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HUSBANO SLAYING
MANFOUNDWITH)
WIFE IS FREED
Coroner’s Jury Upholds Car
penter Who Shot Rival as He
.. nbraced His Spouse.
I-'. Gi’stra.p. who kilied Will Seals
)n the woodi near the western city lim
s yesterday. is a free man today, a
kroner's ju y having declared t’le sja.x - I
■ng justifiable. But there is no more |
happiness in the Gilstrap home after
th, circumstances of” yesterday. I’er
iiaps th l ' dead man is best off of ,the
i o m the tragedy, of which Mrs. Gil
st ap was the third person.
Gilstrap, t lank, tough-looking car
penter about 30 years < id. loft his home]
in ttiivcr street, just at the city limits,!
■md went to work it) Ti nth street. Just j
afte' noon his twe ve-? ear-old son. |
Willie, came tinning to him with the]
news that Mrs. Gilstrap had left home j
with a stiange ipan. I'iic boy said bis!
mother had sent the eitildr n to an
uncle's house, promising to return for
thrnn later in the day. but they had I
watched her enter the woods I
home. _ I
Gilst ‘ap went qii, kly home, pick'sl .
up hi.- pistol and "ent toward the |
S ippine. softly into the unde, - ■
c owtl’ ja came upon his wife and th,' ;
rn m .lie -ward idcntifi -1 aS Seals j
Standing hardly three feet away, the
husband emptied l.is revolver .into i
S. s' body. He fired -blindly, no; car- ,
Ing w.iet.’.er his bullet- I'ouiel th man
m a woman, but, s,rangc to say. th* I
won.. ■ was not stink. S.als was]
<1; cd almost instantly.
Then He C«ils the Sheriff.
Gils: a), teiephcne.l th she-iff to j
e,,m, aii.l ge. aim and Ii imtv IC. P >
Stan', item to t'-c scene. Xfterward
Gils:..i, is taken back to point out
th, seep" of the snooting. ami finally
he ami his wife were brought to the I
Fulton Tower.
The fig res in t'i< tragedy were com-I
mmip'.ac . The h i i 'as forbid-|
lii g In apo, irance. t'.r wife a bedrag
gled. unkempt woman far older in ap-|
pearati'-e 'han years Sv- whs clearly;
under 'lie influence of whisky' « hen “1t,.,
at fix rd al I'.- s'l riff's office. -,nd
s m. d zed by the events of I l*.e fi - ,
?rneon Seals was a farm,- from Cobb j
?,,inty. ,»
i 'oronei Paul Donehoo convened a i
■ i i' Patterson’s chapel last night 1
■ .'min ■<! tie witnesses. The xxom- j
an -a s' a s •■ame ;<> lier house and]
p, is;, ic . in r to ,' di xith. him until!
so xx.i.- :nt ,xicated and after that she I
■ti l ~ ny'liing. 'file little son;
to'o of-. . ing his u: ithcr leave honi" ’
and of'U.aliig Io get ids f :tii r. <»'•!-
st'. ;, . p'Hniy lee 'ory of : lie |
■ootii g r. ,nd sevral office.s
- oe 1 Ji st < ne. '1 he jin x r ndered a
x,- ri‘ -i of justifiable homicide without
‘.'■a., -it. i'd, s' rap tx a s-i free. The
wifi was .. Ihe 'To ci- for further 1
in x ■ stiga ; lop.
FINDS THE WOMAN HE IS
■’LOOKING FOR” IN WALES,
i: PA., Oct. 2. After I
ling ar for a wif<. William ]
J 1’ " "as. aged yea s. a widuxxer. of I
T -mneL has found one of his I'
i'k ’.s. cat he has to go out of the:
to get he:. He is going just as ]
•"■""I, , in: can dispose of his property. I
1 "in,- advertised for a xvife be-j
ci- isin said he was lonely and be-I
'■"is, m was forced to eat his holiday
m-a - it. home. His "ad.-" brought him]
*'• !'■' - num all over the country and |
foreign climes as veil. None
of Ho women seemed to meet his re-,
'in. * in- nt-. His last mail. however,
'nought him a letter from Cardiff,
xxa es. and : his woman just suits him. j
so 11 ■ sa \s.
