Newspaper Page Text
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TAFT FOR TEST
DF CANAL SILL
Confers With Cabinet Over Free
Tolls—May Send It to the
Supreme Court.
WASHINGTON. Aug !'• l’i<sident I
Taft and his x abinet xr.-t< iday discuss- I
cd the Panama canal bill, and the;
question of a possible presidential v> to
of the measure Ever) membet of Mr
Taft’s official family who vs a- in town
was present, and the discussion lasted
for an hour after luncheon time, but
no decision was reached The presi
dent's inclination, it was said today, i
to approve the bill, hut he is anxious
to have provisions made for a legal
test of the matter of free tolls for
American ships The cabinet was un
derstood to agree with him that there |
Is basis for believing that the bill with
the free tolls clause in it. is not in I
conformity with the Hat - I’Huncefote ;
treaty
When the conference was over tin
president was still of the opinion that
the best wav to test the bills agree
ment with the treaty was to have the
United Stales supreme court pass upon
ft. He will confer with senate and
house leaders in the next few days, and
will devote most of his own time to
pondering over this one bill. Most of
the Republican leaders in both houses,
and probably some of the leading Dem
ocrats will be called into consultation,
and the bill will he gone over with care
The president was told that it is
probably too late now to amend the
hill, and that any action he may take
must be in the form of a veto, unless
lie van get Republican and Democratic
leaders to agree on a joint resolution
to be passed later that would show
that the United States had no Intention
in passing tins measure of abrogating
the existing treaty with Great Britain
Such a resolution would permit foreign
steamship companies to test the act's
validity iint.h i the Hay-Pauneefote
treaty in the United States courts.
ALLEN. OF UPSON. STUMPS
SIXTH DISTRICT FOR WISE
TMOMASTiiN. GA.. Aug 19. Inter- j
est in the congressional race for the
Sixth district has taken on new life
with the active fight being waged for
Solicitor General Wise s candidacy b.v
Representative W Y Allen, of Thom
aston. Mr Allen addressed an audi
ence of 200 voters at Yatesville Satur
day afternoon when lie made a strong
speech In Wise's interest. Mr Allen i
addressed the vot'rs of <'raw ford conn- I
ty this afternoon at Roberta and
speaks tonight at Knoxville. Tomor
row night he will speak at Atwater.
Upson county.
OLD PLOWSHARE FOUND
IN THE HEART OF A TREE
COLLINGDALE. PA . Aug 19—With
the tree grown around and entirely
covering it. perhaps many years ago. a
steel plowshale nearly twenty inches
long was found imbedded In the heart
of an old tree which William Brunnl I
and Daniel Scanni were cutting down |
in fiont of theii home, no Jackson I
avenue. Collingdab
The tree, mote than nine feet in cir- ;
cumference. had outgrown its useful-,
ness and Seannl and Brunnl stalled to I
cut it down, hut after getting about |
half through their axes struck metal.
The plowshare was upright and prob
ably had been laid in a crotch of the
t ee mane years ago and forgotten
The tree Is probably 100 years old,
WAYCROSS FOLK GOING TO
JOY-RIDE IN STREET CARS
WAYCROSS, GA Aug 19. Unless
there are unforeseen delays, Waycross
people can go joy riding in street cars
the first week in September. The de
layed contracts for crossings of vari
ous tracks of the Xilantle Coast Line
ami arrangements for electric power
are settled propositions now and noth.
Ing hut construction hinders the opera
tion of ears This is neing rushed, and
with good weather will be completed by '
September 1.
WITHDRAWS FROM SECOND
WILCOX COUNTY CONTEST
ABBEVILLE. GA.. Aug 19. In a
card made public through a local pa
per, Sheriff 1. IL Glenn announces that
he is not In the race for repr< sentative
for Wilcox county He had paid the
assessment and was considered a can
didate until this announcement was
made public. Thi - lea ves Dr * ’ D. I
Mcßae, of Rpchel'e with nr opposi
tion.
Mr. Glenn was 1 :.u-w 's. i amlidate
in the county primary spring for
re-election to the office of s.ieriff, but
withdrew before tile , riu i x came off
FIRST SEA ISLAND BALE SOLD
SAVANNAH. GA Ai, • Th. fits,
bale of Georgia sea island . ..tt<m fol
the season of 1912-12 lia« b. . n receive...
and sold before the ml ta n • ■ of tlu ,
tun Ex. hang. The offering brought :; ,
cents a pound
HARDWICK AT CRAWFORDVILLE
CRAWFORDVILLE. GA Aug 19 |
T. W. Hardwick, candidate fm ..an: . s
to succeed himself from the T>nt o '
triet. spoke to a good size auui.ni- It j
the > ourt house Saturday aft. muon.
