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STREET REFORMS
SMEiBWNTO
ffIOMLL :
Sweeping Investigation of Im
provement System to Result
From Charter Changes.
With Gcfvernor Brown's approval of
Atlanta's charter amendment bill,
which was passed by both branches ot
the general assembly yesterday, the
council will begin a sweeping investi
gation of the city's street improvement
system.
Mayor Winn and Councilman Aldine
Chambers both said today that Gov
ernor Brown had given them assur
ance that he would approve the bill.
On account of the limited time before )
the city election, a special meeting of i
the council will be called to appoint an >
investigating committee. The charter I
amendment gives the council authority I
thoroughly to reorganize the chief of j
construction department and make
many other changes.
Many officials today expressed the
opinion that The Georgian's campaign
for better atreets would soon show gen
uine material results. Aiderman John
S. Candler said that there was no doubt
that the real troubles with the street
Improvement system would be revealed
by the Investigation and the necessary
adjustments made. A majority of the
city fathers are agreed that drastic ac
tion must be taken.
Special Session Necessary.
The city council meets Monday, but
on account of the many bills Governor
Brown will have submitted to him it is
not expected that he will have an op
portunity to approve the city bill be- .
fore the middle of next week. There- j
fore, a special meeting of the council ;
will probably be called.
The bill also gives the council the
right to close the Forsyth street under
pass. provided an outlet for the stores
fronting on the railroad tracks can be
secured of which the governor will ap
prove. This will help to make Forsyth
street one of the principal thorough
fares of the city.
Authority to tax locker clubs SSOO
each and to close them through the
revocation of permits is granted. It is
expected that his provision will result
Jn the closing of a number of alleged
chibs by the city council.
The bill submits the annexation of
Capitol View to a vote of the people of I
Capitol View.
HUNT STEPFATHER IN
SEARCH FOR SLAYER
OF SIX-YEAR-OLD GIRL
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 14.—Police In- '
vestlgation following the discovery of ’
the dead body of Vivian Greenfield, a
sdx-year-old girl, tn a room of a Venice
hotel late yesterday has led to a search
for Charles E. Greenfield, her step
father, as the alleged murderer. T'ne
body, covered up in bed, was found by :
a maid a few minutes after Greenfield
left th® room. The child had been dead
eeveral hours.
No motive cam be given for the crime.
Greenfield came here from Chicago four
months ago. He was a sheet metal
worker and had been out of employ
ment for some weeks.
linerTn port 7 with
PASSENGERS TAKEN
FROM SHIP ASHORE
BOSTON. Aug 14.—The Dominion
Atlantic line steamer Prince Arthur,
with the 172 passengers of the Prince
George, which ran ashore in a thick
fog off Yarmouth. N. S.. on board,
docked at Long wharf this morning.
Hundreds of friends and relatives of
the passengers were at the pier.
The transfer of the passengers from
the Prince George to her sister ship,
which had been called by wireless, was
effected In a thick fog. All the pas
sengers were safely transferred. The
Prince George is reported still ashore,
badly damaged,
SALVATION ARMY IS
PRAYING LIFE OF ITS
FOUNDER BE SPARED
LONDON, Aug. 14. —Prayers for the re
covery of General William Booth, founder
and head of the Salvation Army, who is
seriously ill here, were spoken In thou
sands of Salvation Army barracks
throughout the world today From num
berless street corners, where open air
meetings of the Salvationists are held
daily and nightly, petitions were directed
in the course ot the service for a pro
longation of the useful life of the aged
< vangelist.
General Booth's condition according to
a morning bulletin showed little if any
improvement. Be was unable to sleep
last night from insomnia which added
to his nervous condition
SIXTEEN 8188 CANDIDATES
PAY PRIMARY ASSESSMENT
MACON, GA.. Aug. 14.—N0 candi
dates withdrew from the races In Bibb
county, all paying their assessments.
Those who will be voted on next week,
sixteen In all, are as follows:
Congress —C. L. Bartlett, J. W. Wise,
John R. Cooper.
Judge of Superior Court —H. A. Mat
thews Robert Hodges. <'laud Estes.
State Senate —W D McNeil, < diver
C Hancock
Solicitor General —John P Ross. Ro
land Ellis
Representative Minter Wimberly,
Aithur L. Dasher, Ben .1. Fowler. Nat
R Winship, Wallace Miller and W. R.