1 1
beaten nearly to death
IN FIGHT OVER A WIDOW
''' ILKESBAPiRE. PA.. Oct. 2.—ln a
fight over a woman's love, John Shurau
"as so badly injured last night that he
' ■ vpeeted to die and Martin Marks is
" jail axvaiting the outcome of Shu-j;
s injuries. Both Shuran and Marks
‘ 1 enammed over Mrs. Mary Adams. ,
a xvidow.
mian called at the house last night
1 ,m his xx ay Imine xxas attacked by
1 men and beaten xxith steel knuek
-11, was left on the road in a dying
'ndition. On his statements Marks
arrested. Mark- denies the charge.
demand for laborers
NOW GROWING SERIOUS
I'TI'TSBCRg PA.. Oct. 2.—For the
!lr "’ time in its history. Pittsburg is
paying out Sl.tMio.upo a day in \xage-. ,
' was announced yesterday at the
I‘armg house The reason is the pres
rn remarkable activity in industrials.
-• lion- i l( is the labor famine be
that employers are stealing men
Hom business rivals. This is a misde- ,
' "anor under the laws of Pennsx Ivania. ,
""" during the week two suits xxere
y 11 against employment agents xx Im ,
'"k workmen from on, rival concern
l< * another
FINDS LOVE NOTES 4.000
YEARS OLD: STILL WARM
' Uli 'A ( ; ( , ()ct B._ ljOVe |e tie ,. s .
i, ( 11 l-hiid years ago on a baked brick I
■ ' !| iylon. a unique cure for tooth-I
and a complaint about poo
ng house f.ir, xx ere tran“lated
imm-iform xx citings re- ■
'Xavutc.l by the rt.-\ Dr. |- <•. :
■ e 1 tcssni ( if iml Testament in-
love left • was
ii words of e , at Warmth
Dixon, Oldest Poster in Dixie, Sighs for the Stars of Bygone Days
SEES BILLBOARD .BEAUTIES REFORMED
JWwißßa/ Hi
■ f ■ I wMffliMlF.F
MISS GERTRUDE HOFFMAN.
Robert Dixon Recalls When
Billboards Looked Like Ad
for Hosiery Store Opening.
"Actors’.' Srrc, I ought to know
thorn. Haven’t i been sticking up their
paper I' t 30 years? I’ve posted them
all from Booth down to vaudeville acts.
"Rut have I seen them act? Foolish
um-cion. son. I’ve seen them all. There
wasn't a show 1 missed in the old days,
and when I wasn’t out in front 1 was
at the back, standing in the wings.
\nd I've seen some g eat people in my
day.”
Robert E. Dixon was talking, the
oldest billposter in the South, perhaps.
Hi was slicking bills when Patti's voice]
was fresh, when Keene, as the limpingj
Richard, held thousands under his,
spell; when Booth and Salvini and
Fanny Davenport played at the old De-
Giv«- opera house. He is still posting
portraits of players on the same old
corners, though most of his favorites
hav» taken their last cm tain call.
Dixon wa> inclined to think the bill
posting busitps- had been uplifted of
recent years.'
Billboards Are Cleaner.
“The., can talk about the stage being
on the bum with these two-men-and-a- ;
woman plays," he remarked. "But the
billboards ate cleaner than they used
to be. Not so many tights. Why, I re
member the time when a real good cor
ne looked like a spring opening show
window in a hosiery store. No. that
wasn’t in the real old time, you might
say. It was after "The Black Crook”
and that sort of show commenced com
ing along. Some of the bills tn those
days were enough to make a real nice
man duck down a side street to get by.
I haven't noticed any scarcity of tights
in these musical shows, but there are
not so many on the billboards. I don't
know whether it's because there’s no
use so: picturese with so much silk
stockings on the sidewalks, but ft might
he. The fashions these days are some
thing strange to jne.”
It is not as a billboard artist that
Dixon shines, however. He is a-critic
with ideas of his own on plays and
players And. contrary to most veteran
iheatergoers, he does not think all the
good acting passed with Florence and
Jefferson and their contemporaries. But
he confesses that he doesn't enjoy the
plays of today as he did the famous old
tragedies of a few decades ago
"That old DeGive opera house had
the very best," be said. "It's the Bijou
now. and considered a little house, but
it was big enough for Atlanta in those
days, though many a lime people sat
ui> all night to. buy tickets and thou
sands were turned awa)
Keene the Greatest Richard.
"I guess Booth and Lawrence Bar
rett, when they were together, was the
greatest one show in my recollection.
But when Joe Jefferson and William
Florence played The Rivals,’ with
Mrs. Drew as Mrs Malaprop. it was a
wonderful east. Kene was the great
est of all the Richards.
"It's hard to gay who was the gteat
>-st ai t '-s of those days I believe I'd
say Fanny Davenport. though perhaps
I couldn't judge Bernhardt -o well, so
she played in French. Rut Daven
po Is- I'l- opatra was wonderful. Th* r<
\
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS AVEDNESDA Y. OCTOBER 2. 1912.
