Newspaper Page Text
2
VITAL BILLS LOST
AS LEGISLATORS
■ NOME
Lawmakers Adjourn Sine Die
at 1:13 A. M. - Getaway Ses- ,
sion Given Over to Play.
Continued From Page One.
snd Langsin bx G. R Glenn and Judge I
A. T. M ■on. Walt.r E Steed had been]
appointed in th. spring t'> till th. pl;p e t
made vacant bx the death of Judge 1
Lawson.
The senate grumbled over the Brown I
appointment- and became involved in a i
legal squabble arising over the fact |
that Smith’s appointments were mad. |
under a new a-t ■ creating the present'
board of rdu<aii<>n.
Governor Brown then withdrew his
nominations
It had happened that Governor i
Brown had fu; nished the senate with
the minutes of rite executive office of
September S. a fuel for the controversy.
Th. governor told the senate plainly
that the minutes were nt in merely as
information and the nanu s wire not to
be considered as nominations.
The senate thought otherwise. From
the minutes of the executive office it
was concluded that Hoke Smith must
have made t . ■ above appointmerits.
They were confirmed forthwith.
The action of the upper house means
a court tight. Goi.rnor Brown, it Is
understood, will hold that the senate
has confirmed no appointment and
name men of his own choosing. In this
event quo warranto proceedings from
one side or the other will result, giving
the supreme court a opport unity to
hand down a ruling as companion of
the IVest-Shackleford decision.
LONG. HARD BATTLE
FOR PURE MILK WON
BY CHICAGO CITIZENS
CHK’AGi*. Aug. 15 Having won a
fight for i pure milk ordinance, Chi
cago citizens today began preparations
for a fight to enforce it. The law was
passed at a meeting of the city council
last night after a fight of weeks in
which the citizens held a number of
mass meeting and a regularly organ
ized citizens committee led the crusade.
Now the citizens committee is to he
permanently organiz’d to see that the
provisions of the ordinance an* en
forced.
The ordinance establishes a new
standard fur purity of taw milk, and
piovide’* f<u the pasteurization of all
milk not up to this standard.
CLAIMS ROME PEOPLE GET
MEAT REFUSED BY ATLANTA
ROME, GA., Aug. 15. That the meat
markets of Rome are receiving ami
selling beef refused by Atlanta anil
Chattanooga is the charge of \V. H.
Coker, a well known Rome merchant,
who has reported his complaint to the
city council.
"Why, 1 bought a piece of meat a few
days ago," he says, "that was black and
slick It had evidently been in cold
storage for a year or more."
City council was lx stirred by Mr. Co
ker's protest to a -nolnt a sanitary in
spector to investigate.
GILLAM. ARTIST. AT 77
TO WED WIDOW OF 73
NEW YORK. Aug. 15. John C. Gil
lan. an artist, aged 77. told his friends
todax Uiat h< is soon to marry Mrs.
Rachel Kendall. four years his junior.
$1.25 FOR HAIRCUT AND
SHAVE TOO STEEP: SUES
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 15. F. B.
Forrest, of I.aiisiiown, has gone to law
because he was charged $1.25 in E. J.
Townsend - barber simp, the biggest in
Philadelphia. for a hair cut and shave,
without "trimmings."
DOGS TO BE MUZZLED.
THOMASVILLE. GA . Aug 15—The
city council lias decided tn repeal the
lav requiring dogs m be muzzled dur
ing dog day.- This laxx was passed
txxo y<a s ago. Lit summer Mayor
Drkle decid< : that It mus: be enforied.
Thnmasx i! ■ .logs .ltd iot take kindly I
to the muzzling, ami most of tin tn |
managed to slip • muzzles off their !
heads ,
BODY FOUND IN RIVER.
FORSYTH. GA. Aug. 15 With a
hole in his br< st. < a used bx a pistol or
rifle bullet, th" body of an unknown
negro was found lodg.-d on the mill
dam at Popes I'.rrx scxti >it trt.es east,
of Forsyth on Hie <• mulgw river.
ATLANTAN CONDUCTS REVIVAL.
FORSYTH. GA , \ '’.a looted
by Rev. C W I>. t■• ’. ; astor of the 1
First Baptist church of Atlanta, a re- i
vival service is in | ■••■ g ss ~t th" 1.. al
Baptist church . > • ibn ugh
two weeks. The tn- • : "g- being:
largely attended.
