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THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL*
ROOSEVELT WIRES
COX NEW YORK IS
SWINGING TO HIM
PORT JERVIS, N. Y„ Oct. 23.—N0
excuse remains why proponents of
the League of Nations should not
vote for Governor Cox, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Democratic vice presi
dential nominee, declared in an ad
dress here today. Mr. Roosevelt
based his assertion on Governor
Cox’s communications to Elihu Root
in which he announced he would be
willing to accept “reasonable reser
vations,” which the vice presidential
candidate said removed the last ar
gument against the league.
Mr. Roosevelt again charged that
Republican managers had carried on
a campaign of “deceit and misrepre
sentation” against the league “in
which such eminent men as Elihu
Root have taken part.”
“The issue is now more clearly de
fined than at any time during the
campaign,” he said. “It is either the
League of Nations with reservations
acceptable to the new senate and
the American people, or it is a flat
rejection of the league. In the final
analysis there can be no other con
struction placed upon the election
November 2. Governor Cox’s
straightforward statement of his por
sition leaves nothing that can be
cloud the clean cut issue.”
Mr. Roosevelt also continued his
criticism of Senator Wadsworth and
Nathan Miller, Republican candidate)
for governor, as “reactionary candi
dates” and pleaded for the re-elec
tion of Governor Smith and the elec
tion of Lieutenant-Governor Harry C.
Walker as United States senator.
Mr. Roosevelt today sent the fol
lowing telegram to Governor Cox at
New York:
“I have just completed a tour
through all the districts surround
ing Buffalo and the entire southern
tier of New York state, and I am able
to give you some exceedingly cheer
ful. ’first-hand information. I find
that there is ttnmistakaoly the same
grea*- swing toward the Democratic
cause in this state that we both have
noticed in the middle wesi> Almost
without exception when local com
mitteemen meet me on the arrival of
his train and before I have had time
to tel ithem about how I have found
things farther west, they greet me
with the announcement that during
the last three weeks the so-called
silent. vote has been changing to
an outspoken Democratic vote. They
tell me that Republican after Repub
lican in their territory is aligning
himself in support of you almost in
variably on account of their con
viction that the League of Nations
must be sustained and that your
election is the only possible way
in which this can be done.
“I am convinced that the barri
cades of wilful misrepresentation
and suppression of the facts created
by the Republican campaign manag
ers between *he voters of this great
state, and the truth, have been swept
away and that the facts of this
election which the people finally
been able to obtain in the closing
weeks of the campaign, have turned
to our cause more than enough bal
lots to place New York in the Demo
cratic column.”
F. T. REYNOLDS
PRAISES FAIR
AT EASTMAN, GA.
On his return Friday from East
man. where he inspected the South
ern Exposition, Frank T. Reynolds,
secretary of the Georgia Automobile
association, declared the progressive
citizens of Dodge county have as
sembled this year one of the largest
an ™i. most com plete fairs in the state
The exhibits were excellent, the
midway was bigger than ever be
tore. all attendance records were
broken, and there was a diversified
program of automobile and horse
daily, he said.
Macon Girl Hurt
In Automobile Crash;
Driver Is Arrested
MACON, Ga , Oct. 23.—J. W. Stal
naker, a well-known citizen of Hous
ton county, was arrested early Fri
day night and placed in the Bibb
county jail, following an accident
on Houston road in which Miss Ollie
Bloodworth, of Macon, sustained a
broken limb and other painful in
juries. The charges preferred against
Stalnaker are driving a car while
under the influence of liquor and
violating the rules of the road.
Miss Bloodworth was a member of
a “hay ride” party which was riding
in a wagon. It is alleged that Stal
naker, w’ho the shefiff’s deputies de
clare, was under the influence of
whisky, was driving recklessly and
when coming upon the party In the
wagon, could not stop quick enough
to avoid crashing into them. The
accident occurred about 10:30 osclock
at a point near Seven Bridges, on
the Houston road.