■
. *
I
«/
I , . -sir ' /
tioberl E. Dixon, oldest billposter in South, who has seen
billboard beauty styles reformed from lhe scantiesl of apparel
to the very proper indeed.
were many splendid women. Did you
ever see Clara Morris? Did you eve’
hear of Patti Rosa. , the comedienne"
She was a tremendous favorite. W<*
didn’t have vaudeville, of course, but
we had extravaganzas like Rice's
I Evangeline, with plenty of what we
called variety in them." .
Rut there is one of the moderns to
whom Dixon gave unstinted piaise w ho
lives in the memory of even young At
lantans. Richard Mansfield, the strange
genius w hose "Peer Gyn " was his last
Atlanta role.
Remembers Old Irish Comedians.
“Mansfield was the greatest of them
all. in repertoire." said the old critic.
"I saw him In everything he ever
played, I think. Do you remembe his
Beau Btutnme!?’ Did you eve see the
role which made him famous in a night,
Baron Chevrial In ‘A Parisian Ro-,
inance?' Ah. he was a wonderful
actor.
"Rut when I was a youngster it was
the lighter shows that made me hap
piest. There was old Scanlon, the Irish
comedian. Chauncey Olcott follow ,- ’
in his footsteps, but he could never fill
Scanlon's shoes. And the minstrels!
They were the boys I loved. There
were Primrose & West, and Thatcher,
and old George Wilson. Minstrels were
bigger things in those dflys than now
Primrose is still dancing, and dancing
w ell, and Wilson was here not long ago
1 sat and watchfed him every day, not
because he was so clever now. but be
ta use I loved him. There were min
st’els in those days who drew great
salaries.
"No, I can’t say the really goad act
ors of today ate not as good as th>- old
timers. but we don't see them in the
great old tragic roles and it’s hard to
make comparisons. It was Richard 111.
and Kit helieu, and Mark Antony then,
and the star tragedians played them
one after another, and we could choose
between them with better judgment
They don't seem to care for the old
plays any longer.”
NEW POSTMASTER AT EASTMAN.
EASTMAN. GA . Oct. r. I, Hen
nett. who was appointed postmaster at
this place about two weeks ago. is now
in charge of the office Mr. Itonre't wll!
he assisted by W s Wa'io. assistant
postmaster; Mias Lili) Mae <;-..o|sb\
money order clerK. arri T. f. Waite, gen
eral deliver) and mail.ng clerk.
RAILROAD SUED FOR
LAND GIVEN IT YEARS
AGO FOR TERMINALS
VALDOSTA. GA.. Oct. ’'.— Suit has
been entered her- hy Mrs. W. W. Law
son et al., widow and heirs of W. W.
Lawson, of Hahira, Ga.. against the.
Georgia Southern and Florida railroad!
for the recovery of lands in the town I
of Hahira, which had been deeded io]
the railroad company when the line]
was built through that place 24 yeans i
ago. Four or five acre s in the heart of |
the town are involved in the suit.
The plaintiffs claim that the land |
was deeded to the railroad company for I
railroad purposes and was to be used |
by the road for its tracks and termi- j
rials, but that the road is now leasing
I ihe property to private individuals for
the- erection of wai'-hous s, ginneries
electric light plants and other things.
The suit is brought in the superior
court of Low ndes count).
WANT A GOOD GLASS EYE?
OFFICER HAS 2.650 TO SELL'
CHICAGO Oct. 2. Who wants a
glass eye? i'nit -<l States Marshal Lu- I
man T Hoy w ill dispose of 2.6.7 Ual ti I
ficial eyes at public sale, pursuant to
an order of United States Judge <’ar
penter, entered this morning.
The eyes were seized by custom- in- ,
speetors in the Geneva Optical tom ,
pany's store, at 37 South Wabash ave- |
nue. B. <'. 1., Schulze, w hom the cus- ,
loms authorities alleged smuggled tin ;
e> -s through the port of New York, ,
was prosecuted criminally for failure ;
to pay duty on them.
FOOTPRINTS CONVICT HiM; ;
THIEF WALKS ON BIBLE
i
FORT WORTH. TEXAS. Oct. 2. HD 1
footprint on the dusty cover of a Bibb ■
sent William Hargraves to the state '
penitential) for two years at Denton.
He rollbed the store of W. W, Pruitt, of
Roanoke, lust March.
Mr Piultt di-cove e,| th<- footfirin',
w Hi- h i '-responded with tm •hoe of ■
Ha graves, wh.i had bought a new pair
al the Pruitt store ,
, MlSfe BILLIE BURKE.
HHO
OWW
Faculty Members for State In
stitution at Vaiciosta Are
Chosen by Trustees.