POLE SAVES TROLLEY CAR.
ROME. GA.. Aug. 15. j t. .rtli
bound street car jumped tl t ... k mar
Lytle Springs a serious a. ■ i • m was
averted by a pole. The ir plunged
against the pole on the veg, ~t an
embankment, which stopped r Six
pa e sengers were slightly injure
DOG BURIED LIKE HERO.
COLUMBUS. GA., Aug. 15. Tig- a
rat terrier that saved several livi s In ..
local hotel tire by giving the ab:m
with his barks, but who lost his ov.n
was buried with all tin honors of a
b' ro
PDPHAMS NOW IN
A ffIOERN EDEN
—■ -
Laureate of the Blue Grass
Tells The Georgian Some
thing of Bliss.
Continued From Page One.
I witli the brook and float with the tide;
land in the moonlight and starlight and
I summer afternoons our boat will rock
I us to slumber; and our dreams will be
l written in both story and rhyme; and
lour heart beats will be felt in the
i world s literature and our love will be
I th< fairy magic Inspiration of every
I poem and every dream.
Hear Things in the Gloaming.
i "At evening we will retire, shut in
I from tlie burdens and cares of tlte day;
lat morning, awaken to feel the power
lot life and love and the perfume of a
I kiss which only lovers are capable to
bestow. In this earthly paradise out
soul will revel In the sunshine of heav
en and in the gleam of stars. Many a
-went voice we hear in the gloaming,
which gives us new Inspiration to write
the messages of our heart We hear
the voices of th" night where we lie in
meditation the lawn for our beds and
the sky for our blankets.”
Transmagnification evidently Is a
very small trick for Rev. Popham. First
fish, then fowl, then woodland sprites,
he and his mate will change form f very
time the humor strikes them down in
this Floridian Eden.
"We like to tiavel as birds in the
air," he writes, “and as fishes under
the water, and arm in arm we are
climbing life's hill together."
It would hardly he supposed that
such a pair as this could think in mun
dane numbers, but he naively con
fesses that he actually ate with his
mouth in good old-fashion slxty
(hcws-to-the-mlnute style. And it was
candy, too.
What the Waves Are Saying.
“While writing this," he admits, “we
are sitting together by an open box of
candy, by the blue ocean, and while
kisses are sweeter and certainly mope
lasting thin candy, the latter is not
unweleonr Then, continuing lyrical
ly, pa reg J ideally, "In a poet’s Eden
we ramble, where every tree Is bloom
ing its flowers of love and even the
flowers bend to kiss in celebration of
our happiness and ,the waves roll over
each other in glee and frolic and seem
‘ glad because of out gladness. The sea
gulls, the emblems of peace and con
tentment, linger near upon the blue
bosom of the rocking wavs, and they'
seem to know that even they will be a
part of the love story which we are
writing by the sea."
If the original Eve had had the ad
vantage of Rev. Popham's advice the
human race today would probably be
rambling In wooded glades instead of
toiling in the money mill and grinding
on the grissly grill. He makes the fol
lowing caustic commentary of Adam's
methods of instructions:
"If Eve's appetite for apples had been
cultivated for kisses Eve would have
forgotten her desire for the apples at
the gentle pressure of man's lips and
today we would be rambling in the
original courts of Eden."
In conclusion. Rev. Popham breaks—
nay, crashes into verse. In this metri
cal conclusion he pays respects to the
police who arrested him. to the re
porters who brought to light the fact
of his marriage and to such Other per
sons and institutions as are necessary
to complete the rhyme.
Here it goes:
"The hot retreats from Atlanta's streets
Hold no charm for me.
Nor is there peace with the police
For lovers such as we.
From city walls and reporters' calls
And the eager carneta’s gleams
The waves seclude in solitude
The safety of our dream.
True romance will find some folks un
kind,
Tho' the world doth love a lover,
But what care we by the rolling sea,
Where In the dunes we hover?
Away from hotels In Nature's dells
Lovers find their heaven,
Fo- in the tent of sweet content
We retire at six or eleven."