Eastman Girls Aids
Fair by ’Plane Trip
EASTMAN, Oct. 25. —Miss Mar
jorie McGhee, of Eastman, interested
in the success of the Southern Geor
gia exposition, and desiring to ad
vertise it throughout Dodge and the
surrounding counties, made an air
plane trip with Pilot McMullan over
the towns of Dublin, Dudley. Dexter,
Chester, Cochran, Hawkinsville. Abbe
ville and Eastman, scattering adver-
I tising circulars for the exposition
I over these points. The trip, approxi
mately 150 miles, and beintr her first,
I was made in two hours and ten min-
I nutes.
Miss McGhee is a daughter of Mrs.
W. Mcßae, of Eastman, and a niece
of Mrs. A. L. Wilkins, also of this
city, a prominant club woman, who
has long been interested in the work
of the fair and is one of the ladies
who assisted in promoting the first
Dodge county fair in 1916.
Honey Harvest Failure
LONDON. England.—Owing to the lack of
sunshine in July and August the honey
harvest ni Devon is the worst in thirty
years. One in fifty hives examined only c4n
tabled cufficient honey for the winter.
Drowns in Foot of Water
LONDON, England.—William Baldwin
fourteen, was driving a lorry, in which were
l iis sister, Elizabeth, three, and . another
i little brother. The lorry overturned. The
j little girl was drowned, face downwards, in
a >iitch contidning a foot or water.
Gases
Sourness
Indigestion
Heartburn
Flatulence
Palpitation
Just as soon as you eat a tablet or
two of Pape’s Diapepsin all the stom
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end. Pape’s Diapepsin always puts
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IJffiai
MOTHER GIVEN THIRTY DAYS
TO WIN DAUGHTER’S LOVE
;
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" Jill
« BH
josephja/El • ’ A
I
BROOKLYN. —Justice Squiers, of the Brooklyn supreme court,
has given Mrs. Mary Immordino thirty days to win the affection of
her fifteen-year-old daughter, Josephine. The girl has lived with her
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Garrati, for ten years, since
the death of her father. She wants to stay with them, while the
mother wants her to come home. In court, recently, she said she
owed everything to her uncle and aunt, and that she didn’t care to
go to her mother. The court ruled that if the girl showed no more
love for her mother in thirty days, he could do nothing.
THE SAVINGS QUESTION
Here Are Six Answers by Sixteen People in Va
rious Walks of Life
Professor of mathematics: “My income is none too large, but
I manage to save a fifth of it. Expect to teach all my life, so my
prospects of becoming rich are small. Am laying away a surplus
to keep us in old age.’’
Coal broker: “Am saving. Purpose: for charity. Save 90 per
cent of my income.”
Lawyer: “Saving 50 per cent of income, for freedom.”
Day laborer: “Have begun to save lately. Don’t know how
much I can average. It depends on prices.”
Conductor: “Saving some, but mighty little.”
Farmer: “Am saving. Don’t care to say how much. Want to
be independent and have money ahead for hard times.”
Grandma: “I have nothing to save. My son keeps me. But I
am economical. That’s the same thing.”
Young wife: “Am saving 20 per cent of my allowance to buy
furniture.”
Reporter: “Saving a fourth of my income. Purpose: to get
rich, of course.”
Store manager: “Saving more than half of my income, to
rear my family properly, to give my boy an easier start than I
had, and to be financially independent.”
Carpenter: “Saving about a third of my wages. What for?
For the tax collectors.”
Tool-maker: “I float around a lot from town to town and
don’t save much. Keep a few hundred ahead for sickness.”
Salesman: “Get my expenses paid. Am saving about a third
of my salary, and buying stock in the business that employs me."
Mother: “It keeps getting harder to save, but we manage
to. About a filth of our income.”
Girl clerk: “Have nothing to save.”
Clothes presser: “Saving a little. Prices too high to save
much. Want to be independent and take better care z of my fam
ily.”