I The Atlanta Georgian—Premium Coupon
This coupon Will be accepted at our Premium Paior 20 East A'abama at.,
as partial pa/ment for any of the beautiful premium goods displayed there.
See Premilin Parlor Announcement on Another Page
MUZZLE YOUR WIFE!
Gopyrigbi. 1912, International News Service.
( few AS I WAS V J ( IT SA'YS HERE TBAT < is '
ABOUT To REMARK ' ihameO/ /AH WIVES Should
IT TAKESVou A LONG . —" ;BE MU 12-LED: J
\ TIME To QE.T FRESXoEt) J / V
U H w Er
s. i) on
' Tbußt SiTTiHq ON MIJ) sis That OH! /AY NEW
W HAT J I HAVj J - HAT! You-'
(^> ——
rl X ,
'\\ \ V
~rWHY‘ F/OW DAPE YOU 1 SHE CAN BARK BUT '
' SiT ON /AY NEW HAT/ ) SHE CANT BITE
y
r r?l M
: X \ nm \ j
.j W .
t A Mb-
(A judge says some wives should be muzzled. —News Item.)
"BE SURE OF YOUR MAN IN PICKING
PRESIDENT,” SAYS ALFRED H. LEW IS
By ALFRED HENRY LEWIS.
NE\\ Y(*RK, Aug. ll*. -There is work
on hand. The i ountry s president pick
ing this year is to be no child's play—
no trivial matter. Comiitions are what
writers on so,rial order and economics
•a I acute The next president can do
much toward ameliorating them or
much toward making them worse.
Ihe vulgar arrogance of money is
one of the great causes of commercial
and political disturbance as often as
otherwise. 1 nhappiness is commonly
the bitter fruit of comparisons; and
discontent comes as the result of look
ing at the other fellow from the window
and then taking a survey of one's self
in the glass.
Some notion of what I'm driving at
can be gathered from any morning’s
perusal of the daily papers. The other
day it was published that Mr Rocke
feller's income is J 52.000.000 a year.
This is more than the aggregate Income
of all the sovereigns of Europe, includ
ing King George These Rockefeller
riches grew out of an investment of
nothing in 45 years. How Rebate—
proteetion." Mr. Rockefeller began as
a rehater, to become later an Infant In
dustry Also, as an infant Industry,
be was careful not to grow up.
Do you realize what J52.000.00n
means? Were it all in gold It would,
upon the principle of a ton to a team,
all for 104 spans of horses to take Mr
Rocket'er. r bls x early Income, and
make a close- 'eked procession nearly
a mile long. The average oil wage to
(lie laborei is under an annual SSOO
No Reason For Inequality.
There s no reason, moral, physical,
-ocia . poliii, al. commercial, why this
x a aning itiequality should exist. It's
Un the fa., of natural law. and. there
■ t..r. . in the face of justice. The oil
.xork.n with his ess than 1500 a year.
,>ii'..xs tiu-e things, feels these things
Uhl they help him to a hatred of our
rsi r aliens, utge hail into Soxlaltsm.
Wes. I business manager of the na
tion 1 would issue a bulletin to voters
; giving the follow ing directions Don’t
ook at tag inform, look at tin MAN.
j l'i.r. after all. in politics the MAN is
big ISSU.-
ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, AUGTST 19. 1912.
How often must you be reminded
that in 1892 you elected a president on
a tariff platform who called an extra
session on finance': how often that tn
1896 you elected a president on a
finance platform who called an extra
session on tariff? So much for the
platform; so much for the overshad
owing importance of the MAN. Stick
to the MAN. Look him over with care.
There are men whom power spoils
and who can not be made great with
out being made dangerous. Mr. Taft,
of the latter, is an eminent example.
Would Mr. Wilson turn out to be an
other? Mr. Roosevelt's seven White
House years pointed convincing!!y to
him as one whom power doesn’t de
generate.
