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lA AliiJ
FIT OUR LAWS TO
COUNTRY’S GROWTH
Continued from Pago One.
I
yet In the month of Aiyfuat last we
excavated' over a million and two hun
dred thousand cubic yards of earth and
rock, a greater amount than In any
previous month. If we are able to keep
lip substantially the rate of progress
that now obtains we shall finish the
actual digging within five or six years.
THE NAVY.
"Now. gentlemen, this leads me up
to another matter for national consld-
eratlAn. and that Is our navy. The
' nary Is not primarily of Importance
only to the coast regions. It Is every
bit as much the concern of the farmer
who dwells a thousand miles from sea
water as of the fisherman who makes
his living on the ocean, for It Is the
concern of every good American who
knows w hat the meaning of the word
patriotism Is.
"This country Is definitely commit
ted to certain fundamental policies—
to the Monroe doctrine, for Instance,
and to the duty not only of building,
but. when It Is built, of policing and de
fending the Panama canal.
"Unless we are willing to abandon
this place, to abandon our Insistence
upon-the Monroe doctrine, to give up
the Panama canal, and to be content
to acknowledge ourselves a weak and
timid nation, we must steadily build
up and maintain a great fighting navy.
NAVY 18 EFFICIENT.
“Our navy Is already so efficient as to
be a matter of Just pride to every Ameri
can. So long as our navy is no larger
than at present, It must be considered
as an elementary principle that the
bulk of our battle fleet must always be
kept together. In a couple of months
• our fleefWf-great armored ships starts'
for the Pacific.
California, Oregon and Washington
have a coast line which Is our coast
line just as' emphatically as the coast
line of New York and Maine, of Louis
iana and Texas. Our fleet Is going to
Its own home waters In the Pacific, and
after a stay there It will return to Its
own home waters In the Atlantic. The
best place for a naval officer to learn
his duties Is at sea, by performing them
and only by actually putting through a
voyage of this nature, a voyage longer
than any ever before undertaken by as
large a fleet of any nation, can we find
out just exactly what Is necessary for
us to know as to our naval needs and
practice our officers and enlisted men
In the highest duties of their profes
sion.
SUPPORT ARMY AND NAVY.
"Among all our citizens there Is no
body of equal size to whom we owe
quite as much as to the officers and
enlisted men of the army and navy of
the United States, and I bespeak from
you the fullest and heartiest support.
In the name of our nation and of our
flog, for the services to which these
men belong.
"In conclusion I wish to say a word
to this body, containing as It does so
many business men. upon what Is pre
eminently a business proposition, and
that la the proper national supervision
and control of corporations. At the
meeting of the American Bar Associa
tion In this last August. Judge Charles
F. Amldon, of North Dakota, read a
paper on the ‘Nation and the Constitu
tion’ so admirable that It Is deserving
of very wide study. He quoted from
the late Justice Miller, of the supreme
court, to show that even In the Inter
pretation of the constitution by this,
the highest authority of the land, the
court's successive decisions must be
tested by the way they work In actual
application to the national life; the
court adding to Its thought and study
the results of experience and observa
tion until the true solution Is evolved
by a process both of Inclusion and ex
elusion.
THE CONSTITUTION.
"Said Justice Miller: ‘The meaning
of the constitution Is to be sought as
much In the national life as In the dic
tionary;’ for. as has been well said,
government purely out of a law library
can never be really good government.
Now that the questions of gov
ernment are becoming so largely eco
nomic, the majority of our so-called
constitutional cases really turn not
upon the Interpretation or the Instru
ment Itself, but upon the construction,
the right apprehension of the living
conditions to which It Is to be applied.
The constitution is now and must re
main what It always has been; but It
can only be Interpreted as the Inter
ests of the whole people demand, If
Interpreted as a living organism, de
signed to meet the conditions of life
.and not of death; In other words, If
Interpreted as Marshall Interpreted It,
as Wilson declared It should be Inter
preted.
THE MARSHALL THEORY.