Convict Cook Caught
Making and Selling
Liquor to Prisoners
LOUISCILLE, Ga., Oct. 25.—The
business of making moonshine whis
ky has invided the convict camp of
Jefferson county, according to the
sheriff, and, incidentally, has result
ed in one of the niftiest little legal
tangles on record.
Sheriff D. C. Thomas reports sev
eral days ago he caught John Lamor,
a negro convict, peddling whisky dur
ing one of his trips to carry dinner to
convicts who were working some dis
tance from the camp. Investigation
disclosed a moonshine still in the
camp kitchen, where Lamar was < aok
and where, according to the sheriff,
the prinsoner had been making whis
ky from molasses bought by the
county and had been reaping a con
siderable profit by peddling the
liquor while away from the camp
carrying meals to the other convicts.
Sheriff Thomas promptly arrested
Lamar and put him in the Jefferson
county jail. Now the convict warden
has made a demand upon the sheriff
for the negro. The warden takes the
position that Lamar is his prisoner
for the term of fifteen years he is
serving; that the sheriff can get him
at the end of that period, and that
the convict camp doesn’t relish the
idea of being without its prize cook.
The sheriff has refused to surren
der custody of Lamar, and declares
that he will take the case before the
grand jury when it convenes here
next week. In the meantime Lamar,
who has twelve more years to serve
on the chaingang, is , en l°y *“ e
food of the county jail without the
necessity of cooking it.
George White Moves
To See That Public
Gets Text of League
NEW YORK, Oct. 25.—'George
White, chairman of the Democratic
national committee, has issue?, »
statement appealing to friends of
the League of nations in the most
solemn and reverent spirit • to see
that the text of the covenant be
comes generally known during the
week beginning Monday.
Democratic candidates, the state
ment declared, “have done all in
their power,” to see that the voters
of the United States acquaint them
selves with the text and ‘ the Re
publican party has done its best to
prevent this.” In part, the state
ment said: , , ,
“The great issue before the Ameri
can people is: Shall the Lotted
States join the League of Nations
with such reservations as are deem
ed necessary to stress the league s
sole purpose to insure peace and
to emphasize the supremacy of the
constitution? „
“Governor Cox and the Democratic
party are for going in on that ba
sis. Senator Harding, if he stands
for anything, committed his party
at Des Moines, for total rejection
of the league, a league and any
clarifying reservations or modifica
tions.
Four Big Apples on one Tree
LONDON England.—From one tree an
owner of an orchard at Springvale, Isle of
Wight, has gathered four apples weighing
one pound, one pound and a half ounces,
fifteen and a half ounces and fourteen and
a half ounces.
Change in World
Court of Justice Is
Asked by Neutrals
BRUSSELS, Oct. 22.—(Delayed.)—
Scandinavian and other neutral rep
resentatives presented a proposal for
radical alteration of the plans for the
international court of justice, at this
afternoon’s session of the League of
. .ations council.
While the details of the scheme
were not made public it was learned
that they were based on the allega
tion that the covenant does not au
thorize the proposed court to try
cases in which one litigant only con
sents to the proceedings, and that
the consent of both litigants is neces
sary before the league council orders
the trial. This Would greatly curtail
the power of the court. Final de
cision on the proposal was expected
tomorrow.
The council was understood to have
adopted a budget of $1,000,000 for
league.
MOVE TOWN AND ALL!
When These Montana Folk Decided to Move
They Just Took the Town With Them
I •
HELENA, Mont. —Moving day for residents of the town of
Pompey’s Pillar, Mont., means something more than piling the
things into a van and unloading them around the corner.
The residents are taking the town with them! They ex
pect to complete the move by November 1.
The new location is three miles directly west of the present
town site. Its advantages are that it is on the main line of the
Northern Pacific railroad and also at the convergence of two
main-traveled state highways.
The first settlers built the town in the expectation that the
railroad would come to them. After many years of waiting, they
are now going to the railroad.
Business men of the town formed a syndicate and bought
a tract for the new town site.
Signers of the agreement to mov® x included the national bank,
the lumber company, the two general stores, the restaurant
keeper, the blacksmith, the butcher and the proprietor of the
livery stable.