Barnes.
Atlanta Business Men Masters of Crafts
10 MORGAN A CANDY MAKER
i i J . - ~ ~x\ !
"A Ml Bi* ‘
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flat ,
'lOkm? wWb.g* Via* TfaL •
mH m.THaPIIW*
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. wags bK i , "
Brooks Morgan, dee president ami manager of the Frank E. Block Candy Company, wiio
knows as much about making candy as his most skillful employees.
FEE BILL GOES T 0
GOV.J.M.BROWN
Watchful Wohlwender. of Mus
cogee, Finally Puts “Old 88”
Across in the House.
A long sigh of relief is on its way
heavenward today, for senate bill No
88, the pride and erstwhile pet anxiety
of Representative Ed Wohlwender, of
Muscogee, has passed the house of rep
resentatives, and now awaits the sig
nature of Governor Brown!
This Is a bill to require all officials
receiving fees in Georgia to keep ac
curate records thereof, and to submit
them to public inspection from time to
time.
There was much opposition to it,
and for a while it looked as if it surely
would fail of passage. It doubtles
would have suffered that sad fate had
some one other than Watchful Wohl
vender been behind it.
On the first day of the present ses
sion Wohlwender moved to take old bill
88 out of the pigeonhole, where it had
reposed a year or so. and "shove her
through." There was objection, and
Wohlwender sat down. Three days aft
er that. Wohlwender tried it again—
nothing doing.
Always the Same Clamor.
Then Wohlwender. who has a voice
ike a—fog horn and a vocabulary three
degrees finer than Elbert Hubbard’s,
settled right down to a steady thrice
a-week viewing- wlth-alarm that Old 88
never had been brought to the house
'or its august and distinguished con
sideration.
Finally, the rules committee got hold
»f the thing, and Wohlwender changed
his thrlce-a-week viewing- wlth-alarm
to a twlce-a-week performance. - He
ripped that rules committee up the
back, on the bias, and across lots. He
said things about It that can not be
printed in any newspaper hoping to get
by the postal authorities. There was
hardly a night that "passed in which
Wohlwender did not toss and groan In
nightmare about Old 88. and the rules
committee coming out of its lair every
few minutes and sitting heavy and de
pressing-like on Wohlwender’s manly
chest.
At last the pressure got too stout for
"Bob" Hardeman and his crowd, anti
they resolved that the rules commit
tee must report Old 88 for a hearing in
the house, or Wohlwender would organ
ize a lynching party, and there might
not be any rules committee soon. So
the bill was put on the calendar Tues
day. and Wohlwender was happy an 1
the thing passed with a whoop!
Now. “Bob” Hardeman, who engi
neers the rules committee’s steam roll
er. has a neatly framed motto hanging
over his desk in the speaker's room,
which reads "Oh, peislstency, thy
name Is Wohlwender. of Muscogee!”
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 14. 1912.
I |
i Vice President and Manager of
; Block Company Learned the
i
Business From Ground Up.
Brooks Morgan, vi p pr side it anil ■
manager of Frank E. Block 6’- <’• .. man- ■
ufacturers of candv at 1 crackers. ;
knows just as much about the manual
work of his big shop as do the em- I
ployees who daily earn their living 1
there
With all the skill of one of the deft
fingered girls in the shop, he can set
tiny little blocks of candy to running
through a big machine that Covers them
with chocolate coating, brushes them
off and sends the sweet morsels on their
way to the drying and cooling room.
He can take a look at a monster cal
dron of boiling syrup and tell just when
it should be cooled off. and that takes
skill, the candy makers say. For if
you take it off the fire too soon there
is going to be sugar instead of candy
when you cool it
Candymaking hasn't been Mr. Mor
gans lifework. He started out as a
young clerk with the Southern Rail
way Company and worked his way up
to the position of assistant general pas
senger agent.
"That young Morgan is going right
along and he’ll be at the head of the
road some day," was the prophecy of
old-timers, who knew by experience
when they saw a railroad man.
About that, time the young man mar
ried. His wife was the daughter of
Frank E. Block. Soon afterward Mr.
Block's health failed and he was unable
to attend to the business which he had
made one of the largest in the South,
so he persuaded his son-in-law to Join
forces with him.
