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| REBELLION
! IN STOMACH j
I “Pape’s Diapepsin” at once I
| ends Indigestion and I
| Sour, Acid Stomach j
Lumps of undigested food cause
pain. If your stomach is in a revolt;
i If sick, gassy and upset, and what
you just ate has fermented apd
tm-ned sour; head dizzy and aches;
belch gases and acids and eructate
undigested food —just take a tablet
or two of Pape’s Diapepsin to help
neutralizes acidity and in five min
utes you wonder what became of the
pain, acidity, indigestion and distress.
If your stomach doesn’t take care
of jrour liberal limit without rebel
lion; if your food is a damage in
stead of a help, remember the quick
est, surest, most harmless stomach
antacid is Pape’s Diapepsin, which
costs so little at drug stores.
(Advt.)
IrEETOSICK
If you are suffering from Blood or Nerve
Disorders, Rheumatic Symptoms. Stomach or
Bowel trouble. Skin Btoken out. or rough and
nori?. Sore Mouth or Tongue, Dizziness.
Sleeplessness, Loss of Appetite. Weak, Ner
vous or a General Rundown Condition—these
are danger signals that you should heed.
Write lit once for the most reliable and val
uable information on how to rid your sys
tem of these troubles and regain strong,
vigorous health.
We want you to prove for yourself, as
thousands of other sufferers have proven,
that the ARGALLEP TREATMENT is the
most pleasant, simplest and safest method
•f getting permanent relief. Uon't take
chances. These troubles may indicate that
you are suffering from
PELLAGBA, AMAEMIA. CHLOBO
-BXB, DEBILITY, NEURASTHENIA
or seme other serious derangement of the
system that needs immediate treatment. No
matter what doctors or others have told
you—no matter what you have tried—all we
ask is a cliance to show you what the
_. ARGALLEP TREATMENT 'Will do. It costs
Kfon nothing for this FREE PROOF. We
send to yon FREE and Prepaid, without
■ cl AgaM on bn your part, a
I ETTEL SIZED $2.00
| TREATMENT FREE
1 Thousand- of sufferers have accepted this
generous offer and write us that they are
amazed nt their rapid recovery to health.
Just send your name and address—NO
MONEY—we will send you the $2.00 Alt-
GALLED TREATMENT, full directions, and
valuable and important information—all
free — in plain wrapper.
ARGALLEP company
CARBON, HILL, Ala.
Dept. 802.
BLADDER
WEAKNESS
A famous European chemist has Riven the world
* rare discovery that soothes and allays inflamma
*Mn and Qealmcss of Bladder, and the
PROSTATE GLAND
It is embed, cd in cur treatment, PRO-GLANDIN
Thousands arj u ing it. Si rapid and safe for all
Who need relief from suffering.
Sleep
|V'§u>all
getting up
If you want to enjoy unbroken rest all night,
with ea«* mmfnrt and contentment, then uso
YBO-GLANDIN on Fire Trial.
50c Pkg’e FREE
ALSO “SELF CARE” LEAFLET
To Jntmdwc we will giro away 100.000 Packages
fnt FREE. postpaid auywliere. Contains Trial
I mtpplv of PRO GL'XDIN and ’Wf Care” Leaflet
tilling benv to tr*at rr.itrsrlf. Evrrv Bladder or
Prnstaro sufferer should rend it. S-'nd no money,
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W.B. WORTS 74 Cortlarit St. New York
J jF *
SEND NO MONEY
Don’t miss this chance to cut your ZqA' ZA
tiro eost in half. Our standard make fCX’.Y \
Rebuilt Tires in excellent condition IQCX. zfedtk \
selected by our experts are guaran- LOT 4
teed for 6,000 miles or mere. We Ofe I
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bring* tires. NOTE. These are Uw=l I
not two tirea sewed together. XX> I
Prices Smashed 6Q< IB I
Size Tires Tubes Size Tires Tubes, EE i
28x3 |5.45»1.55«4z4 $ 8.75 S2.6OXX> liF
30x3 5.50 1.60 33x414 9.50 2.801 Eg|
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31x4 8.00 2.26 36x436 11.60 3.4o'Eg| I
32x4 8.25 2.40 35x5 12.50 3.50 OOC Life I
33x4 8.60 2.60 37x5 12.75 3.75 (-£- I
SEND NOW I
Joet your name and size of tires ',«&/ f
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“WcHCLi. TIRE & RUBBERM.
109 East 39th Street Dept. 349,
Chicago, 111.
Better
dead
Life is a burden when the body
is racked with pain. Everything
worries and the victim becomes
despondent a d downhearted.
To bring back thj sunshine take
COLD MEDAL
The national remedy oi Holland for over
200 years; it is un enemy of all pains re
mitting from kidney liver and uric acid
troubles. All druggists, three sizes.