Garages have not yet invaded Pompey’s Pillar.
NO LEAGUE FOR
HARDING, SAYS
HIRAM JOHNSON
NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—Senator
Hiram Johnson, In a statement Is
sued tonight at headquarters of the
Republican national committee, de
clared there can be “no agreement
upon the league issue” between him
self and supporters of Senator Hard
ing, who say the Republican candi
date will take the United States into
the League of Nations.
"There is a studied effort in some
directions to make it appear that
there is unity of purpose between
those who believe as I do concerning
the League of Nations and those
who wish, with, or without, reserva
tions. to enter the league,” the
statement said.
“Mr. Harding has said if elected
he will not take this country into
the league, that he has turned his
back upon it and seeks not interpre
tation but rejection of it.
“Some gentlemen supporting Mr.
Harding say that, notwithstanding
this plain declaration, he will take
the United States into the league.
Between these gentlemen and men of
my belief there can be no unity of
purpose, no agreement upon the
league issue. I stand with Senator
Harding. I accept as conclusive his
emphatic declaration. His words
upon the issue, not the words of
those who are for the league, are
all controlling.”
Senator Johnson declared that
“while every normal man and every
normal woman desires to promote
peace and prevent war, none could,
in justice to the nation, subscribe to
a contract in advance of precise
knowledge of its definite terms.
“We did this,” he -added, “in the
psychological reflex from the great
war with the covenant of the league,
and before its provisions were known
or its obligations understood, em
braced hysterically its purported
p rposes.”
“Before us is the one plan.” he
said, “the one association. When
that is buried beyond redemption by
Mr. Harding’s election, as it is cer
tain to be from Mr. Harding’s words,
then, at our leisure, we may examine
with the scrupulous care required
any suggestions for promoting peace
and preventing war.”
ENFORCEMENT OF
DRY LAW UP TO
OFFICERS-DORSEY
In response to the appeal of Police
Chief R. S. Williams, of the town
of Homerville, in Clinch county, to
Governor Dorsey for assistance in
the enforcement of the prohibition
laws, the governor says there is noth
ing he can do but call the law to
the attention of the sheriff, the so
licitor and the judge of the superior
court.
Chief Williams informs the gover
nor that “the making, selling and
drinking of whisky In Clinch county
is something awful, and something
must be done to stop the suffering
of these poor women and children.”
He goes on to say: “I appeal to you
as governor to help me stamp out
the traffic. What can you do to
help me? Please write me at once.”
Discussing the Clinch coupty sit
uation as reported to him by the
Homerville police chief. Governor
Dorsey said Saturday that there was
no authority vested In him to set
aside the local authorities and take
the situation in his own hands. He
said the attorney general has ad
vised him that enforcement of the
law is one of his duties as gover
nor, but that he can act only through
the constituted authorities. He sa.id
he would call the Clinch county sit
uation to the attention of the sheriff,
solicitor general and superior court
judge.
Governor Dorsey has not replied to
the letter of Mayor Murray Stuart,
of Savannah, requesting advice as
to whether the enforcement of the
prohibition laws in that city is in
cumbent upon the city police, the
sheriff of Chatham county or the
federal officers. Mayor Stewart in
formed the governor that most of
the whisky In Savannah is landed
from ships outside of the city limits
in remote waterways and conveyed
to the city.
New Trial Hearing
For Jack Kelloy Is
Postponed at Griffin
GRIFFIN, Ga., Oct. 25.—The mo
tion for a new trial in the case of
the state vs. Jack Kelloy. convicted
of the murder of Leroy Trexler, set
for a hearing today before Judge W.
E. -H. Searcy, Jr., at 10 o’clock in
Griffin, was continued until Novem
ber 27. The official reporter has
not been able to complete a transcript
of more than a third of the evidence
given at the hearing of the case and.
therefore, the motion is not ready for
a hearing.
GALLSTONE TROUBLES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad
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.)