EX BLIND TIGER KING
OF MACON TO STAND
TRIAL IN OLD CASES
MACON, GA,, Aug. 15 I'lmuncey
| Groves, the former "blind tiger" king of
Macon, who is now a prosperous busi
ness man of Miami, Fla., and whose
pardon by Governor Brown last year
stirred up so much feeling here, must
j.-tand trial on two charges at the ap
’ prouching term of the city court.
Groves came here this week and. to
gether with bls bondsman. Nick Block,
made an urgent appeal to Solicitor
G'tteral Matthews to recommend the
iistnls-il f the Indictments against
him The solicitor general refused to
; ■ till-, and Groves must be tried. He
is charged with violating the prohibi
tion law and also with pointing a pistol
’ at another
Groves pleaded his residence in an
other state and the fact that he has sold
til of his Macon property and retired
ft- tn busin. ss here as reasons why he
•hould not be prosecuted.
525 PER SUFFICIENT TO
KEEP FAMILY OF THREE
WASHINGTON, Aug. 15 Secretary
< < , omnun'' and Labor Nagel ha« ren
<l’l cd an official opinion that $25 a week
is t nough tv support a family of three.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. AUGUST 15. 1912.
EVERYBODY’S DOING IT -
fTtrfc -
lit l •
- ' fe 1 r
'‘Eg/-- wL-
Vi 9 I i
i ,f '\§) II ■' SI
? I ' jf 2-S '
WOULD GIVE UP
sum eyes
Clay's Attorney for Aiding the
Blind Newsman. But Thiniks
He Will Save Murderer.
The eyes of Robert 1,. Clay, th,* wife
slayer, sought by John <'ashin. the
blind paper seller, thnt he may see
again, will bo given in case the sen
tence of the court ts executed, if the
family of Clay affrees with W. M.
Smith, the attorney, who has conduct
ed the defense of the slayer.
The lawyer believes that the eyes
never will be available. He believes
that the appeal in Clay's behalf now
pending in the supreme court will save
his life.
Rut should the sentence of death be
executed the lawyer believes that the
eyes would be freely offered in the hope
that they restore the sight of a fellow
man.
“Clay's eyes would, of course, be of
no use to him, should he hang. 1 dor. t
think he will ever hang, but certainly if
the sentence is i xecuted 1 would advise
that if Cashin believes that his sight
can be restored by their use, that the.
eyes be given for that purpose. I can
imagine nothing that a man would
rather do before leaving the world
than bestow his power of sight on some
fellow being deprived of vision." said
tlie lawyer.
if it is decided by the specialists, who
have the operation under consideration,
that the optic nerves are serviceable
enough to permit of possible success in
the operation, the eyes of Clay will be
asked for. Under Georgia custom the
body of a man who meets death on the
gallows is turned over to his relatives.
They finally will decide whether or not
the eyes be given Cashin.
Mr. Smith says he knows of no ob
jection that would lie raised by Clay's
kin. He did not speak for the family,
however.
MISS ROSA COOPER TO BE
BURIED AT CARTERSVILLE
Miss Rosa <'coper, who was kin to
many prominent Georgia families, died
in Atlanta late yesterday. She will be
burled in Cartersville, Ga.. Friday
morning. Miss Cooper, who was 68
years old. had been 111 for several
weeks.
She was a daughter of the late Mark
A. Cooper, congressman and pioneer in
dustrial worker, and a sister of Mrs.
William A. Pope, of Was! ngton, Ga.
Waltei G. Cooper, s< retar; of the At
lanta Chamber of Commerce, was a
nephew, as was Thomas 1.. Cooper, also
of this city. Other relatives are Pem
broke Pope, of Washington. Ga . .1 I’
Cooper, Rome. Mis. Minter Wimberly.
Macon, ami Mrs. John Hill, of Wash
ington. Ga.
FUNERALS BY TROLLEY
NOW VOGUE IN PHILLY
PHII.ADKI PHIA Aug. 15.- Theßap
id Transit Company has installed a
"funeral trolle; ear" on its lines. Funer
als by trolley are coming into style
here.
COOPER CLOSES AT MACON.
MAi '< >X. GA., Aug 15 Joh n R
Cooper is going to close the campaign
for congress in the Sixth district Fri
day night with a political address in
the eit; auditorium. He has announced
that in this speech he is going to "at
tack and expose th, Bibb count; T ng'
the first time this will hate ever
been done in Macon.'
JACK' ROSE TELLS HOW
PURPOSE TO KEEP OUT
OF GAMBLING FAILED
By JACK ROSE.