Despite the fact that hts early train
ing and tastes were for railroading.
Brooks Morgan started in to help out
the man whdse daughter he had mar
ried. He learned the business from the
bottom up. while managing it. In over
alls, he studied the actual work of mak
ing candy and learned it so that his
old employees acknowledge that he can
tell them many things about the work
which they learned In their youth.
Mr. Morgan has also taken a great
Interest in the doings of other whole
sale confectioners and knows many of I
the leading men in this country per
sonally. He has attended conventions
and made himself felt, there as much as
he has made the force of his personal
ity felt in the office at his factory
—— ■ ■ ■■ - ■
THOMAS SHOWS TAX GAIN.
THOMASVILLE. GA., Aug. 14.—The
tax returns of Thomas county show a
gain of *80,061 for 1912. Last year
there was a gain of $250,000.
The largest increase this year is from
the Boston district, with $.’.0,167. Meigs
comes next with an increase of $44,-
889. Thomasville shows a decrease.
The returns this year for Thomas coun
ty total $7,259,562.
TAYLOR VETERANS MEET.
BUTLER. GA.. Aug. 14.—The Con
federate veterans of Taylor county held
their annual reunion at Butler y ester
day. The resignation of A. G. McGee
as commander of this camp was ten
dered and accepted. Colonel .1 A.
Steed yvas unanimously elected to fill
this place.
charge is false?
; MATTHEWS SAYS
Candidate for Macon Judgeship
Denies Being in League With
Saloon Men.
MACON, GA.. Aug. 14 —The charge
that Solicitor Genera! H. A. f.latthews,
of Fort Valley, who is a candidate for
judge of the superior courts of the Ma
con circuit, promised protection to at
least two violators of th° prohibition
law in exchange for their votes and
support has been made and denied
However, there will probably be more
interesting developments. depending
upon whether Mr. Matthews can ascer
tain yy ho paid for an advertisement in a
Macon paper yesterday that contained
this charge against him.
The advertisement asserted that Ike
Rashinski, a saloon keeper, who has
been convicted several times, and
against whom a case is pending now,
is managing Mr. Matthews* campaign
for judge. it further asserted that
Bashinski and Mr. Matthews went to
gethei to \t . T. Amerson, another sa
loon keeper, and Bashlnski. with the
candidate for judge acquiescing, as
sured Amerson he would be protected
in the future if he voted for Mr. Mat
thews and worked against Judge Rob
ert Hodges. Who is also a candidate
Mr. Matthews immediately declared
that the charge was a canard, and that
the man who made it was "a contempt!
ble liar."
Bashlnski said he did n>t know any -
thing about it. and declared he had no
connection with Mr. Matthews or his
campaign.
Amerson also denied completely his
alleged part in the affair.
BAXLEY TO HAVE LIGHTS
BAXLEY, GA., Aug 14.—The ma
chinery f<„ , t i„. new electric light and
waterworks plant for Baxley is being
placed in the power house near the
Southern railway. The poles ar.- up
and most ot the wires strung Resi
dences and stores are being wired for
electric lights. The plant is owned by
the city. Lights will he turned on In
, September.
TOM WATSON TO SPEAK.
\ IDALIA. GA., Aug. 14. Immediate
ly after the election is over the friends
of Tom . Watson will be given an oppor
tunity to hear him deliver an address.
An engagement has been made for him
to speak at Tiger Springs, six miles
north of here on the Georgia ami Flor
ida road.
FARMERS HEAR UNION SPEAKERS
VIDALIA, GA.. Aug. 14 A number
of the farmers of this section met .ft
Glenwood to hear President Lawton
Brown of the Georgia Slate Farmers
union and L. B. Cheatham, traffic man
ager of the National Warehous. Com
pline. apeak In the Interest of a mor.
scientific marketing of the cotton crop
MES TAFT'S
CHIEF ADVISER
New York Boss Heads Commit
tee to Inspect Plans for
G. 0. P. Campaign.
NEW YORK. Aug 14—Charles D
Hilles, chairman of the Republican na
tional committee, has announced the
names of all the members of the ad
visory committee for the campaign.
William Barnes. Jr., chairman of th.
New York Republican state committee,
is at the head.