“The Marshall theory, the theory of
life and not of death, allows to the
nation, that Is to the people as a
whole, when once It finds a subject
within the national cognizance, the
widest and freest choice of methods for
U. S. CAN COMPETE
IN EGYPTIAN TRADE
Cotton Seed Oil Is Used to
Great Extent in
Egypt.
Washington, Oct. 2.—Special Agent
W. A. Graham Clark, writing from Bei
rut, Syria, makes the following report
on the cotton seed oil Industry In
Egypt:
"The system Is the same as with oil
mills In England using Egyptian seed,
and the fact that they are often quoted
as getting so much larger percentage
of oil cake than American mills Is due
to the hulls being Included. Egyptian
seeds have more oil than American,
containing as high as 24 per cent to
possibly 20 per cent In the American.
The cost of seed at Alexandria la at
present about 234 and 325 an English
ton, respectively, or, say, 230 and 332
per American ton.
■ The cost of working seed Is also
higher than usual, as also wages are
advancing, but fuel Is higher protected
than ordinarily, being now about 33.80
per ton, landed from England. With
cheap freights America could well com.
pete with England not only In coal for
Egypt, but for other Mediterranean
countries as well."
TUMORS CONQUERED
Overwhelming, Proof that Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound Succeeds.
Dear Mrs. Pinkham
One of the greatest triumphs of
•Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound is the conquering of woman's
dread enemy Tumor,
The growth of a tumor is so in
sidious that frequently its presence
is wholly unsuspected until it is well
advanced.
So called ‘‘wandering pains” rosy
come from its early atages or the
presence of danger may be made
manifest by excessive monthly periods
accompanied by unusunl pain, from
through the groin and
thigh.
If you have mysterious pains, if
there are indications of inflammation
or displacements, secure a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound, made from native roota and
herbs, right away and begin its use.
Tho following letters should con
vince every suffering woman of its
virtue, and that it actually docs
conquer tumors
Mrs. May Fry, of 838 W. Colfax
Ave . South Bend, Ind., writes :
Dear Mrs. Pinkham
•'I take great pleasure in writ
ing to thank you for what Lydia E,
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has
done for me. 1 also took the Blood
Purifier in alternate doses with the
Compound. Your medicine removed a
cyst tumor of four years’ growth,
which three of the best physicians
declared I had. They had said that
only an operation could help me. I am
very thankful that I followed a frieod's
advice and took your medicine. It has
made me a strong and well woman and
I shall recommend it as long as I live.”
Mrs. E. F. Bayes, of 28 Buggies St.,
Boston, Maas., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
‘‘I have been under different doctors’
treatment for a long time without
relief. They told me I had a fibroid
tumor, my abdomen was swollen and
I suffered with great pain. I wrote
to you for advice, you replied and I
followed your directions carefully and
today I am a well women. Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ex
pelled the tumor and strengthened my
whole system.” ,
Mrs. Perry Byers, of ML Pleasant, ,
Ia.va, writes > I
“1 wsa told by my physician that I
had a fibroid tumor and that I would
have to be operated upon, I wrote to
I followed care-
you for advice, which 1
fnl - - -
ally and took Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound. I am not only
cured of the tumor but other female
troubles and can do all ray own work
after eigh years of suffering.”
Mrs. 8. J. Barber, of Scott, N. Y
writca:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“Sometime ago I wrote you for
advice about a tumor which the doctors
thought would have to be removed.
Instead I took Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound and to-day am a
well woman.”
Mrs. M. M. Funk, Vondorgrift, Pa.,
writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham
“I had a tumor and Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound removed
it for me after two doctors hsd given
me up. 1 was sick four years before I
began to take the Compound, I now
recommend Lydia E. Pinkham'a Veget
able Compound far and near.”
Such testimony as above is con
vincing evidence that Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound stands
without a peer as a remedy for Tumor
Growths as well as other distressing
ills of women, and such symptoms as
Bearing-down Sensations, Displace
ments, Irregularities and Backache,
etc. Women should remember that it
is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
und that is curing so many women
ra't forget to insist upon it when
some druggist asks you to accept
something else which he calls “just
as good.”