Fully to fit a White House one should
have not alone the strength to main
tain a war, but the wisdom to con
clude a peace The more w hen you re
member that the too-frequept mark of
the philosopher is that in trying to
light a candle he puts out a lamp. Also
books, alcoves, education, erudition and
the right to affix A M or LL.D, or Ph.D.
or all three to ones name promise
nothing of importance on the firing
line of affairs He who has them will
be lucky if they don't get in his way.
Another Sort to Avoid.
There is another sort to avoid, the
sort that although they speak loud,
think low and hardly act at all. These
you may easily know. They talk dn
primer, think in nonpareil, act in agate
Such folk suffer not only soul weak
ness, but a shortness of political sight
They are the shrinkers, trimmers, haul
ers of horns In this, too, they play
the fool
Men should remember that these
declarations of principles which
brought them the election ate in all
chance the most likely If concreted into
action to bling them immortality. Not
to know this as a matter of instinct
argues some meagerness of virile fibei
The natural fighter the born victory
winner, in short, the Roosevelt carries
the knowledge of It from birth in the
brain that Iles back of his ears.
<if no strong hates no strong loves,
and above and bey ond all else no strong
gratitudes, vou would imperil your own
■ safety should you think of <>nr of them
, for your White House Neither does
' it follow that because a men is no
[ Damocles tn betray he « a Damon to be
[ ttue Indeed the common run of souls
'' <r>- neither false nor faithful.
The master-thicat of the hunt is the
1 gnoram.t of the rich uui next pres-
— i
ident must be strong enough to check
if he doesn't illuminate it. Who will
best serve—Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Taft or
Mr. Wilson? In answering the ques
tion. past performances should count.
Nn American like's to take a chance
when it comes to his White House. As
to Mr. Taft and Mr. Roosevelt, all is
plain sailing—the wind Is aft. the open i
ocean dead ahead. His seven presi
dential years proved the courageous
While House worth of Mr. Roosevelt.
Mr. Taft. In his presidential three
years plus has shown conclusively his
timid. White House worthlessness.
Mr. Wilson? He is wholly without al
White House past, which mikes his
case more difficult. Presidentially con
sidered. he's a pig in a poke.
88 COURSES IN DINNER:
TONG MEN CELEBRATE
, .NEW YORK. Aug. 19.—Three hun
, died members of the Ong Leon Tong
society from all parts of the United
States met at their headquarters in
Mott street to celebrate at a dineni
the five thousandth birthday of their
god, Kon Quon. The dinner was in two
sections, consisting of 88 courses.
A few days aso an attempt was made
to blow up the god with dynamite, but
the idol was not damaged, although
’ ihe building was. A reward of $1,500
has been offered for information as to
the perpetrator of the deed.
THEATERS CUT OUT MUSIC:
FOUR CHICAGO HOUSES ACT
I'Hli'AGil. Aug. 10 Four downtown
theaters have decided to do away with
i orchestras. Under the rules of the
I Chicago Federation of Musicians, the
, | four houses, being in the first class.
I must employ a minimum of eleven mu
sicians in their orchestras ot none. Tin
theaters chose the latter alternative.
The musicians say they intend to en
, list the support of the other trade- con
. nected with the recently organized
amusement trades council, including
the billpostirs. stage employees and
scenic painters.
.... - —•
Are Ever At War.
There are two things everlastingly at
war. joy and piles Rut Bucklen's Ar
' mica Salve will banish piles tn any form, j
■ J it soon subdues the itching, irritation. ;
inflammation or "wr'ang It gives com. ,
Ifort, invites joy. Greatest healer of
. burns, bolls ulcers cuts bruises, ecze- i
ma. si aids, pimples skin eruptions.
jUlily 25 cis at all druggists. ••• I
LIGHTNING KILLS
TWO ST MON
MACON. GA.. Aug. 19. —A bolt of
lightning from a blue sky yesterday
Killed two persons, seriously injured
two and caused another to suffer from
hysteria for some time afterward.
The tragedy occurred as Mr. and
Mrs, N A. Cranford, of Cordele, were
crossing Tindall's field near Mercer
university, with two grandchildren,
Flora and Virginia Sullivan. Mrs.
Cranford and little five-yeai -old Flora
were instantly killed, though not a
bruise was afterward apparent on their
bodies. Mr. Crantoid and Virginia Sul
livan were shocked and bruised. They
i e now at a hospital in a critical con
dition.