JLoolc for the name Gold Medal on ever,
box and accept no imitation
RECOMMENDED TO
SCHOOL CHILDREN
This is the season when children
are subject to croup. colds and
coughs. Rena C. Marchard, 36 Law?
rence St.. Salem, Mass., writes: “I
used Foley’s Honey and Tar with
good results. I had a very bad cold
and it gave me relief at once, so I
'*■ recommend it to every child that
goes to school.” This standard, low
priced medicine loosens and clears
mucus and phlegm, checks strangl
ing coughing, makes easy breathing,
soothes and heals raw, inflamed
membranes, and stops tickling in
throat.—(Advt.)
Guaranteed Gold Watch
C. 0.0.
This wonderful Reven-jeweled, thin model, 12 elze watch, with
'St, f
C. 0.0 No money down. Fay the poatman when the watch arrives.
Fully Guaranteed
AHIO 0r»4,. C.l< FIIImI Chain. CuaraMaM 20 Vaara »I.?A
Gmoira Wateh Co., Utt tlda- Dtpt. ns, CHICMO. ILL
, rffft CRYING BABY DOLL UDCT
’ 4 <1 She is an awfully A ixILLJ
L AjSx Noisy Baby. You can hear her all
r ovpr tlle house. Sounds just like
F U ave baby. Wears a lone white
• I IrnyVl 'lress mid baby bonnet. We send
1 ,ber free, by parcel post paid, for
*4 •••’’selling only 8 peks. Novelty Post
cards at 15c each. We trust you. Simply
send your full name and address to JONES
MEG. CO., Dept. 38, Attleboro, Mass.
NO GOVERNMENT
OWNERSHIP FOII
SEMMOING
NORFOLK, Va., Dec. 4. —Declar-
ing against government that con
tinues “the burden of war taxes in
time of peace” and is “suspicious
of successful business.” President
elect Harding, in an address before
a business men’s dinner here to
night, said that “that belongs in
soviet Russia.”
"I want a government that has
'ess to do with business and injects
a little more business in govern
ment," he said. "There is too much
suspicion in the United States and
too much drift to paternal social
ism. I don’t believe in government
ownership <~.f anything—” this sen
tence was drowned out here by ap
plause.
Continuing Senator Harding said
that “if I had my say within ten
days after the order had been is
sued millions of tons of American
shipping would be in *’•■> hands of
American enterprise.”
“I don’t care how big business is
so long as it is righteous.”
Praising the Panama canal Sena
tor Harding said he thought it
ought to bring more commerce.
"Great achievements await in
South and Latin-America,” he con
tinued. “They only await understand
ing to give us their confidence. We
ean’t expect trade to be wholly one
sided but I am in favor of bring-1
ing only those things here that we •
don’t produce in the United States
I believe in prospering the United
States first.”
Expressing the belief that some
time there probably will be an
equalization of wages and working
conditions. Senator Harding said
that “until that time I want the
world to bring its standards up to
ours, never to lower ours.”
Busy Day for Hardings
In a half dozen short public
speeches incident to a welcome home
in the shipping centers of Hampton
Roads Senator Harding asked for
a government-aided merchant ma
rine that would make the United
States “the greatest maritime
nation on the face of the earth,” .
and for a navy fit to be the
first line of defense for a people>
“everlastingly determined to defend
its commerce and its "rights.”
He also spoke a word for an in
ternational peace understanding that
should not sacrifice American nation
ality and took note of his presence•
in the south by forecasting a nation - i
a! unity that would “have the peo-I
pie of the old confederacy under-]
stand that that’s only a memory.” I
The program of entertainment and
speech-making arranged by Norfolk I
and Newport News to celebrate the j
home-coming of the president-elect
and Mrs. Harding gave them one of I
the busiest days of their experience, i
From the moment they stepped!
ashore in the morning from the'
steamer Pastores, which had brought i
them back from the canal zone, they:
were kept on the move continu uly
until late at night when they left,by
special train for Bedford, Va., where ■
Mr. Harding speaks tomorrow. In
addition to numerous public func- i
tions in the two cities they visited
the ship yard at Newport News. “he
Norfolk naval base and army base,
and the navy yard at Portsmouth
and reviewed a special drill of 10.000
blue jackets at the naval training
station.
Green Auto Tags
For 1921 Will
Be Issued Dec. 15
Green numbers on a pink back- •
ground is the color scheme of the
new automobile tags for 1921, which
have been delivered to the secretary
of state, and will soon make their!
appearance on motor vehicles.
In order to reduce the, strain on
the clerical force in the motor regis
tration office, it has been decided
to begin issuing new licenses on De
cember 15 to owners of vehicles
which are now registered for 1920,
but not to purchasers of new cars.
This will enable persons renewing
their licenses to take an early start.
The watermelon effect of the new
number plates is quite unique, being
the first time this combination of
colors has been used in Georgia.
Scouts Called to Aid
Red Cross Campaign
Scout Executive A. A. Jameson has
issued a general call to all scouts to
repont at local headquarters, 614
Chamber of Commerce building. Mon
day afternoon, December 6, at 2:30
o’clock for the purpose of aiding in
the anti-tuberculosis Christmas seal
campaign.
