreanayoeeaanymveMSnO
BgilH I toUO-00. More than WX»
.LI. —homer an aow eaioytae
V -■ajnHß Thiery Onaaa-aS ahlppad
on tnal —all parchaeed
ITtfOTffViwwd <Urec *'
' WRITE TODAY
Q r> «> tanker. Bay amr.
IE T>i'{il Send today for Cotaloawe, x
’ll ‘Trial Oder Blanks aad D*-
cf' A to Yaa Prtn *- s<ad
M .Lcoupon below and fall par
-1 Bi ticnlara will be eart yealv
■ - mam mail pcatpeM.
J. B.
Smd n me at earn, pertpaift Free Crteiatw red mmfMr W
fenutiee raesdiet Thiers Ortmu. Buyiaf Zlaeu Mw Mrtb
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Xddrass. . M ...
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• Big Money Be Vour Own Bore ■
ur<l»ra fo> uur gmr*nr*»(l tn«d*-'4> mea* gJ
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Your profit* are clear w». ■
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ney You Cake uu rian we back tuuup
EXPERIENCE NEEDED-WETRAIN YOU H
p will furnish e*ejvfhmg free and
nymi to take and make bi« eaab
fitn no matter *h»i you have been doing
or«* Ou» bi»< complete FRRE <»ntS| eon
*ull aise t*al coth xamplec. later* l»«k.
n tape line, order blank*, atnfinnetr «u
•rvthin® vnmnlete tvitn in<rr«>rtinn» rellinff
» exactly ho**- to rake he but order* *"d
MAKE SSO 00 A WEEK EASY
ND NO CASH The complete nonry*mak.nff
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Great Western Tailoring Co.
DEPT. 105 CHICAGO. lUC.
“PaiiSs enemy”
"111 say ills
WHEN you want quick com
forting relief from any
’external” pain, use Sloan’s
Liniment. It does the job with
out staining, rubbing, bandag
ing. Use freelu for rheumatism.
neuralgia, aches and pains,
sprains and strains, backache,
sore muscles.
At dll /
Lungs Weak?
Generous Offer to Tuberculosis Suf
ferers Os Trial of SANOSIN SANO
LEUM Embracing Europe’s Re
markable Expectorant, SANOSIN
Noted medical scientists —Doctors Dane
lius, Sommerfleld, Wolff, Noel, Gauthier,
Essers —declare SANOSIN most valuable
treatment for Pulmonary ailments. Felix
Wolff, Court Physician, Director of the
Sanitarium for Consumptives in Keibolds
grun, Germany, highly recommends it. SAN
OSIN lias been officially recommended to
the Berlin Medical Association. Dr. C. W.
A. Essers, Amsterdam, Holland, declares it
a “Moral obligation to make SANOSIN
known to the whole human race.’’ Amer
ican sufferers, rich or poor, can use this
remarkable home treatment that has met
with such success in Europe. SANOSIN
SANOLEUM is designed to produce calm,
restfni sleep without Morphium or similar
deadening drugs, and to bring almost im
mediate relief from coughing, blood spitting
and night sweats. SANOSIN SANOLEUM
is an inexpensive home treatment of genu
ine merit and is proving a blessing to all
suffering from Tuberculosis, Bronchitis,
Asthma, Catarrhs, Whooping Cough, etc.
Send for FREE BOOKLET (with testimo
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a trial can be made in your own home at
our risk. Address SANOSIN-SANOLEUM,
222 N. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111,, Dept. 953.
SHOW THIS TO SOME UNFORTUNATE.
RHEUMATISM
RECIPE
I will gladly send nny Rheumatism sdT
ferer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free
that Completely Cured me of a terrible at
tack of muscular and inflammatory Rheu
matism of long standing after everything
else I tried had failed me. I have given
It to many sufferers who believed their
cases hopeless, yet they found relief from
their suffering by taking these simple herbs.
It also relieves Sciatica promptly, as well
as Neuralgia, and is a wonderful blood puri
fier. You are most welcome to this Herb
Recipe if you will send for It at once. 1
believe you will consider it a God-Send after
you have put it to the test. There is noth
ing injurious contained In It, and you can
see for yourself exactly what you are tak
ing. I will gladly send this liecipe—abso
lutely free—to any sufferer who will send
name and address, plainly written.
W. G. SUTTON, 2650 Magnolia Ave.
Los Angeles, California.
Milrtnrr finish air rift* . Sdl 8
bcxCT Mentho-Nevji S«fv» «» 25e. ”
Cr»n>vm e ,raL
3