Mrs. E. B. Campbell witnessed th“
occurrence while standing in the door
way of her home about 50 yards dis
tant and the spectacle threw her into
The homes of Arthur Codington, L.
E. G.eisling and C. W. Jones, in differ
ent parts of the city, were also struck
by lightning during the electric storm
which had Macon in its grip for two
hours.
Flora and Virginia Sullivan, both
orphan children, have lived with their
giandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Cranford,
in Cordele, and came with them last
Friday to visit in Macon.
Mrs. Cranford is survived by her
husband, four sons, four daughters and
one sister. Her sons are L. F. Cran
ford and W. G. Cianford, of Macon; S.
L. <Tanford, of Cordele, and Henry
t'ranfoid, of Dexter. Laurens county.
Her daughters are Mrs. Fannie Sim
mons, of Macon; Mrs. Jennie Bustin,
Mrs. W. S. Jones and Mrs. Beadie Cro
zier, of Cordele.
Policeman John Green, of Macon, is
a nephew of Mrs. Cranford and Mrs.
Mary Green, of Fort Valley, is her only
sister.
Official Ballot
WHITE DEMOCRATIC STATE PRI
MARY. AUGUST 21, 1912.
(Erase, names of all candidates for
whom you do not desire to vote.)
For Governor.
( Vote for one.)
HOOPER ALEXANDER.
JOSEPH H. HALL.
,l< >HN M. SLATON.
For United States Senator.
(Vote for one.)
AI'GVSTUS O. BACON,
H. H. PERRY.
For Secretary of State.
PHILIP COOK.
For Comptroller General.
WILLIAM A. WRIGHT.
For Attorney General.
(Vote for one.)
THOMAS S. FELDER.
W. R. JONES.
For State Treasurer.
W. J. SPEER.
For State School Superintendent.
(Vote for one.)
E. H BECK.
M. L. BRITTAIN.
For Pension Commissioner.
( Vote for one.,
W. H LANIER.
JOHN W. LINDSEY.
For Prison Commissioner.
( Vote for one.)
A. N. GROVENSTEIN.
S. W JOHNSON
T. E. PATTERSON.
F°r Commissioner of Agriculture.
(Vote for one.)
A. O. BLALOCK.
J. J. BROWN.
J. D. PRICE.
For Commissioner of Commerce and
Labor,
H. M. STANLEY.
For Associate Justice of Supreme Court
for Full Terms. Beginning Jan. 1, 1913.
(Vote for two.)
SAMI'EL C. ATKINSON.
JOSEPH HENRY LI'MPKIN.
For Associate Justice of Supreme Court
for Unexpired Term of Justice Hor
ace M. Holden. Ending Jan.
1. 1915.
HIRAM WARNER HILL.
For Judge Court of Appeals. Full Term.
I'IIN.IAMIN H. HILL-
For Judge Court of Appeals. Unexpired
Term of Judge Arthur PowelL
(Vote for one,.)
NASH R. BROYLES.
J. R. POTTLE.
For Railroad Commissioner.
(For the office now held b.v Joseph F.
Gray.)
(Vote for one.)
JOSEPH F. GRAY.
JOHN H. JAMES
JOHN H. M'GEHF.E
CHARLES J. SHIPP.
For Railroad Commissioner.
( For "fti e now held by George Hillyer.)
(Vote for one.)
W TROX BANKSTON.
GEORGE HILLYER.
S G. M'LENDON.
For Railroad Commissioner.
(I’ntxpired term of H. W Hill, now
held by Paul B. Trammell.)
(Vote fol- one.)
.1. .1 FLYNT.
PAI’L B. TRAMMELL.
For Representative in the 63d Congress
from the Fifth District of Georgia.
WILLIAM SCHLEY HOWARD
For Judge of the Superior Court of the
Atlanta Circuit.
(Vote for one.)
JOHN T PENDLETON.
ALEX \\ STEPHENS.
For Solicitor General Atlanta Circuit.
(Vote for one.)
MADISON BELL.
HIGH M DORSEY
(In counties where two or more rep
resentative- in the Legislature ar< to
he nominated, the voter must vote for
the full number to which such county
i.,- entitled.)
For Representatives.