Annually the Boy Scout organiza
tion is called upon to do this big
good turn for the Anti-Tuberculosis
association. Scouts will go out in de
tails and will put up attractive pos
ters advertising the sale of seals
during the Christmas holidays.
Scout Executive Jameson requests
that all scouts reporting for this
duty appear in full scout uniform.
Senator Would Stop
Wine Serving Abroad
WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.—Ameri
can diplomats abroad would be pro
hibited from serving wines at embas
sy dinners or other functions under
a bill to be introduced next week
by Senator Jones, of Washington.
The bill, according to Jones, is in
tended to apply the Volstead act to
the Philippine islands, where there
has been some doubt of its applica
tion. But it also applies the law in
the consular districts of the United
States in China, and imposes the dry
law on all American citizens in for
eign countries.
$2,000,000 Memorial
Planned in Tennessee
NASHVILLE, Tenn., Dec. 44. —The
state memorial commission today au
thorized the sale of two million dol
lars of state, city and county bonds
as soon as practicable, the funds
to be to the erection of a
memorial to Tenn<essee’s world war
soldiers, sailors and marines
WARNING
Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are
not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
21 years, and proved safe by millions.—Say “Bayer”!
SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an “unbroken package” of
genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper direc
tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu
matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American!
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents —ljarger packages.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacldeßter of Salleyllcacld
run .■ rr 1 Lili- weekly journal.
The Tri’Weekly Journal’s
HONOR COLUMN
A Department for People Who DO Things
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life
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Although he is only nineteen years old, Private John Kelly, of
the marine corps, has been decorated seven times for valor in the
world war. The photograph shows Lieutenant Commander Eugene
E. Wilson, of the Great Lakes naval training station, Chicago, con
ferring upon him the Congressional Medal of Honor, the seventh dec
oration. Any marine who received a medal must have earned it. The
Huns will testify that the “Devil Dogs” are the most deadly fighters.
So if young John Kelly has been decorated seven times, he is certain
ly entitled to a place in The Tri-Weekly Journal’s Honor Column.
Career of Fred D. Shepard,
Whose Death by Poison
Opened Sensational Case
BY ED H. BRADLEY
(Staff Correspondent of The Journal)
FORT VALLEY, Ga., Dec. s.—The
death of Fred D. Shepard, one of the
most prominent business men of this
section and prominent in the peach
growing industry, has brought his
spectacular career to public attention
in a manner that has aroused partic
ular interest in the history of the
Shepard family.
He was the son of Alfred Shepard,
originally from Battle Creek, Mich.,
and a man who extended his business
operations over many sections of the
United States. According to ac
counts of pioneer residents, Alfred
Shepard came to this city many years
ago, but made frequent trips to Cal
ifornia, Michigan and other states,
where he had investments of various
kinds.
Fred Shepard as a young man is
remembered by many of the older
residents of Fort Valley. Early in
life he is said to have had a dis
agreement with his father and sud
denly disappeared. He dropped com
pletely out of sight for years, leav
ing no trace of his whereabouts and
communicating with none of his rel
atives. •
One day his mother, glancing oyer
a newspaper published in a city in
Oregon, saw an advertisement an
nouncing the fact that a Fred D.
Shepard had opened a restauran,t in
that place. She became obsessed With
the idea that the Fred D. Shepard of
the advertisement was her missing
son and soon she and her husband
made a trip to Oregon, finding that
her intuition had been correct and
that the restaurant proprietor was
indeed hei’ son.
The boy who had left home many
years before had grown to maturity
and had married a young woman in
the Oregon city, where he made his
venture in the restaurant business.
It is said that his marriage was dis
pleasing to his parents, who induced
him to return with them to Georgia,
his wife securing a divorce.
This was about ten years ago, ac
cording to the best authorities on
the subject. He made his residence
in Fort Valley, taking an active part
in developing the peach orchards that
now form a considerable portion of
his estate.
Alfred Shepard died in December,
1918, about one year before Fred D.
Shepard married Mrs. Pauline Hop
son, of Abbeville, who had been di
vorced from her husband. Mr. Shep
ard’s first wife is said to be now
living in Oregon, while Mrs. Alfred
Shepard, his mother, is living in a
hotel at Long Beach, Cal.
It is said that Shepard was indul
gent toward Ernest and John S.
Hopson, his Second wife’s sons by
her first marriage. Persons well
qualified to talk about the relations
between Shepard and his two step
sons declare that he gave them
money whenever they asked for it,
bought automobiles for them, and in
fact, showed deep affection for them.
Fred Shepard’s only sister, Mrs.
Alice Crandall, is one of .the most
prominent women of Fort Valley. She
has three children, Fred, David and
Helen, the latter now being Mrs. H.