Mrs. Pinkham’s invitation to Women.
Women suffering from any form
of female weakness are Invited to
write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn. Moss.,
for advice. She is tho Mrs. Pinkham
who has been advising sick women
free of charge for more than twenty
years, and before that she assisted
her mother-in-law, L.vdla E. Pink-
ham in advising. Thus she is especially
well qualified to guide sick women
bock to health.
national control, and auatalns every
exercise of national power which has
any reasonnble relation to national
objects. The negation of' this theory
means, for Instance, that the nation
—that we. the ninety millions of people
of this country—will be left helpless
to control the huge corporations which
now domineer In our Industrial life,
nnd that they will have the authority
of the courts to work their desires un
checked; nnd such a decision would in
the end be as disastrous for them as
for us.
"If the theory of the Marshall school
prevails, then nn immense field of na
tional power, nftw unused, will bo de
veloped, which will be adequate for
dealing with many, If not all, of the
economic problems which vex us; and
we shall be saved from the ominous
threat of a constant oscillation be
tween economic tyranny and economic
chaos. Our Industrial, nnd therefore
our social, future ns a nation depends
upon settling aright this urgent ques
tion.
CONDITIONS CHANGED.
"The constitution Is unchanged and
unchangeable, save by amendment in
due f irm. But the conditions to which
It Is to be applied have undergone a
change which is almost a transforma
tion, with the result that many sub
jects formerly under the control of the
states have come under the control of
the nation.^ As one of the Justices of
the supreme court has recently said:
•The growth of national powers, un
der our constitution, which marks
merely the great' outlines and desig
nates only the great objects of na
tional concern. Is to be compared to
the grow th of a country not by the geo.
graphical enlargement of Its bounda
ries, but by the Increase of Its popula
tion.’
"A hundred years ago there was, ex
cept the commerce which crawled along
our seacoast or up and down our In
terior waterways, practically no inter
state commerce. Now, by the railroad,
the malls, the telegraph and the tele-
phqne, an Immense part of our com
merce is Interstate. By the transfor.
matlon It has escaped from the power
of the state and come under the power
of the nation.
FEDERAL POWER.
"Therefore, there has been a great
practical change In the exercise of the
national power, under the acts of con
gress, over Interstate commerce; while
on the other hand there has been no
noticeable change In the exercise of the
national power 'to regulate commerce
with foreign nations and with the In
dian tribes.' The change as regards In
terstate commerce has been, not In the
constitution, but In the business of the
people to which It Is to be applied. Our
economic and social future depends In a
very large part upon how the Interstate
commerce power of the nation Is Inter
preted.
“I Iwlleve that the nation has (he
whole governmental power over Inter
state commerce and the widest dlscre
tlon In dealing with that subject; of
course, under the express limits pre
scribed In the constitution for the ex
ercise of all powers, such, for Instance,
us the condition that 'due process of
law’ shall not be denied. The nation
has no direct power over purely Intra
state commerce, even where It la con
ducted by the same agencies which
Conduct Interstate commerce,
LET COURTS DETERMINE.
"The courts must determine what
Is national and what l« state com
merce. The same reasoning which sun.
mined the power of congress to Incor-
Unlted States bank tends to
The oyster season
begins with September
and ends with April.
The soup season
begins with January and ends
with December. Therefore
Oysterettes
are in season every day in every
month of every year.
Oysterettes—oyster crackers with
a taste that improves the flavor
of oysters, soup and chowder.
Always fresh in moisture
^and dust proof packages
NATIONAL
BISCUIT
COMPANY
STOCK IN BANK
EAGERLY SOUGHT
More Than $200,000 Is Sub
scribed for New Insti
tution.
Special to Tho Georgian.
Macon, Oa„ Oct. 2.—More than |:oo..
000 has been subscribed to the new
Citizens' National Bank. Which Is to
open for business on December L The
work of tearing down the old building
at the corner of Cherry street and Cot
ton avenue has begun and in Its place
will be erected a handsome marble
structure' of three stories. As stated
some time ago, the contract has already
been awarded and as soon as the old
building Is torn down work on the new
building will begin.
property when following a course so
shortsighted as to be really an assault
upon property.