Officers Investigate
Andersonville Fire
AMERICUS. Ga., Oct. 25.—Officers
spent today investigating clues in
connection with the burning of Eas
terlin Brothers warehouse and 450
bales of cotton at Andersonville, but
this afternoon no arrests had been
made in connection with the fire.
It is reported they are searching
for a negro ex-convict who had been
living at Andersonville and who dis
appeared after the fire.
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1920.
The Tri-Weekly Journal's
HONOR COLUMN
A Department for
People Who DO Things
■ ■
•••• r ■’<* . Ytm '■ *
BHiwiiO ■!
•Iv* vv-v.A—V.S...V.V
How would you
| like to earn your
I bread and butter
Jby risking your
life time and
again at the dizzy
top of some flag
pole to chimney
stack? Such a
profession sounds
like a man-sized
game. Yet Miss
■ Frances Smith,
'just eighteen
A Si
>
years old, has taken it up in Chica
go. Not only has she become a full
fledged steeplejack—or should it be
“Jill?”—but she tackles hazardous
climbs that her masculine rivals are
afraid to essay. For instance, some
lofty apparatus at a Pennsylvania
plant needed mending recently the
superintendent couldn’t find a man
with nerve enough to go up and see
about. He found Miss Smith, how
ever; and she immediately ascended
575 feet —a record-breaking height—
to turn the trick. Street-crowds in
Chicago have been watching her
with admiring gaze of late. The Tri-
Weekly Journal awards her a place
in the Honor Column and hopes that
she’ll be living to tell her grand
children about her exploits.
TO UNVEIL TABLET
IN HONOR OF POLK
COUNTY HEROES
CEDARTOWN, Ga., Oct. 23.—A
memorial tablet in honor of tha Polk
county men who gave their lives In
the world war will be unveiled Mon
day in the public library here by the
American Legion, the United Daugh
ters of the Confederacy and the lo
cal post of the United Confederate
Veterans. Homer Watkins, comman
der of the Joseph S. Brewster post,
of this city, will be master of cere
monies. Judge Moses Wright will
deliver the address. Confederate vet
erans will unveil the tablet.
Stand by Primary,
Upshaw’s Message
To Georgia Voters
“Stand by the white primary,” was
the message which Congressman W.
D. Upshaw delivered to Georgia,
voters in a statement given out Sat
urday. Con-ressman Upshaw left
Saturday night for Virginia, where
he will deliver several speeches. Be
fore going, he commented on the
status of Georgia politics as follows:
“Every Georgia Democrat who be
lieves in the wisd6m of party regu
larity and the necessity for standing
by our white primary must have
read with unmixed gratification the
refusal of Thomas E. Watson to
consent to the use of his name on
the official Republican ballot. It
was good common sense and demo
cracy for him to say having been
nominated, by the Democratic party
I could not accept the nomination or
the official support of any other
party. His call also for ‘Uncle Reu
ben’ to go to the polls and vote for
every Democratic nominee is de
licious and refreshing. This gives a
good opportunity to put into italics
the fact that we ought to take se
riously the talk that we are hearing
here an dthere about Democrats vot
ing an independent ticket for United
States senator in Georgia. However,
honest the advocacy of independ
entism by some good people years
ago, that day is past in Georgia.
The Republican party has forced the
issue on us. The white primary that
practically eliminated the negro from
politics for his own good as well
as the good of the white man, is an
absolute necessity in the political as
well as the social life, of the south.
However much any man may have
differed from Mr. Watson before the
primary, no man would have the tem
erity to say that the people did not
have an opportunity to vote, free and
untnammeled; and no man failed to
understand him, for he was as un
equivocal in his position as he was
forceful in his declaration. Differ
ences, so far as this election is con
cerned, were settled at the ballot
box in the primary of September 8.
Let every man who voted in that
election of November 2. Our white
primary is the hope, th© purity and
the security of Georgia democracy.”