J. Hume.
Navy Deserter Said
To Have Confessed
' To Killing Clubman
NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—John Reidy,
alleged deserter from the battleship
Arizona, who was arrested here to
day, was reported by the police to
have confessed to killing Leeds
Vaughn Waters, wealthy clubman
and globe trotter, whose body was
found in a hotel here November 3.
SENATOR HARRIS
FAVORS REVIVAL
Os WAR FINANCING
On his return to Washington for
the opening of congress next Mon
day, Senator William J. Harris, of
Georgia, will join with others who
are insisting upon the immediate re
vival of the War Finance corporation
as a means of placing the cotton of
the south, the wheat of the west
and other American farm products
in the markets of Europe.
"Secretary Houston’s statements in
the past few days before the joint
committee of the house and senate,”
said Senator Harris, "have had a
most damaging effect upon the al
ready low price of cotton. He has
demonstrated conclusively that he
will not swerve from his fixed theory
of hammering down the price of all
commodifies regardless of the havoc
which may be wrought upon the pro
ducers.
"Secretary Houston’s theory, if
; followed to its logical conclusion,
■ would mean that America must give
iup the idea of selling any products
!to Europe until Europe has cash
' with which to buy at par exchange
I rates. This would bankrupt Ameri-
■ can agriculture and industry.
i “We must follow one policy or the
! other. If Secretary Houston's pol
| icy prevails, we sell nothing more
iin Europe until Europe recuperates,
I years hence. On the other hand, If
we go forward as originally intended
■ with financial assistance in the way
of credits, extended through the war
finance corporation, we can reason
ably expect to dispose of a vast
amount of our products in Europe
without much delay. That was what
the War Finance corporation was
created for—to enable European
countries to buy our products after
the war. It was suspended by Sec-
■ retary Houston. It ought to be re-
I vived at once. I am going to insist
upon its immediate revival. Secre
tary Houston’s opinions and theories
are those of an able man. but he is
only one man.”
In addition to Insisting upon the
revival of the War Finance corpora
tion, Senator Harris will Introduce
a bill to fix the rediscount rate of
the Federal Reserve banks at 5 per
cent for member banks.
"One-half of the banking capital
of Georgia is out of the federal re
serve system,” said the senator Sat
urday. “A fixed rate of 5 per cent
for member banks would be a strong
Inducement to dur state banks to be
come members. The federal reserve
system was not organized to make
money, yet it has a profit of $60,-
000,000, which it doesn’t know what
to do with.”
Senator Harris has spent a month
touring Georgia, visiting every place
in the state where the federal gov
ernment spends money. He visited
the coast cities of Savannah, Bruns
wick, Darien and St. Marys, where
the government spends money for
harbor improvement. Savannah, as
he remarked, is the second largest
port on the Atlantic seaboard, out
ranked only by New York.
“Not many people realize that
fact,” he said. "We Georgians ought
to feel proud that we have such a
magnificent port on our coast. Camp
Benning at Columbus is the largest
officers’ training school in this coun
try or the world. It is the post
graduate school of West Point for
officers of the infantry. It is train
ing now 1,000 officers. It has every
sort of terrain encountered in any
war.”
Senator Harris also visited Souther
field at Americus, the United States
public health service hospital at Au
gusta and Fort McPherson, at At
lanta.
Terrell County Banks
Subscribe $13,000
To Export Company
Seven of the nine banks in Terrell
county have taken stock in the Fed
eral International Banking company
to aid in the export of southern
products. Georgia’s quota of the
capital stock is $1,500,000, and of
this amount something over $1,000,-
000 has been subscribed.
Thirteen thousand dollars has been
subscribed by the Terrell county
i banks as follows: Dawson National
I bank, of Dawson, $5,000; City Na
tional bank, of Dawson, $4,500; Plan
ters’ bank, of Parrott, $1,000; Farm
ers’ bank, of Bronwood, $900; Bank
of Parrdtt, Parrott, $750, and Bank
of Sasser. Sasser. SBOO.
Girl Is Held in Jail
On Bad Check Charge
GREENVILLE, S. C„ Dec. 4.—A
) - etty eighteen-year-old girl, giving
her name as Mildred Hardin, and
claiming to be of a prominent family
of Forest City, N. C., has been ar
rested and is held in jail at Spartan
burg upon suspicion of being the
I young woman who is alleged to have
| tieeeed merchants of Greenville and
' other Carolina cities out of several
J thousand dollars with bogus checks.
He Finds $970
In Leather Boot
GARDNER, Mass. —While ex
amining a pair of leather boots
at a sale of the personal effects
of Jacob Haggstrand, of Finland,
who died here in 1919, a pros
■ .' icrchaser stuck nis hand
into one of them and found a
money belt containing $970. The
boots had been in possession of
the overseer of the poor since
Haggstrand’s death. Haggstrand
came here from Crystal! Falls,
Mich. His wife in Finland will
be notified of the find.
PRICE PREDICTS
EARLY RETURN
OF PROSPERITY
CLEVELAND, Ohio., Dec. 4.