"They have shown extreme unwisdom
in their violent opposition to the as
sumption of complete control over the
railroads by the Federal government.
The American people will not tolerate
the happy-go-lucky system of no con
trol over the great Interstate railroads,
with the Insolent and manifold abuses
which have so generally accompanied
It. The control mutt exist somewhere:
and unless It Is by thoroughgoing end
radical law placed upon the statute
books of the nation. It will be exercised
In ever-increasing measure by the sev
eral states.
,LET NATION CONTROL.
The same considerations which made
the founders of the constitution deem
It Imperative that the nation should
have complete control of Interstate
commerce apply with peculiar force to
the control of Interstate railroads at
the present day: and the arguments of
Madison of Virginia, Pinckney of South
Carolina and Hamilton and Jay of New
York, In their essence apply now as
they applied one hundred and twenty
years ago.
"The national cohventlon which
framed the constitution, and In which
almost all the most eminent of the first
generation of American statesmen sat,
embodied the theory of the Instru
ment In a resolution, to the effect that
the national government should have
power In cases where the separate
states w ere Incompetent to act with full
efficiency, and where the harmony of
the United States would be Interrupt
ed by the exercise of such Individual
legislation.
A CASE IN POINT.
The Interstate railroad situation is
exactly a cose In point. There will, of
course, be local matters affecting rail
roads which can best be dealt with by
local authority, but as national com
mercial agents the big Interstate rail
road ought tp be completely subject
to national authority. Only thus con
we secure their complete subjection to,
and control by a single sovereign, rep
resenting th whole people, and capa
ble both of protecting the public and
of seeing that the railroads neither In
flict nor endure Injustice.
"Personally I firmly believe that
there should he national legislation to
control nil Industrial corporations do
ing an Interstate business, including
the control of the output of their se-
porate the
sustain the power to Incorporate an
Interstate railroad, or any other cor-
porutlon conducting an Interstate bust-
ness.
"There are difficulties arising from
our dual form of government. If they
prove to be Insuperable resort must be
had to the power of amendment. Let
us first try to meet them by an exercise
of all the powers of the national gov
ernment which In the Marshall spirit of
broad Interpretation can be found In
tbe constitution as It Is. They are of
rast extent. The chief economic ques
tion of the day In this country Is to
provide a sovereign for the great cor
porations engaged In Interstate busi
ness; that la, for the railroads and the
Interstate Industrial corporations. At
the moment our prime concern Is with
the railroads.
INTERSTATE ROAD8.
"When railroads were first built they
were purely local In character. Their
boundaries were not coextensive even
with the boundaries of one state. They
usually covered but two or three coun
ties. All this has now changed,
present five great systems embody
nearly four-fifths of the total mileage
of the country. All the most Important
railroads are no longer state roads, but
Instruments of Interstate commerce.
Probably 85 per cent of their business
Is Interstate business.
"It Is the nation alone which can with
wisdom, justice and effectiveness exer
cise over these Interstate railroads the
thorough and complete supervision
which should be exercised. One of the
chief, and probably the chief, of the
domestic causes
constitution was the need to confer
upon the nation exclusive control over
Interstate commerce. But this grant of
power is worthless unless It Is held to
confer thoroughgoing and complete
control over practically the sole Instru
mentalities or Interstate commerce—the
Interstate railroads.
FAULT OF ROADS.
■The railroads themselves have been
exceedingly ahortslghted In the rancor
ous bitterness which they have shown
against the resumption by the nation of
this long-neglected power. Great rap-
Itallste. who pride themselves upon
their extreme conservatism, often be
lieve they are acting In the Interests of son.”
FOOD STOPPED IT
Good Food Worth Mors Than a Gold
Mint.
curltles, but as to these the necessity
for Federal control Is leas urgent and
Immediate than Is the case with the
railroads. Many of the abuses con
nected with these corporations will
probably tend to disappear now that
the government—the public—Is gradu
ally getting the upper hand as regards
putting a stop to the rebates and spe
cial privileges which some of these cor.
poratlons have enjoyed at the hands of
the common carriers.