(Copyright, 1912, by Star Company.
All rights reserved. Any infringement
will be vigorously prosecuted.)
NEW YORK, Aug. 15. —The Chicago
man to whom Lee owed the $3,000 was
a loan shark. Lee always went, to such
men when fie wanted money.
Payment was made direct to the loan
shark by the theaters at which Lee ap
peared.
I gave Lee all the money I had—
about $2,000 —and told him I would get
the balance. 1 went to some friends
and borrowed $2,000 more.
We started for Chicago. Before I
was there one week I found I needed
more money, as Lee had no concep
tion of figures.
I eame to New York and borrowed
another $2,000, returned to Chicago and
gave it to Lee.
The show was launched in Chicago
at the Colonial theater shortly after
that, it proved all that Lee claimed
for it. During ail this time I didn't
touch a card or do any gambling. I
was absorbed in my new venture.
Lee, who was treasurer of the firm,
had all the time to himself. Soon I be
gan to get suspicious that Lee was
• gambling. I asked him about it, and lie
assured me that he was through for
ever. \\ e then made all arrangements
to play a week's engagement at Massey
hall, in Toronto, Canada, during the ex
position, hut the engagement was still
about a month off. and the plant need
ed some' overhauling.
Borrowed to Limit.
I left Loe in Chicago* and came to
New York to arrange for further book
ings. \\ hile here I received word from
Lee that he had let his foot slip, and
that he had obligated himself to the
extent of $2,0111) gambling. He had given
our plant as security. He attributed
this misfortune to the absence of my
restraining influence.
1 was in despair. I had borrowed
e\er; w here 1 could and didn't know’ an
other soul to go to for assistance. 1
wired Lee to come to New York, and
he did. 1 explained my awful position.
He was very penitent, and told me that,
after all. it meant only a couple of
weeks longer, when our Canadian tour
would straighten everything out.
1 secured a new loan of SSOO from a
prominent play author and another of
SI,OOO from a friend of the family ami
turned it over to Lee.
He went buck to Chicago and 1 re
ceived another message that more mon
<A "as needed to make the journey to
Canada. 1 raised another SI,OOO and
started for Chicago. By this time 1 was
involved for about SII,OOO.
When it came time to move to To
ronto I learned that Lee had never
paid the man who held the lien on the
plant, and he refused to allow the pro
duction t i move. Lee had lost all the
money gambling
I had a ti lend in < hicago who made
an arrangement to allow the produc
tion to move. Before the first perform
ance was over in Toronto Lee collapsed,
was put to bed and we despaired of
his recovery.
I borrowed enough money to bring
Lee and the rest of .the company home
'to New A wk. He recovered, went to
I Chicago shortly after, and .died sud-|
deni;. 1 went back to gambling again,
more involved than ever and with an
other sermon in the life of Henry Lee
lon the curse of gambling
Harassed by Creditors.
, I was constantly being harassed by
, eieditors. Suits were instituted against
me. To none could I make answer
< ther than that 1 hadn't the money to
pay.
Judgments were secured against me,
and they still are unsatisfied.
My creditors at times dragged me
into supplementary proceedings to as
certain if possible how I managed to
live and provide for my family.
That is one of the Unexplainable
things in a gambler’s life. Somehow or
other they do it. They don’t really
know how themselves.
I would go along for weeks at a time
unable to meet small household bills,
the rent in arrears, etc.
Then some day I would make a good
winning, pay al! the bills and again
feel easy for a time.
I was one of the large army of ap
parently prosperous men about town
Every once in a while I would secure
an interest in some gambling house and
while we were let alone make some
money.
Then would come a raid, the closing
of the place and further distress. Just
living from one day to another, hoping
against hope that some millionaire
would drop in to some place I was
interested in and lose one of his many
millions.
Then I could pay everybody, retire
from the business, take my family
away somewhere and start all over
again.
I hat Is about the dream of the aver
age small gambling house keeper.
The small gambling houses of down
town. the kind I was associated In. are
usually composed of from four to six
partners. It is usually started by each
man putting up about SI,OOO.
I he partners work in the place and
draw an average of $lO a day wages.
Profits Usually Small.
The profits, if there is any, are usu
ally divided on the first of each month.