Economic waste was termed the
cloud which is preceding the rain
bow in the financial heavens of
America in an address by Theodore
H. Price, editor of Commerce and
Finance, New York City, before the
City club of Cleveland today.
But as there can be no rainbow
without a cloud, Mr. Price said, the
phenomena is perfectly natural.
Price futhermore predicted an Imme
diate appearance of the rainbow of
prosperity.
Chief among the economic waste
Mr. Price classified the “waste of
capital that results from keeping
eight billions of gold tied up In
idleness as bank reserves.”
"Our federal reserve banks alone
hold two billions of gold as a re
serve,” he said. “If it were in cir
culation it would earn at least 100,-
000,000 a year in interest to say
nothing of the stimulus to business
it would furnish.
“I know the belief that the banks
ought to keep a gold reserve is so
sacrosanct to some that it seems
almost blasphemous to question it,
but we shall some day come to un
derstand that wealth producing prop
erly is the only reserve worth hav
ing and that ’he value of gold is
traditionary rather than real.”
Other economic waste, Mr. Price
cited, was waste of labor, material,
transportation, intelligence, .econo
mic and expenditure. Regarding the
waste of material, he said that the
waste of raw material in American
industry averages fully thirty per
cent.
"Not all of this is reclaimable,” he
said, "but a large portion of it can
be saved by those who are •willing to
introduce scientific methods and ma
chinery."
"And as to the labor element,” he
added, "we have a long way to go be
fore we can even glimpse the addi
tion to our we’alth that would result
from the intelligent utilization of
human labor.
"Employer and employe, those who
work with their heads and those who
work with their hands, must co-op
erate in solving the problem, for the
only way that the wars cost can
ever be paid is by making it possi
ble for one man to produce as much
in the future as two did previous
ly.
"Os our waste of transportation,
we ought to be ashamed. I know of
a certain article that makes four
journeys between New England and
the middle west in the course of its
fabrication. Doubtless there are
many others.”
Tobacco Company
Employes Will Get
SIOO,OOO in Bonuses
NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 4.—An
nouncement was made today that
SIOO,OOO in bonuses would be dis
tributed to employes of the W. R.
Irby branch here of the Liggett &
Meyers Tobacco company, when the
last wages are paid December 11,
the date set for the closing of the
local factory. Bonuses average $250
for each employe. Work done in the
New Orleans factory will be distrib
uted between the Durham, N. C., and
St. Louis branches in the future.
A Message
to Skin Sufferers
There are many skin sufferers, among
them may be yourself, who have endured
for many years the torment or humiliation
of some form of skin disease, who have tried
“very form of treatment, who have followed
all manner of advice and ■till have teen
unable to find the relief which they sought.
Your trouble may be only a mild form of
some simple skin eruption—no great suffer
ing, but very, very humiliating and uncom
fortable. Your face is disfigured and you
are ashamed to appear among your friends.
You wish to clear away the blight that hangs
like a drawn curtain between youraelf and
your companions.
Skin Disease a Torment
Or you are consumed, perhaps, with the
burning fire of a violent skin disease. The
scales and the scabs cover your arms, your
legs, your entire body. You are driven wild
.vith the greedy Itch that cannot be ooothed
or quieted. You know no sleep; your wak
■ng hours are hours of intense misery. You
cry out for relief!
Times without number have you followed
some hopeful advice and each time you have
met only disappointment and despair.
"Who knows?” you ask. "Whose advice
may I follow?”
Here is an answer given you honestly and
frankly.
Reputable physicians will tell you today
that the medical profession can only guess at
what is the true causa of akin disease. Some
say it is a blood disease and try treatments
threugh the blood. Others say it is a skin
disease, pu-e and simple, and treat the dis
ease through tlie skin.
But science isn’t sure. We shall not pre
sume, then, to tell you what skin disease is
when science itself frankly admits that it
cannot tell.
But we can tell you about a prescription
which has been used for twenty-five years
in the treatment of skin disease. And, with
out making further claims, we ask you to
read the letters from those who have used it.
A Doctor’s Prescription
D. D. D. Prescription is the formula of a
physician. Dr. D. I). Dennis, from whose
Initials ft secures its name. The present
enormous sale of this prescription is the re
sult of twenty-five years of gradual growth
from the time when Dr. Dennis first started
treating patients in his immediate neighbor
nood
We make no extravagant claims for D. D.
D. We do not shout from the housetops,
“Come one, come all—see, I cure, I cure!”
There is nothing miraculous about this pre
scription. It is just a common sense lotion,
compounded of well-known soothing and
healing ingredients—thymol, oil of winter
green, etc. —just such elements as any con
scientious physician might prescribe.
We know only this: —throughout twenty
five years, day by day, the written testi
mony of restored happiness and health keeps
pouring in. Letters by thousands come from
everywhere, with words of thanks and praise.
They come freely without solicitation or
suggestion of any kind. If you should ask.
“What is the secret of D. D. D.’s success?”
we should answer, "Read the letters which
we receive and judge for yourself.”
We reproduce a few letters. Read them!