Shops Are Burned
In Irish Village
CORK, Oct. 23. —Several shops
were burned and the windows of the
principal business concerns were
smashed las tevfcning at Bandon, in
the vicinity of this city, near the
scene of yesterday’s ambush of mili
tary lorries, in which an officer and
a private were killed and five soldiers
were wounded, one of whom died
later, tl is reported the village of
Innishannon also was considerably
damaged.
Children’s Quilt to
Be Feature of Fair
TIFTON, Ga., Oct. 23. —One strik
ing feature of exhibit of the Tift
County Canning club girls at the
Albany South Georgia fair next week
will be a silk quilt made by the
children of the Harding school. This
quilt is a ■ map of the United States
with the states in different colors
on a blue background.
The club exhibit for the state fair
was sent Friday night. The ex
hibit for Albany will be taken over
today and put in place. The Tift
County Canning club girls also have
an exhibit at the Southeastern fair
in Atlanta.
FOREIGN MARKET
SEEN AS REMEDY
FOR LOW COTTON
“The south appears to be very
largely of one mind as to what
should be done to relieve the present
serious situation and to work out
its economic salvation,” says Wal
ter E. Duncan, South Carolina news
paper man and comptroller general
elect of that state, who Is making
a tour of the south in the interest
of the C®tton Export corporation
now forming in Carolina.
“While no end of remedies have
been suggested and various plans
proposed, it seems now to be the
consensus of opinion that the south,
on its own initiative and depending
on, its own capital and its own ef
forts, must move to open up the
markets of Europe, selling the
south’s staple on credit if our farmer
customers, now crippled financially
by the war, cannot pay cash. The
idea behind the Export Cotton cor
poration is generally conceded to be
the one constructive plan and prac
tical solution.
“So widespread and general is this
idea,” continued Mr. Duncan, “that
it is taking firm hold on the minds
of the leaders of thought through
out the south.” As evidence of this
fact the plans projected at the meet
ing of the American Bankers asso
ciation in Washington is cited.
"These plans,” says Mr. Duncan,
comprehend precisely what was in
the minds of the farmers, bankers
and business men who met in Co
lumbia on October 7, under the aus
pices of the American Cotton asso
ciation, and launched the movement
for organization of the American
Products Export and Import corpo
ration. Heading the organization
committee of the movement begin
ning then in South Carolina is for
mer Governor Richard I. Manning,
of that state. The full force of the
American Cotton association is sol
idly behind it. J. S. Wannamaker,
president of this association, is like
wise a member of the organization
committee. Already approximately
$1,000,000 of the $10,000,000 capital
stock has been subscribed in South
Carolint alone.
“It was not intended, however, that
this should be a project local to
South Carolina,” says Mr. Duncan.
“It is too big a proposition for
South Carolina to undertake without
the aid an£ co-operation of other
cotton states. Only the _ beginning
was made in South Carolina. It is
proposed that all the cotton-grow
ing states shall have equitable rep
resentation in the management on
the directorate and voice in the se
lection of the men who will head
the corporation.”
Governor Manning, says Mr.
can, is moving in an effort to ef
fect unity between the two big
movements. This he considers ab
solutely essential to avoid duplica
tion of effort and any possible con
fH“We have all things in common,
and certainly a common purpose in
trying to work out the economic sal
vation of the cotton south, ’ says Mr
Duncan. “The only is that
in our eagerness t odo the things
we must do w emay defeat the very
end at which we aim because of
lack of essential co-operation.
$40,000 Fire Loss at
Camp McClellan
, oss A .S.Ta, A &o»? c
from a fire last night which destroy
ed th© motor transport repair shops
at Camp McClellan, near Anniston.
The origin of the fire has not been
determined. Hard work by camp fire
fighters prevented the fire from
spreading to other nearby camp
buildings. The burned building con
tained a number of trucks and cars
besides expensive machinery.
Still and Ten Gallons
In House of Marshal
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Oct. 23.
Discovery of a still and ten gallons
of moonshine in the home of J* -A-
Cunningham, town marshal of Alton
Park, a suburb, provided Chattanoo
ga with a real sensation today. The
discovery was made by federal Pro
hibition agents who have as yet
unable to locate Cunningham.