The other members are S< nator Theo, i
E. Burton, of Ohio: State Senator Colo- I
nel Austin Colgate, of New Jersey:
Thomas H Devine, of Colorado; Gov
ernor Philip Lee Goldsborough, of
Maryland; John Hays Hammond, J. B
'Keating, of Indiana; former United
I States District Attorney Adolph Lew
[ isohn, of New York; Henry F. Lippitt.
senator from Rhode Island: David W.
Mulvane, of Kansas: Colonel Harris I
New, of Indiana; Herbert Parsons, of
New York; Samuel L. Powers, former
congressman from Massachusetts; Eli
liu Root, senator from New York. John
Wanamaker, of Pennsylvania; George
R. Sheldon, treasurer of the Republican
national committee in 190$; Otto Stif
fel, of Missouri, and Fred W. Upham,
of Illinois.
Ax for Surveyor
Favoring Roosevelt
NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 14.—Having
been request< d to resign as surveyor «»»'
customs at New Orleans Ijy Secretary
of the Treasury MacVeagli. Louis P
I Bryant h is refused to quit, charging
I that the action of the secretary ij< the
result of his active support of Colonel
! Roosevelt for the presidency.
Calling upon Surveyor Bryant to va-
I cate the office, "for the good of the
| service," Set t -tary MacVeagh suggests
| that the resignation become effective
“at tlie earliest convenient time." Mr.
| Bryant deviated that he resented the
' request for his resignation on the
j ground stated, and that while he ex
. pected to have to give up the office,
he would rot do so In accordance with
the secretary’s request.
"There is no doubt in the world that
polities, pure and simple, led to the ac
tion of the secretary In demanding my
resignation.” asserted Mr Bryant. "It
is an open fact that 1 am for Colonel
Roosevelt, and they have determined to
decapitate all the Roosevelt men. I am
one of the first to get the blow.”
Mr. Bryant was appointed surveyor
of customs at New Orleans by Presi
| | dent Taft on June 19. 1909.
CAPT. W. P. MANLEY
( DEAD; WAS CHIEF OF
POLICE FOUR YEARS
The body of Captain W. P Manley,
former chief of police, who died last
night after a long illness, lies at Green
berg & Bond’s chapel awaiting funeral
arrangements.
Captain Manley, who was 92 years
old, was widely am! favorably known
in Atlanta. He entered the police de
partment as a young man and saw it
developed from a handful of men to the
present organization. Through succes
sive promotions he was made chief in
1897 and held that position for four
years.
During the past few years he had
been living quietly with his wife and
son at Austell, Ga. He belonged to the
Masons and the Odd Fellows.
DIAMOND JIM BRADY
ABLE TO EAT AGAIN;
$220,000 HIS THANKS
BALTIMORE, Aug. 14. His appe
tite restored, “Diamond Jim" Brady, of
New York, has given $1'20,000 to Johns |
Hopkins hospital here.
After suffering for nearly six months !
from stomach trouble, during which he !
could not indulge even in the luxury of I
dry toast without being savagely re- j
venged during digestion. Mr. Brady ‘
was able to sit down to his first big
meal last Thursday night.
The menu was as follows: ('anta
loupe. cherry stone clams, chicken
j gumbo (strained), sea bass, wine, j
' broiled squab, turkey, string beans, |
I salad, demltasse, cigars, champagne.
HATS MUST COME OFF IN
MACON'S PICTURE SHOWS
MACON. GA., Aug. 14.—Astor lying j
dormant in the city code for twelve
years, an ordinance requiring women to
remove their hets In theaters will he
enforced hereafter by the picture show
proprietors. The ordinance was passed
by council in 1900 before*moving pic- I
ture theaters came into existence, but I
it says that “ladies in any theater must
remove their hats.'’ and this is con
] st rued by the city authorities to apply
to the present playhouses. There has
been so much complaint against big
hats in the picture shows that the ordi
nance was dug up and will now be put
into effect.
NO BAD BOYS AND GIRLS IN
MACON. SAYS POSTMASTER
MACON. GA, Aug 14 Postmaster
Harry Stillwell Edwards declares that
there Is no need foi’ enforcing in Ma
con the recent postoffice order against
the abuse of the general delivery win
dow system.