(Vote forth ee.>
ROBERT P RLAi'KBI’RN
RALPH " COCHRAN
WALTER M EI.RF.ATH
.!■ -HN V. SMITH
I M ILLIAM M SMITH.
iSEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
One of the shrewdest political ob
servers in northwest Georgia, a man
who has served several terms as a rep
resentative of one of the larger counties
of that section, but who. because he is
personally for Wilson and does not
wish to be misunderstood, refuses to
permit his name used, gave it as his
opi Mon today that Theodore Roosevelt
surely wih carry the Seventh congres
sional district over both Taft and Wil
son in the November presidential elec
tion.
Discussing the matter today, he said;
"I have recently had occasion to
travel over a large part of. the Sev
enth district, considerably more than
half of it. and I was astonished to find
the sentiment running so powerfully in
the direction<>f the former president.
Farmer after farmer, in reply to di
rect inquiry, stated that he expected to
vote for Colonel Roosevelt. Numbers
of them said they would vote for Wil
son. Very few expressed an intention
to vote for Taft.
"Attention constantly is called to the
fact in the Seventh district that it
went for Taft as against Bryan in the
last election, but the votes that went
for Taft then went for him entirely on
Roosevelt's account.
"Mr. Roosevelt’s mother lived in the
Seventh district when she was a young
woman and was married there. That,
while pleasantly recaVed in some in
stances, is not, I think, the real rtason
why the Seventh district seemingly' In
clines to the former president now. The
people of that vicinity seem impressed
with the idea that of nil 'the candidates
Roosevelt is the most human and
stands most aggressively' for human
rights. Neither Wilson nor Taft ap
pears to have the ‘punch’ with the peo
ple of the Seventh that Roosevelt has.
“I do not say these things because I
am glad that they are so, for I am not.
I am against Colonel Roosevelt and
would not vote for him in any circum-
I stances. I regard him as a dangerous
man in the place to which he aspires
And I am going to vote for Wilson.
"I merely say what I do because, from
close and personal observation. I be
lieve it is the solemn 'truth. If Roose
velt comes to Georgia and makes two
or three speeches, and the remainder
of the state is in the receptive mood
the Seventh unquestionably is. the for.
mer president will carry the state—
mark the prediction!"
,Not a few citizens will take this
man's statement with generous grains
of salt, and think that, at least, he is
mistaken.
The only two guaranteed facts are
that the district unquestionably did go
for Taft as against Bryan last time,
and that the person quoted is an ob
server of great shrewdness and much
common sense and political experience.
There may be some differences of
opinion as to w hether the president of
the senate or the messenger thereof
should appoint tbe senate pages—and
there are some more or less violent dif
ferences—but there is very little dif
ference of opinion as to whether the
provision for the appointment of pages
should be attached to a general appro
priation bill. The almost unanimous
opinion is that it should not.
It is not germane to a general ap
propriation bill—nor to a special ap
propriation bill, either, for that matter
-and il should not be saddled upon the
same, where the entire bill may be
endangered by it. If it be necessary to
enact each year how pages shall be ap
pointed. the bill or resolution provid
ing for the appointment ought, in de
cency and common sense, to stand by
itself. That frees the proposition from
other questions, and permits a settle
ment on the merits of the case.
The house was "squabbling" with the
' senate in its dying hours over the ap
pointment of pages, when it should
have been giving its attention to much
more serious matters —notably the gen
eral banking bill, which went to its
: death through sheer inattention.
True, the house was contending for
(COMMUNICATED.)
BACON IS FOR “INTERESTS,”
I
STATES THOMSON PROGRESS
IN A VIGOROUS EDITORIAL
The following interesting editorial on the race for United States Sena
tor is taken from The Thomson Progress:
WILL BACON BE RENOMINATED?
Will Senator Bacon be renominated at the coming primary as a Demo
cratic candidate foi United States Senator from Georgia? We are frank to
say that it seems that he will. Just how he has managed tp turn the trick
year after- year we have been, and are still, unable to answer. But the
everlasting fact is that throughout the r ecent turbulent years in Georgia
politics he has successfully weathered the storm.
Bear in mind that at all times he has stood in with the "gr eat interests"
that have so vigorously fought, and yet not ’a time* has popular sentiment
turned against him. Bear in mind that in al! these years the "great inter
ests" of the country have never been dissatisfied with him. Bear in mind
that when the transcontinental railway fought the Panama eanal and
. when the entire South was giving that measure its strong support, our sen
ator was found lined up with these transcontinental railways making speech
after speech against the Panama eanal. which it is hoped will be the great
, well-spring of Southern prosperity in a few years. Bear in mind that when
i an effort was made to throttle the great interstate railways in the issuing
of bonds and stocks, in other words, in watering their capitalization and
thereby putting a mortgage on coming generations, that our senator spoke
against and voted against this measure.