$400,000 Per Month
To Be League Expense
BRUSSELS, Oct. 23.—The sum of
$400,000 monthly will be required to
run the League of Nations next year,
according to the budget approved by
the council of the league here today.
This budget will be presented to the
league assembly at its coming ses
sions in Geneva. _
Cotton~Nlill Men Urge
Farmers to Hold Staple
GREENVILLE. S. C., Oct. 23 —The
South Carolina Cotton Manufactur
ers’ association in session here this
week adopted a resolution urging
the farmers to hold their cotton un
til it reaches the cost of production
and advised them to market it slowly.
Manufacturers in statements here
expressed the belief that the panicky
feeling among cotton producers at
the present time is not that they
have been compelled to sell their
cotton at prevailing low prices, but
the fear that prices will go still
lower and they will ultimately be
forced to sell so far below the cost
of production that many oi them
will be ruined.
Woman, 97, Hop Picker
LONDON, England.—To Mrs. Jane Smith
belongs the distinction of being the oldest
hop picker in Kent. Although ninety-seven,
she is still on the job, walking daily three
miles from her home to th fi fields. She Las
eleven children, sixteen grandchildren and
twenty-seven great-grandchildren.
Il GOMB AULT’S
CAUSTIC BALSAM
TheTerfect Liniment
For External Use on
The Human Body
It is astonishing how quickly
Caustic Balsam relieves Stiffness
and Lameness, Rheumatism. Neu
ralgia, Strains, Sprains, Lumbago,
Backache. Sore Throat, Chest
Cold. Stiff Joints, etc.
Serious results through Blood
Poisoning are liable from
scratches, cuts or wounds from
rusty nails or other metal. This
great remedy applied at once will
prove a preventive, is a perfect
antiseptic, soothes while it heals.
What it has done for others it
will do for you.
Write us for any Information
desired. $1.75 per bottle at drug
gists or sent parcel post on re
ceipt of price.
THE LAWRENCE-WILLIAMS
COMPANY
Cleveland, Ohio
Ends StoijiachTroubk
Banish Tape-Worm
No matter how long you have suffered—
how much you have doctored—how many
times you have been told your case Is in
curable I positively guarantee that my spe
cial Remedy “A” will end the worst case
of stomach trouble (except cancer) and ex
pel any tape-worm or I make no charge
for the treatment. I take all the risk, you
none. You must get satisfactory results or
you are out nothing. Don’t suffer another
minute—semi me your name and address to
day and get FREE PROOF by return mail.
Walter A. Reisner, Box C-64, Milwaukee,
Wisconsin.
imDCBOT
CMN6ESPDTS
Mr. Dodson, the “Liver
Tone” Man, Tells the 1
Treachery of Calomel i
Calomel loses you a day! You know
what calomel is. It’s mercury; quick
silver. Calomel is dangerous. It
crashes into sour bile like dynamite,
cramping and sickening you. Calomdl
attacks the bones and should never
be put into your system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish,
constipated and all knocked out and
believe you need a dose of dangerous ’
calomel just remember that your
druggist sells for a few cents a
large bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone,
which is entirely vegetable and pleas
ant to take and is a perfect substi
tute for calomel. It is guaranteed
to start your liver without stirring
you up inside, and can not salivate.
Don’t take calomel! It can not be
trusted any mor© than a leopard or
a wild-cat. x Take Dodson’s Liver
Tone which straightens you right up
and makes you feel fine. Give it
to the children because it is perfect
ly harmless and doesn’t gripe.
(Advt.)
®w prices
Ws Lead the Fight
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I aawfca
I BIG BARGAINWTOIEgMmS
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■ kDI
Don’t bay a thing fer year- L™-—-* , l '‘
uE or family natil yea get
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Gilbert BroM
DEPT E NASHVILLE, TENN.
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g AGENTS American tailoring hmUI
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WATCH CUABANTEED
Send us your name and address plainly written, at once,
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3