REMEDY IN U. 8. CONTROL.
"But ultimately It will be found that
the complete remedy ror these abuses
lies In direct and affirmative action by
the national government. That there
Is constitutional power for the national
regulation of these corporations I have
myself no question. Two or three gen
erations ago there was Just as much
hostility to national control of banks
as there Is now- to national control of
railroads or of Industrial corporations
doing an Interstate business.
"That hostility now seems to us lu
dicrous In Its lack of warrant: in like
manner, gentlemen, our descendants
will regard with wonder the present
opposition to giving the national gov
ernment adequate power to control
those great corporations, which It alone
can fully, nnd yet wisely, safely, and
Juatlv control. Remember also that to
regulate the formation of these cor
porations offers one of the most direct
and efficient methods of regulating
their activities.
ENFORCE POWERS.
"I am not pleading for an extension
of constitutional power. I am pleading
that constitutional power which already
exists shall be applied to new condi
tions which did not exist when the con
stitution went Into being. I ask that
the national powers already conferred
upon the national government by the
constitution shall be so used as to bring
national commerce nnd Industry ef
fectively under the authority of the
Federal government and thereby avert
Industrial chaos.
“My plea la not to bring about
condition of centralization. It Is that
the government shall recognize a con
dition of centralization In a field where
It already exists.
NOT CENTRALIZATION.
When the national banking law was
patted It represented In reality not
centralization, but recognition of the
fact that the country had to far ad
vanced that the currency was already a
matter of national concern and must
be dealt with by the central authority
at Washington. Bo It Is with Interstate
Industrialism and especially with the
matter of Interstate railroad operation
today.
“Centralization has already taken
place I nlhe world of commerce and In
dustry. All I ask Is that the national
government look this fact In the face,
accept It as a fact, and fit Itself ac
cordingly for a policy of supervision
and control over this centralized com
merce and Industry.
LARCENY CHARGE
AGAINST DAIRYMAN
ffpeclnl to Tho (Jeorglnn.
Macon. <Jn., Oct. 2.—C. Wilton Desobry,
superintendent of tbe Macon Kunltarj Dairy
Company, trua arrested yesterday, chaired
with larceny after truit. He will be tried
Thuraday morning In Juatlce of the Peace
Roger s’ court. It la charged that Deuebry
turn for some time been taking milk. Ice
and other things from the dairy company
without making a ticket for anything.
Ilia nrreat line cauaed a great suprlae
among hla friend*.
LOG CABIN CLUB
WILL RE-ELECT OFFICERS.
Special to Tbe Georgian.
Macon, Oa.. Oct. 2.—A meeting of the
members of the Log Cabin Club will be
held this afternoon for the purpose of
electing officers for the new year.
The Log Cabin Club In Macon
known throughout the state as one of
the best country clubs In Georgia, and
the buildings nnd grounds are amoag
the most beautiful In the entire South
The club, under the present manage
ment, Is In a flourishing condition ami
It Is likely that the same officers who
are now holding office will be re-elect
ed.
MERCER FRESHMAN CLA88
BRAVES FIR8T CALL.
Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Oa., Oct. 2.—Members of the
freshman clast of Mercer Unlveralty
braved the first call for a meeting after
chapel exercise* yesterday and were
met by a storm of jests and yells from
upper classmen. The effort every year
on the part of the higher classes Is to
prevent a meeting of the freshmen In
the college chapel. When the new men
make efforts to elect officers they find
much difficulty nnd this time there was
a rush which lasted some time.
MAYOR BRIDGES 8MITH
CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY.
Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Oa., Oct, 2.—Mayor Bridges
Smith was 80 years old yesterday, and
celebrated hla birthday, by having a
large number of hls frlends take dinner
with him. During the sixty years of
his life, Mayor Smith has spent the past
fifty In Macon and haa seen the city
grow from a small village to one of the
most prosperous In the state.
OFFICERS FIND NO CLEW
IN P0180NING CASE.