Ten Year Misery Ended
For ten years I have had a severe case of
eczema and about one-third of that time 1
could not appear in public. I tried every
thing. but found no permanent relief until
my druggist recommended D. D. D.
I beg every eczema sufferer to begin using
D. D. D. at once and continue using it and
feel sure that they will find permanent re
lief. MISS MYRTLE HAHN, Nurse.
1800 Sth Ave., Hickory, N. a
This Fine Beard
Is Made of Bees
F j
' OFi ■
o* iL
« - wlr w
.j ' , J ' V ’ H
" Mr’’
l| , j
i
Every' bee has a sting, but every
bee doesn’t sting. So the bee farmer
will tell you and he can prove it.
Here is James Carnes, a veteran bee
fancier of Vincennes, Ind., with hun
dreds of bees clustered about his
face so that they give the impression
that he wears a long beard. Carnes
says that most bees are easier to
handle than most people.
SECRETARY COLBY
STARTS TOUR OF
SOUTH AMERICA
NORFOLK, Va.. Dec. 4.—“ Well,
Admiral, come and we’ll drop in on
Brazil.”
With these words Secretary of
State Bainbridge Colby stepped into
a shining gig launch today at the
government wharf at Fort Monroe,
was whisked out to the gray form of
the battleship Florida a mile away
in the waters of Hampton Roads, and
a half hour later was standing on
the bridge of the dreadnaught steam
ing outward for South America.
The secretary’s jaunty statement
was addressed to Rear Admiral Bas
sett, the naval' aid for Mr. Colby
on the South American visit. The
words typified the zest and holiday
spirit with which Mr. Colby entered
Into the ceremonies incident to his
departure.
Today was a day of formalities
for Mr. Colby. The echoes of Hamp
ton Roads were kept busy by the
flock of gun salutes frequently
spurting their flame across the wa
ters. The air above hummed with
a great array of seaplanes and dirigi
bles, circling back and forth wher
ever Mr. Colby and his party went.
But Mr. Colby only shared honors
with President-elect Warren G. Hard
ing, who entered Hampton Roads on
the steamer Pastores a little more
than an hour after the secretary on
the immaculate and luxurious presi
dential yacht Mayflower. The fact
that Senator Harding will soon be
the possessor of the Mayflower,
which he has twice refused on his
present trip, was remarked.
Fifteen Years in Wail
LONDON, England.—Posted at St. Malo,
France, on August 21, 1!M)5, a postcard has
just been delivered to Miss Sheale, South
fields Road.
Eczema Torture
—A Touch of D.D.D.
Instant Relief
For months I did not know what it was to
enjoy a night of unbroken sleep, for I had a
severe case of itching eczema which was a
perfect torture. I am so thankful for having
heard of your D. D. D. remedy I scarcely
know how to say enough for it. The first
application gave complete relief, and I de
cided to keep on using it, and after three
months’ treatment find myself completely
well. To anyone suffering with skis disease
I would say, "For your own sake use 9. D.
D.” It will heal you.
WM. BENFIELD.
3252 Monroe St., Bellaire, Ohio.
Sore Covered Skin Now Smooth
After four years’ suffering, D. D. D. gave
me almost instant relief, and my legs that
had been raw sores with eczema were pei
fectly smooth in four weeks. I used several
prparaticns put up for eczema, but none ever
did me any goed until I tried D. D. D.
ALBERT SMITH.
Asheville, N. Y.
Sample Bottle Does the Work
I received your sample bottle of D. D. D.
and it has done so much good I sent to the
drug store and got one bottle and It cured
me of the barbers’ itch. I have had differ
ent doctors and I have spent $30.00. Thev all
used salves, but they didn’t do me any good.
I can’t praise your D. D. D. too much.
R. A. BOLING.
Baldwin, Ga.
After Four Years
No Sign of
Dreaded Eczema
I suffered for five years with the worst
case of ringworm or dry eezema I ever saw.
Tried everything I heard of or read about;
also throe doctors; I got no relief. Finally I
read of D. D. D. and tried a sample. It did
me good and I got a full size bottle, and be
fore I used half of it I was healed, and for
four years I have stayed cured, not having
seen one sign of return.
WILLIAM F. BUTLER.
R. F. D. 1, Box 70, Warrenton, Va.
Results Permanent
About ten years ago D. D. D. healed me of
the worst case (of eczema I ever saw, and it
has never returned. I could never stop rec
ommending it as long as I live.
ALBERT SMITH.
Asheville, N. Y.
Instant Relief !
About three years ago an itching, scaly
eruption appeared on my head. I tried sev
eral salves and remedies, but it kept grow
ing worse and kept spreading. Night after
night I walked the floor unable to sleep from
the constant pniu, itching and burning. A
friend recommended Three D. for eczema. I
tried it and the first application gave me
great relief, stopped the itching so I could
sleep. After applying it for several months
I was entirely healed.
D. W. HANNA,
Burlingame, Kan.