In most of the gambling houses on
the East Side about all that Is left at
the end of the month Is the salary that
each partner has been drawing.
I have often thought that one-quar
ter the energy devoted in any other
direction that is used by the average
small gambling house owner to keep
alloat would make him successful In
any other business.
There ard no fixed hours of work.
Sometimes we put in twelve hours and
sometimes it is twenty-four hours.
In my last venture, which was the
house conducted by Herman Rosen
thal, of which 1 was a partner, we
started in one Monday night and Wed
nesday night found us all still at work,
with the exception of short intervals of
relief for a bite to eat and a few hours
sleep in a chair propped against the
wall.
Ihat particular play paid us, when
the game quit, almost SIO,OOO to the
good. But we have had other long ses
sions and the end found us not only
having lost sleep, but with it our "bank
roll.’’
And often "frenzied finance" methods
had to be brought into play to prevent
it getting out that our "bank roll" had
been won out.
Replenishing Bank Roll.
For instance, on several occasions
our "bank roll" was getting thin. The
game would start. Soon the players
were all winners. It was my duty to
make a quick mental calculation of
about the amount of cheeks out that we
I would have to redeem with money.
On comparing the amount of cheeks
and the amount of the cash on hand, if
1 found we were getting near the dan
ger point of a showdown, or of not be
ing able to meet our obligations, it was
then up to me to call another member
of the firm and give him about six
blank chocks to fill in. He would start
out to visit other gambling houses, or
obliging friends would cash these
cheeks.
Os course, none of the others' sus
pected the game had suffered an un-
GIRI. BUTTLES TO
SME BOTIN SEA
Miss Fincher Refuses to Leave
Hawes Despite Danger. But
Efforts Are Vain.
Miss Emma Adele Fincher, of 386
Spring street, who, despite the danger
to herself, refused to leave Walter E.
Hawes when they were both being
swept to sea by the undertow yester
i day morning at St. Simons island,
reached her home this morning in a
state bordering on collapse. She re
fused to talk of the tragedy.
. Assistance from the shore eame in
i time to save Miss Fincher from a wa
. tery death, but too late for Hawes. The
sweeping current had already torn him
. from Miss Fincher’s grasp. His body
was found on the bar several hours
. later, where the tide had rolled him in.
Mi. Hawes and Miss Fincher met on
. a boat going to Fernandina. The next
. day he went to Old St. Simons from his
hotel on New St. Simons, and the two
, together with a party went for a dip
in the surf. Miss Fincher and the
, young mang radually drifted apart
from the rest. Neither of them could
swim.
Girl Tries To Aid Him.
Colonel A. Yorkshire, out by himself,
■ saw the two young folks, and he no
ticed that they were gradually going
outward. He swam toward them and,
calling to Hawes, asked if he needed
help.
The young man turned his face. It
was drawn, and his eyes were starting.
The girl was laughing with slight hys
teria. but was clinging tenaciously to
the bathing suit of Hawes, whose phys
ical strength was all gone.
Colonel Yorkshire made an attempt to
leach them, but, not being an expe
rienced swimmer, he couldn't make it.
Seeing this, he rushed back to land and
sounded the alarm.
I-ee Arnold, of the Arnold house
plunged into the surf, clothes and all’
and reached Miss Fincher in time to
save her. Hawes had disappeared.
Hawes was nineteen years old and
lived with his mother and stepfather
Mr. and Mrs. J. S, Rose , at 15 -
ley street, Atlanta. He worked in the
offices of the T. S. Lewis Company and
was wgll known in church circles.
mother and two small
SONS SMOKE IN PUBLIC
BOSTON, Aug. 15.—The Cunard liner
Laconia arrived here, its passengers in
a high state of excitement over the ac
tions of a woman passenger listed as
Mrs. F. H. Robins, of New York, who
spent all her time on the voyage in tht
smoking room smoking cigarettes with
- her tw o young sons.
WOMAN WAS SUBJECT OF
SIX ENGLISH MONARCHS
EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND. Aug. 15.
Mrs. Mary Drew , aged 101, has just died
.it Helensburg after living in the reigns
of six English monarchs.
I
usually hard drubbing at the hands of
the players, and our -egular "bank roll"
had been distressed, and being night
time, we couldn't get to the bank for
fresh funds
The man running a game w hen these
emergencies come up will resort to
any kind of a chance to get money,
knowing, as he does, that while at
times the players get runs of luck, all
that is necessary is to keep them play
ing, and in the end the house must get
the money back. JACK ROSE.