There are no bad boys and girls tn
Macon, and few. if any. crooks in Ma
con who patronize the general deliv
ers," he says, "and thus th< order will
not result in any changes here "
PRESIDENT IS LOYAL TO
CONSERVATION POLICY,
SAYS CHAS, D. HILLES
By CHARLES D. HILLES.
Chairman of Republ’can National
Committee.
President Taft’s record as a conser
vationist must convince every unprej
udiced inouirer of Ills unswerving loy-
alty to that great
policy. He has
p 1 a c ed measures
above men, but
never in the
slightest degree
has he yielded one
iota from that pol
icy, and the fact
that millions of
acres of oil. gas.
phosphate and
mineral lands are
lying idle because
congress has not
seen tit thus far to
enact proper leas
ing laws consti
t u t e the most
striking testimo
nial to his un-
Jet J
w-
swerving loyalty to the policy.
There ate some conservationists who
would have the public believe that a
majority of the conservationists are op
posed to the president. This is not the
fact. A few conservationists who have
been able to make much clamor and to
deceive people Into believing that they
constituted a majority are opposed to
the president—not because he is not a
conservationist, but because he could
not and would not approve illegal meth
ods and because when they came to re
gard themselves as larger than the pol
icy Itself and even as above the law,
Mr Taft promptly dispensed with their
services. But if you will look into the
subject you will find that they consti
tute a very small minority.
Results Have Been Obtained.
The conservation movement is one of
the most important in this country, and
that policy has been one of the most
important and the most strictly adhered
to of this administration. A great part
of the conservation work of this gov
ernment has been done by tlie scientific
experts of the geological survey. Os
course, in the eyes of'certaln persons
who can see no good outside of the for
est service, that in itself is a crime.
But the great army of conservation
ists want results, concrete results, and
these they have obtained under the
Taft administration. For instance, the
survey's classification of coal lands has
nearly trebled the valuation of 15,000.-
000 acres of coal lands. These lands
have been segregated, and not an acre
is passing to private ownership. Pres
ident Taft has declared himself un
equivocally for the leasing of coal lands,
and sooner or later congress will enact
the necessary legislation. And until it
does, President Taft will protect these
lands, as he will all similar mineral
lands, from passing into the hands of
private individuals, to pass in turn, as
they surely would, into the hands of
monopolists.
How important is the president’s
stand in this regard may he judged
from the fact that the geological sur
vey has found 20.000.000 acres of ex
ceptionally rich llgnate lands In Mon
tana. of which oni- 40-acre tract con
tains more than 2.500,000 tons.
The withdrawals made by order of
President Taft include 68.215,489 acres
of.coal lands, 4,774,182 acres of oil
lands. 3.340.561 acres of phosphate lands.
1,813,753 acres of land available for
power sites. 97,228 acres set apart for
water reservoirs and mole than 300.000
acres set apart for public waterworks,
experimental station purposes, etc. ('an
you beat this?
Trbute For Potash.
Do you realize that this country pays
foreign producers of potash $10,000,000
a year and that this sum all comes
■ nit of the po( kets of the American
farmers.' President Taft has directed
that all tlie available scientific knowl
edge of the government be directed to
finding a method of producing this pot-
I “Were (ill medicines as meritorious
iis <'hamlx rlain's Colic, Cholera and
| Diarrhoea Remedy, the world would be
i much better off and the percentage of
' suffering greatly decreased,” writes
| Lindsay Scott, of Temple, Ind. For
1 -ale by all dealers. ’»•
[rwaOTwwMaHHHBWMnmmHaHMMMBH
How Will You Stand
The Summer?
P)R- KING'S Royal
Germeturr purges
the body of poisons se
creted by inactive or
over-worked organs.
It destroys disease
germs before they weak
en the vital parts. It
fortifies the whole sys
tem against sickness.
GERMETUER
Is recommended for
fevers, rheumatism, bowel
troubles, blood, skin and
nervous diseases, etc. Its
effect is lasting and beneficial.
Germetuer will help you.
SI.OO per bottle.
For sale by all drug
gists, or
Ellis-Lilly beck Drug Co.
MEMPHIS, TENN.
ash right here in the United States.
If we succeed, not only will $10,000,000
be kept here in our own market, in
stead of going to Germany, but an im
mense saving will be effected for the
benefit of the farmer. What better kind
of conservation is there than that?