Constant Torture Ended
I certainly can recommend your medicine
in this community for what it has already
done for me. .1 had not had a good night’s
rest for five months until I commenced
using your D. D. 15., and oh! how sweet was
rest after suffering five months of severe
torture.
MRS. LUCY J. TAYLOR.
Mechanicsburg, Va,
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1020.
PRESIDENT APPEALS
TO AMERICANS FOO
AID FOR ARMENIANS
WASHINGTON, Dec. s.—President
Wilson addressed an appeal today to
the American people for contribu
tions to the Near East relief.
None of the allies in the great
war, the president recalled, had suf
fered more severely in proportion to
their numbers than the Armen’ans
and other peoples of the Near East
Recent renewal of onslaughts against
Armenia by the Turkish nationalists,
the Kurds and the Bolshevists, the
president added, had placed a million
people in imminent danger of star
vation unless aid was again offered
them. He urged that the American
people contribute generously “out of
their abundance.”
“During the last few years,” the
president said in part, "these peo
ples have suffered untold hardships
and losses, and now at the begin
ning of the winter, when - it was
hoped these burdens would be light
ened, another great disaster has
overtaken them. The Armenian re
public has been over-run and thou
sands of people who had begun to
rehabilitate themselves have been
driven from their homes. Recent ca
bles state that the roads to Batum
are jammed with refugees, women
and children, shoeless and without
food.
“Relief work in this section of the
world is entirely under the direct on
of Near East relief, incorporated by
congress Since this organization
was formed it has raised and dis
bursed with great economy and ef
ficiency more than forty-one million
dollars in cash. A nation has been
saved and at least a million per
sons are alive today who would have
perished but for the generosity of
Americans.
“The 110,000 orphans who are now
being cared for by Near East relief
and wholly dependent upon it for all
the necessities of life, will furnish
the future leadership of the Neat
East. We dare not let them perish
now.”
Nine Moonshiners
Captured; Others
Killed by Officers
LEXINGTON, Ky„ Dec. 4.—Nine
moonshiners were captured and a
number of others believed to have
been killed or wounded in a bat
tle between thirty moonshiners and
fourteen United States revenue of
ficers in the southern part of Bell
county, near tho Tennessee border,
according to reports received here
tonight by Chief Prohibition Agent
W. G. McFarland.
None of the government officers
were injured, although more than
1,000 shots were fired. Five stills
were destroyed. The government
forces were headed by Prohibition
Agents Steve Cornett and Charles
Wright. The prisoners will be taken
to Pineville.
The scene of the battle is in one
of the wildest sections of the east
ern Kentucky mountains. First re
ports of the fighting came in a dis
patch from Pineville, which said
that heavy firing had been heard in
the southern part of the county. The
moonshiners who escaped fled into
the mountains with federal agents in
pursuit. The government agents left
Holden, Tenn., the nearest railway
point, Friday morning.
Plans for the raid were made dur
ing the term of circuit court, which
closed in London, Ky„ a week ago.
For more than two years the moon
shiners of that section of the state,
known to residents as “South Amer
ica,” have been growing bolder in
their operations, Chief Prohibition
Agent MacFarland stated tonight
when informed of the battle.
No raids had been made in that
section in several years and it was
decided at the London conference
to break up the traffic there.
Perhaps, indeed, these letters are too en
thusiastic. But, if so, may not the writers
be excused in the knowledge that they wrote
in the ecstfisy of relief—in the joy of free
dom from jears of suffering?
One thing is sure: Regardless of what they
said, the spirit of what they said is unmis
takable. It rings true. .Icy, relief, grati
tude, happiness!
If they have won this feeling, why not
you? If you could but have the feeling that
inspires such letters, freely written, what
would you not give? What more, indeed,
can you ask?
■We’ll not nay that thaae grateful
oorreapondentß are relieved, healed
or cured, but we will eay that they
are HAPPY AGAIN, after years ox
pain and suffering—and that’s what
D. D. D. Prescription offers to do for
yon. We make no claims. Ton can
draw far greater confidence and com
fort from what D. D. D. has done
through the past twenty-five years
than from anything we can now say.
D. D. D.’Prescription will be
found effective in cases of
Eczema, Psoriasis, Ringworm,
Barber’s Itch, Hives, Rash,
Acne, Dandruff. Pimples often
yield to treatment over night.
In all cases, D. D. D. gives
relief from itching upon the
first application.
Trial Bottle
Sent on Request
Without making any prom
ises of miraculous results,
we urge you to send the
coupon below for a trial
bottle of the famous D. I).
BGnl Prescription. We can
03 I promise you that the effect
of D. D. D. in most cases is
instantaneous; a few drops
and the itch is gone. Note
0 that soothing, refreshing
feeling! We have letters
K stating that our trial bot-
H tlp aionp was enough to free
■ I some sufferers from the tor-
Bi ment of skin disease. If,
Bs* rTiJttoC then, you are afflicted witli
I eczema, psoriasis, ring
® n worm, scales, pimples, or
!£■ an - v orm ®f skin disease,
w uSSaSS'’ ,r ‘ild or violent, send the
H I jgSBBSIj coupon nt once for this gen
,r°ns trial bottle of I). D.