Kpeelsl to The Georgian.
Macon, Oa., Oct. 2.—Although more
than a week has passed, still nn ar
rests have ■ been made In the alleged
poisoning of Roscoe Arnold, who. It Is
charged, was given a large dose of car
bolic acid at the Door of Hope Monday
a week ago.
Both Sheriff Robertson and the city
detsctlves have been at work on the
case.
ADJUTANT THURMAN
SUCCEEDS CAPT. STARR.
gpsclal lo Tbe Georgian.
Macon, Oa., Oct. 2.—Captain W. L.
Starr, of the Floyd Rifles has resigned
his position, and Colonel Walter Har
ris has appointed In his place Adjutant
Merrett Thurman, of the Second Geor
gia regiment.
Captain Starr haa been at the head
of the Floyd Rifles for several years,
and under his charge the company has
grown wonderfully and Is now In a
flourishing condition. For the past
several months Captain Starr has been
very sick, and returned only a few-
days ago from a trip through Canada,
and other northern points, where he
was traveling for his health.
WANT HART TO REMAIN
IN RACE FOR ALDERMAN.
Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Ga., Oct. 2.—Friends of Al
derman Jesse B. Hart, who has with-
Jrawn from the race for alderman, are
after him to re-enter the race under
the Moore ticket. Mr. Hart haa served
the city as alderman for the past two
years and during that time has proven
to be one of the best aldermen Macon
has had In tome time.
NEW MAIL BETWEEN
MACON AND ATHENS.
Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Ue., Oct (.—Secretary 7.. K. J«y
of the Macon Chamber of Commerce receiv
ed a letter Tuezdny from I- M. Terrell, su
perintendent of the railway mall service,
stating that a new mail service would be
put on between Macon nml Athens Just ss
soon ss the Central of Georgia rsllrosd ran
famish a mall car. At present the retimed,
are short of mntt cars, but It Is thought
that they will be able to put on a car with
in the next few days.
To find a food that will put an abso
lute stop to "running down” Is better
than finding a gold mine.
Many people when they begin to run
down go from one thing to another
without finding a food that will stop
the progress of disease. Grape-Nuts
Is the most nourishing food known and
will set one right If that I* possible.
The experience of a Louisiana lady
may be Intereating. "I received a se
vere nervous shock some years ago and
from that and overwork gradually
broke down. My food did not agree
with me and I lost flesh rapidly. I
changed from one kind of food to an
other but was unable to atop the loss
of flesh and strength.
“I do not exaggerate when I say that
I finally became. In reality, a living
skeleton. My nights were sleepless,
and I was compelled to take opiates In
various forms. After trying all sorts
of food without success I finally got
down to toasted bresd with a little but
ter, and after a while this began to
sour and I could not digest It. Then
I took to toasted crackers and lived on
them for several weeks, but kept get
ting weaker.
"One day Grape-Nuts vis suggest
ed and It seemed to me from the de
scription that It was Just the sort of
food I could digest. I began by eating
a small portion, gradually Increasing
the amount etch day.
"My Improvement began at once for
It afforded me the nourishment that I
had been starving for. No more har
assing pains and Indigestion. For a
month I ate nothing but Grape-Nuta
and a little cream, then I got so well
I could take on other kinds of food. I
gained flesh rapidly and now I am In
better health than I have been In years.
I still stick to Grape-Nuts because I
like the food and I know of Its pow
erful nourishing properties. My phy
sician soya that my whole trouble was
a lack of power to digest food and that
no other food that he knows of would
have brought me out of the trouble
except Grape-Nuts," "There's a Rea-
BARRETT AND CARLING
CONTROL BANK 8TOOK,
Special to The Georgian.
Macon, Ga., Qct. 2.—Congressman
Charles L. Bartlett and Thomas
Carling have succeeded In their fight
for the control and almost complete
ownership of the Union Savings Bank,
as far as the price of stock Is concern
ed. The 788 shares of the stock of .he
bank which went to T. J. Carling sev-
celvers of the Exchange Bank yester
day. and this time only 38 was offered.