Besides potash the farmer has io
buy phosphates. President Taft ha»
withdrawn from entry, as I have said,
more than 3,000,000 acres of phosphat*
lands in Wyoming. Idaho and Utah. As
soon as congress can be induced to en
act the proper legislation these lands
will be worked—not for the benefit of a
few monopolists, but under such re
strictions as will insure competition
and a fair price to the farmer for this,
one of the essential elements of plant
food.
Then look at the 4.700,000 acres of
oil lands which have, been withdrawn
from entry. Do you think the Stand
ard Oil trust would have been possible
had the government pursued the wise
policy of conservation when that insti
tution was In Its formative period? Os
course, the policy was not known then,
but it is now. and it has no more val
iant champion than President Taft.
Fear Democratic Rule.
I hate to think what would become
of these e valuable lands which have
been so carefully withdrawn from en
try were there to be a Democratic ad
ministration; but 1 know, and every
man who wants to exploit these lands
for his own pt ivate gain knows, that,
as long as William H. Taft is in the
white house the monopolists will get no
chance.
And while I am discussing the sub
ject of conservation, I want to point
out to you what economies have been
effected in the administration of the
general land office under President Taft
and through the agencies of Secretary
Fisher and Commissioner Dennett. I
will not bore you with more figures, but
take just one item. A saving of $194,-
000 a year in salaries alone has been
effected, and the land office is more ef
ficient today than it ever was in its
history.
I have frequently had put to me a
delicate question as to why. if Presi
dent Taft is a loyal conservationist, he
appointed R. A. Ballinger as secretary
of the interior President Taft ap
pointed Judge Ballinger secretary of
the interior because he had had useful
experience as commissioner of the
general land office, having been ap
pointed by President Roosevelt on the
recommendation of Secretary Garfield,
who had known him from their college
days at Williams. Garfield congratu
lated the country upon the accession to
public life of a man of Judge Ballin
ger's preparation, probity and patriot
ism.
Why Taft Backed Ballinger.
Certain enemies of Judge Ballinger,
notably the head of the forest service,
attacked Judge Ballinger— not on the
ground that he was not progressive or
a loyal conservationist, but with the
charge that he was dishonest. Presi
dent Taft was convinced that Mr. Bal
linger was an absolutely honest man
and he could not then have asked for
Judge Ballinger's resignation without
seeming to confirm the charge agafrst
his integrity, even if persuaded that he
was not heartily in sympathy with the
president's conservation program.
There are those who think ft would
have been good politics for President
Taft to have demanded Judge Ballin
ger's resignation at once, but Mr. Taft
is too manly and too just a man to cast
such a reflection on any man's reputa
tion without warrant. ,
But conclusive proof of Mr. Taft’s
loyalty to the conservation policy is
afforded by his selection of Walter L.
Fisher, a former president of the Na
tional Conservation association, as
Judge Ballinger’s successor. And. mark
you, when Secretary Fisher assumed
the office he found that not one back
ward step had been taken, not one acre
of land had been lost, not one power
site had passed into private ownership
since Secretary Garfield had retired
front the office.
Clogged-Up Liver
Causes Headache
It’s a foolish proceeding to suffer from con
stipation, sick headache, btltousaeaa, duzineu,
indigestion and kindred ail
meats when CARTER’S
LITTLE UVER T X
PILLS will end all
miter y in a few yypgrie
hours. Purely
vegetable. • ILVes
Act gently ■ IVER
on liver Iff PLLCS
•nd Wt
bowels. - -•■- i nnrt
Smfttl Pill. Small Do»«, Smail Price.
The GENUINE must bear signature
Diseases of Men
MY experience of 36 yearn has shown
me that more human wrecks am
caused by a chronic local disease than
Bby any other. No
disease needs more
careful or scien
tific attention to
effect a cure. I
also know there Is
no quick cure for
specific blood poi
son. Temporary
removal of symp
toms is not a cure.
Experience. care
ful attention to de
tails and a thor
ough knowledge of
how and when to
use the remedies
known to be bene
ficial in the treat
ment of this dis
ease. produce re-
I DR. WM. M. bairp suits. Honest bus
| grown• Randolph Bldq.| n oss methods and
Atlants. Qa. conscientious treat
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