B - Prescription. Enclose
m i iSiSiwl q nly ten cents jo cover cost
II I of packing and postage. Do
X not delay, for it mny mean
freedom at last for you
from the agonizing torment
of skin disease.
D. D. D. Laboratories, Dept. 3519
3845 East Ravenswood Ave,, Chicago, 111.
I D, D. D. Laboratories, Dept. 3519
I 3845 East Ravenswood Ave., Chicago, 111.
Gentlemen - Please send me, a trial bottle
[ of D. D. D. Prescription. I enclose ten
cents to cover cost of packing and
1 postage.
I Name
I
Address
i Town State
CASCARETS
“They Work, while you Steep”
You’re sluggish—slow as molasses’
You are bilious, constipated! You
feel headachy, full of cold, dizzy, un
strung. Your meals don’t fit—breath
is bad, skin sallow. Take Cascarats
tonight for your liver and bowels and
wake up clear, energetic and cheer
ful. No griping—no inconvenience.
Children love Cascarets too. 10,
50 cents.-—(Advt.)
Heavy Cold? Chest
All Clogged Up?
Don’t Give it a Chance to
“Set In” —Use Dr. King’s
New Discovery
DON’T let it get a start. Dr.
King’s New Discovery will get
right down to work, relieving the tight
feeling in the chest, quieting the rack
ing cough, gently stimulating the
bowels, thus eliminating the cold
poisons. Always reliable.
For fifty years a standard remedy.
All the family can take it with helpful
results. Eases the children’s croup.
No harmful drugs. Convincing, healing
taste that the kiddies like. AU drug
gists, 60 cents, $1.20 a bottle.
For caldsandcougbs
Dr.KingS
New Discovery
Feel Badly? Bowels Sluggish?
Haven’t any “pep” in work or play?
You’re constipated! The stimulating
action of Dr. King’s Pills brings back
old time energy, makes the bowels
and liver respond to your strong
healthy body. All druggists, 25c.
Prompt! Won’t Gripe
Pilk
PELLAGRA
MISSISSIPPLBOY CURED
Booklet Sent Free to, All
Sufferers
Doctors of Laurel and Hattiesburg
who waited on the son of J. T. Chil
ders, gave him up to die. He had
open sores on his face, hands and
legs. His throat was inflamed and
full of scabs. He suffered terrible
pain in his stomach, arms and legs.
But the boy’s parents heard of
Baughn’s Pellagra Treatment and de
cided to try it. Soon after the treat
ment was started an improvement
was noticed. • The pain was relieved
and the sores started to heal. In a ,
few months the patient was com
pletely cured.
If you suffer from pellagra as
this boy did, by all means investi
gate this treatment.
Baughn’s Pellagra Treatment was
discovered by a big-hearted man.
living in Jasper, Ala., who is de
voting his life to the relief of pel
lagra among his neighbors. He is
glad to help you. He has written a
booklet on "Pellagra and How to
Treat It,” which he would like to
send you. It will help you effect a
cure in your case. Send your name
and address and we’ll send the book
let without obligation to you. Amer
ican Compounding Co., Box 587-L,
Jasper, Ala.—(Advt.)
I
I 1 IkO A vegetable B
MaT/ - acerUtt. add* ■
HUi’ tor.e and vigor to ■
| the digestive ard ■
■Mn| eliminative system, ■
BBS improve* the appe- H
Jja tite, relieves Sick ■
h Headache er.d Bil- I
ioc.sr.ess. corr ec te ■
Ccr.sttpation.
for over B
FITS!
wlthCCtßUcees,. Mat,r r hoh^ l ,t l 2?®S2!!al
$2.00 FREE bottle
nf this wonderful treatment sent to every man.
child Buffering from this tenSS
Affliction. Writs at once, giving age. how tong
afflicted, full name and express Office. Send tod»T
DR. F E- GhANI CO. Dept. 020 Kansas City. W.
HOWHEENDEDKIDNEY
TROUBLE
"I had a severe attack of kidney
trouble and for three weeks could
not get out of doors and scarcely
out of bed,” writes C. E. Brewer, Vil
lage Springs, Ala. “Could not bend
over at all without the most excru
ciating pains. I purchased a bottle
Os Foley Kidney Pills. Was relieved
after first few doses and continued
their use until completely cured. I
consider Foley Kidney Pills the best
kidney remedy in the world. No re
currence of my trouble.” —(Advt.)
G reatest Bargain You Ever Saw
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New Feather Beds Only $10.50
New Feather Pillows, $2.20 per pair. New,
Sanitary and Dustless Feathers. Best 8 oz.
Ticking. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
Write for new catalog. Agents wanted.
Southern leather & Pillow Co., Dept, 16,
Greensboro, N. C,