This offer was mads by Jacob Collins,
of Savannah, a business associate of
Carling.
BAIL NOT SECURED;
BARRETT STILL IN JAIL,
Special to Tbe Geortsn.
Macon. Ga.. Oct. 2.-0. J. Barrett, who
1s condned In the Bibb county Jail awaiting
trial on tho charge of plugging pipes of the
new government building. Is still wsltlng
Tor friends from Augusta to come and fur-
nlsh the <500 needed to ball bln; out. lie
received word Inst week that friends In
Augusta were ralalug money, but It has not
arrived.
INSPECTOR MAY RECOMMEND
THAT BRIDGE BE PAINTED.
Bperlal to Tbe Georgian.
Mtcon, Ga., Oct. I—Building Inspector
I'niilln has been Instructed by Mayor Smith
to make a careful Investigation of the
bridge that connects Fast Macon with Ms-
con proper, and when the report Is made
fears may either be banished or given
grounds for further roustderatf —
council does not think the bridge
least bit unsafe, although Its me
believe that an application of paint might
Improve Its looks, and serve ss su aid to
the metal work.
JOHNSON WILL RECOVER
FROM INJURY SUSTAINED.
Special to The Georgias.
Maron, Ga.. Oct. t—Ben Johnson, who
fell from the roof of the Sanitary Dairy
Company's plait on Hatnrdsy last. Is stead
ily Improving at tbe Maron Hospital, where
he has been roudned slneo tbe accident oc
curred. Although Johnson’s Injuries are very
painful, it la thought they will not prove
III Wilh,Typhoid Fsvar.
Special to The Georgian.
Macon. Ga.. Oct. 2.—-Bridges Jordan,
non of Sanitary Inspector Charles Jor
dan. Is critically III at the family home
It. Knit Macon with typhoid fever, and
It Is feared by the doctor* that the llt-
rellotv will not recover.
DISTRESS AFTER EATING
Do You Ever Feel Aa Though Yon
Had Swallowed A Brick, In
stead of a Meal?
That heavy, bloated, stuffed-up, lead-
like feeling, which you often experience
after eating a meal, ia positive proof
that something la wrong with your di
gestive organs. They are becoming
weak and fagged out. There is r lack
of gastric and other digestive juices.
The food Is no longer properly digest
ed and it forms a heavy load on your
stomach, ho that nearly every meal
causes you misery and distress.
If you are In this condition, 1t means
that you have dyspepsia In some form
and may have had It for some time,
though you didn't realize It.
Now is the time to check it, for if
you don't It will surely develop into
worse forms of dyspepsia and other
stomach troubles, which may have se
rious results.
But that Is not all. The stomach is
the hub of the body and an Injury to
It is an Injury to all. A weak atom-
uch causes the whole body to Ruffer.
The action of the heart, liver and kid
neys becomes sluggish. The brain be
comes Inactive. The nerves become
unstrung. Tho blood loses its vital
ity.
The only safe, sure, scientific meth
od of restoring your stomach to Its
healthy, normal state, is to use Stu
art's Dyspepsia Tablets, which will act
as a substitute In digesting your food,
thus giving your stomach a much need,
ed rest.
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets have
stood the tests for years. Thousands
have used them and been cured. Phy
sicians all over the United States rec
ommend them. They are not a secrot
remedy. They contain fruit and vege
table essences, pure concentrated tinc
ture of hydrant is, golden seal, lactose,
and pure aseptic pepsin These com
bined Ingredients will digest the coars
est kind of food and do the work Just
as well as any good, strong, healthy
stomach will.
Don't take our word for It. Ask .
physician, your druggist or any of your
friends. who may have used Stuart
Dyspepsia Tablet*. But you don't eve
have to take their word for It. Find
out for yourself. Send for a free sam
ple package and try them. That’s ths
surest way to learn the truth. Then,
If you are satisfied, you can go to your
nearest druggist and get a flfty-cent
box. AH druggists *ell them.
Write u«» for a free sample today.
Address F. A Stuart Co., 15u Stuart
13lug, Marshall, Mich.
f;
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