Bear in mind that when Taffs little Attorney General Wickersham
prosecuted Brown. Hayne and others for attempting to put up the price of
cotton and thereby tuin millions of dollars into the pockets of Southern peo
ple. appeals were made from Thomson to Senator Bacon to intervene tn
their behalf, and the reply was in substance that it was a matter in which
> he had no concern Later Senator Smith, of South Carolina and other
Southern representatives made it too hot for Wickersham and his croud
and the prosecutmn came to naught, but remember that It was a matt er in
which the Geoigia Senator had no concern
It may he that the peopje win go on and nominate him again It ma"
be that Mt Perrv. of Hall wtr not • net eeri ... >, K ma
, Urt ln obtaining the nomination,
and yet it wl . forever be a mystery to The Progress ho . one old roal , .-an
pull the wool ove the eyes of thousands and thousands of Georgia farm
ers. Geogia business men and Georgia voters in general.
a principle that rvas sound and right
eous, but the principle ought not to
have been made possible of discus
sion in the way it was.
The fault was in attaching the pags
amendment to the appropriation bill
under consideration.
It has been suggested, and the sug
gestion has met with much favor, that
hereafter pages and other employees
should be appointed by a committee on
legislative attaches—one for each
house. But. regardless of whether that
is done, there Should be no repetition
of the page "squabble” in the future.
The weather is very hot.
Many people have noticed that, of
course,, of late, and particularly after
so unusual and so long a spell of de
lightfully cool yveather.
Perhaps that is the reason why some
candidates run in their campaigning
of late rampant to perfervid oratory
and grandiloquent parts of speech.
Mayhap the recent extreme humidity
characterizing meteorological condi
tions —as the esteemed weather; sharp
puts it—has gone to the heads of some
aspirants for office, for certainly some
of them are saying things, ever “see
ing things.”
Unquestionably, if Georgians are to
believe some of the grand, gloomy and
peculiar things they hear, the "gob
berlins" will "git us, if we don’t watch
out."
In testimony whereof, witness this
exhibit:
I call on God to witness the cov
enant I make this day with the
people of Georgia:
Mercenary crime shall jiot stand
unchallenged in the market place.
The pestilence shall not walk at
noonday unrebuked. The cove
nant with death shall be disan
nulled and the agreement with hell
shall not stand. The rich and pow
erful shall no longer set up their
respectable crime as a pattern for
the vicious and the ignorant.
Can you guess, gentle reader, who
! said that?
Only half a guess will be allowed
each would-be guesser!
' Copies this simultaneously anxious
and ecstatic inquiry to the Sidelights
! department:
1 am delighted that the legisla
ture made Jess Perry a colonel, but
won't he look funny in a blue uni
form, with his acutely ted hair?
ADMIRER (OF PERRY'S).
Atlanta. Aug. 17, 1912.
Certainly the colonel will not look
'■ funny in a blue uniform. He would not
’ and could not look funny in any sort
• of uniform.
It is not a question of the uniform
1 becoming the colonel, but of the colonel
• becoming the uniform—and the colonel
under discussion becomes any uniform,
t red hair and all!
f Besides, is the colonel’s hair "acute-
E ly" red? It is positively, categorically,
1 and honestly—even defiantly—so. per-
■ haps. but. "acutely?” Does this fair
■ correspondent (for. of course, it is a
' fair one. and. mayhap, "most divinely’
s tall." as Tennyson loved to sing about)
■ mean to suggest that Colonel Perry
may be the guy who’put the "cute" in
"acutely?"
If so. Sidelights will forever and
hereafter hold his peace—otherwise,
"Admirer" need fear not at all for
' Colonel Perry .
In his colonel's regalia, he is sure to
’ look both perfectly lovely and grand!
Flying Men Fall
victims to stomach, liver and kidney
’ troubles just like other people, with
i like results in loss of appetite, back
. ache, nervousness, headache, and tired,
listless, run down feeling. But there's
s no need to feel like that, as T. D. Pee
bles. Henry. Tenn., proved. "Six bot
' ties of Electric Bitters.” he writes, "did
1 more to Rive me new strength and good
i 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 all
■ druggists. •••