HOOSE YIELDS TO
BATTLESHIP PLAN
Majority, in Caucus, Agrees to
Compromise on One New
Dreadnought.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 15.—House
Democrats late yesterday agreed in
caucus to recede from their "no bat
tleship program” In this session and to
permit the battleship champions to vote
for one such vessel. The decision came
after a long tight in the house for no
battleships. Unlike the four preceding
caucuses, there was an absence of bit
terness and by a rising vote of 95 to
11 the resolution of recession was put
through.
It is expected the senate will agree
to the one-battleship plan, ending the
deadlock over the naval, bill. While
the solid support of the majority will
not be given to the battleship program,
leaders are confident they will have far
more than the necessary strength when
aligned with the Republican, "friends
of the navy.”
The resolution embodying the reces
sion states that no member is bound to
vote for one battleship should he not
desire to do so.
An effort will be made to have the
warship to be authorized thj largest
and most formidable fighting craft ever
laid down. The vessel, if its sponsors ‘
win their fight, would be equal in fight
ing ability to any two battleships below
the dreadnought size and far superior
to any of the latter class now afloat.
A sharp fight is expected on this pro
gram, however.
To Drive Out Malaria
and Build up the System
Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTE
LESS CHILL TONIC. You know what
you are taking. The formula is plainly
printed on every bottle, showing it is
simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless
form, and the most effectual form. For
grown people and children. 50c.
Flying Men Fall
victims to stomach, liver and kidney
troubles just like other people, with
like results in loss of appetite, back
ache, nervousness, headache, and tired
listless, run down feeling. But there’s
no need to feel like that, as T. D. Pee
bles, Henry, Tenn., proved. "Six bot
tles of Electric Bitters," he writes, “did
more to give me new strength and gooc
appetite than all other stomach reme
dies I used." So they help everybody
It’s folly to suffer when this great
remedy will help you from the first
dose. Try it. Only 50 cents at al'
druggists. •*’
IS YOUR COMPLEXION
CLEAR?
A clear complexion and
a torpid liver cannot go
hand in hand. Clear
the bile ducts gently,
but firmly, with
Tutt’s Pills
At your druggist
sugar coated or plain..
ERUPTION ITCHED
JNDJURNED
Scaly First, Then Blisters or Watery
Pimples. Sores With Scabs.
Scratched and Made Them Bleed.
CuticuraSoap and Ointment Cured.
Long Island, * T . C.—“ When my baby
was about one week old his face broke out
scaly first and then in lit tle blisters or watery
pimples irhich ran matter and then went
into sores with scabs over them. The sores
would run yellowish water. They itched
and burned and he would scratch them and
make them bleed. He could not sleep good
and wanted to scratch his face all the time.
"We had him treated and used several
kinds of salves and they failed. Then we
got one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box
of Cuticura Ointment and they took the
desired effect. A little later we got one more
box of Cuticura Ointment. He could sleep
all right after we commenced using Cuticura
Soap and Ointment, and ho was entirely
cured in six months." (Signed) Mrs. Tina
Byers, March 8, 1912.
FOR PIMPLESAND BLACKHEADS
The following is a most effective and eco
nomical treatment: Gently smear the affected
parts with Cuticura Ointment, on tho end of
tlic finger, but do not rub. Wash off tho
Cuticura Ointment in five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and hot water and continue
bathing for some minutes. This treatment
is best on rising and retiring. A t other times
use Cuticura Soap freely for the toilet and
bath, to assist in preventing inflammation,
irritation and clogging of the pores. Sold
throughout the world. Liberal sample of
each free, with 32-p. Skin Rook. Address
post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T. Boston."
flu Tender-faced men should use Cuticura
Soap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free.
TELLS THE CAUSE
OF APPENDICITIS
The Jacobs' Pharmacy Company
states that much appendicitis in Atlan
ta is caused by constipation, gas on the
stomach or sour stomach. These trou
bles are almost INSTANTLY relieved
and appendicitis guarded against by
taking a SINGLE DOSE of simple
buckthorn bark; glycerine, etc., as com
pounded in Adler-l-ka, the new German
' appendicitis remedy.