VALDOSTA. GA. Oct 2 ill - board
of trustees of tile South Georgia State
Normal college in this city has de
cided <m Thursday. January 2. 1913. as
ibe date for opening tin- college. The
matriculation fee for Georgia pupils
.ill bi sln. Foi pupils from other
states there will bi a tuition fee of
$ ii in addition to the iii.ttriculation fee.
Board in lhe dormitory will be sl2 per
month. Valdosta pupils for the train
ing school will be charged $2.50 per
term, and classes in the training school
w ill be limited to fifteen pupils.
The following members of the fac
ulty have jusl been elected:
Pedagogy, J. M. Gulliams, Ocil a. Ga.;
mathematics and science, .1, F. Wood,
graduate of Columbia university, re
cently of Nashville. Ga.; English and
history, W. J. Bradley, Barnesville, and
Miss Elizabeth McElreath, Atlanta;
English and Lutin, K. L. Brimberry, Al
bany; agriculture and manager board
ing ib purimenl J. E. Creel, College
Park. Ga.: art and manual training.
Miss Frances Ruth Carpenter, Elber
ton. Ga., now of Columbia university;
nature study and geography. Miss Alice
Prickard. of State Normal and Indus
trial college al Columbia. Miss., now at
I'niversity of Chicago; school of music.
Miss Gladys Norton. Marengo. III.; su
perintendent of the training school.
Miss Lillian Rule, Knoxville. Tenn . for
mer!) of the .Milledgeville Normal col -
lege; matron, Mrs. R. H. Patterson,
Wiens, Ga. The teacher of'domestic
science and art and two training teach
ers are to be elected later.
Professor II H. Powell is president.
GAME ROOSTER PECKS OUT
EYES OF BOY. AGED THREE
PITTSBI'RG. PA. Oct 2.—The fe
rocity of a Game rooster here cost lit
tle Johnnie Charles, aged three, the
sight of his eyes The boy was playing
In the yaid at bis parents’ home In Lin
coln avenue when the cock, which had
been fighting in another yard. Hew ovei
the fi nee and seiiled on the Charles
family por. -i: Johnnte rushed for lie
roost er ind t l ied to seize it.
The enraged fowl lb w gj the boy and
knocked him down Although the lad
fought to defend himself and cried (or
help, the bird peck'd out his left eye
and injured the ollie- so badly that the
attending physician says the vision is
destroyed.
JOLIET FEELS TREMORS.
JOLIET. ILL.. Oct 2. Two distinct
■ alt h'l Ila ke shocks were felt here with
,i half hour Intel val between shocks
i * yesterday. Window - were biokeii
and houses sliglitlv rocked
SIDELIGHTS ON
STATE POLITICS
Interesting Comment on Men,
Measures and Conditions in
the Field of Statecraft.
I’p in the grand old county of Gil
mer they are an election to
day, as they are holding them through-
k
out the entire
- state, for that
j matter, of course
i —only in Gilmer
I they hold them
i differently.
I Nobody seems to
: knoxx’ exactly xvhat
is going to hap-
I pen in Gilmer to-
I day, howe ve r,
] which makes the
] situation extraor
! dinarily interest
| ing. because the
i rule has been
i heretofore that
I everybody knew
t exactly xvhat xvas
I going to happen
several days in
advance —that depending, in the main,
upon which side of the pending con
troversy had charge of the i-ather loose
and reckless election machinery at the
time.
Some light is throxvn on the situa
tion in Gilmer by the folloxving illumi
nating paragraph, picked, palpitating,
from the current issue of The Pickens
Progress, published in the neighboring
grand old county of Pickens:
In Gilmer county w< notice the
"Slick Tail" Democrats xx ill have
a full ticket to vote for Wednes
day- against the nominees. The re
cent judge contest in that county
doubtless caused this move. We
are told there are three parties
in that edunty—the "Simon Pure”
Democrats. "Slick Tail” Democrats
| and the Republicans.
The difficulty in establishing the
Democratic household on a rock in Gil
mer seems to be the apparent hope
lessness of getting the "Simon Pitres”
and the "Slick Tails" into the same
boat, and everybody pledged not to rock
it!
The precise difference bet ween a "Si
mon Pure" and a "Slick Tall" i» hard
I to explain, for while one seems to have
no corner on purity, the other seems
equally to he shy of a corner on slick
ness.
Alternately. It seems, the "Simon
Pures" and the "Slick Tails” combine
with the Republicans, and there is
deuce to pay In the Democratic ranks!
Since the big shakeup in the state
I convention. Gilmer polities has been a
] little bit up In the air. The story that
comes from there today xvill. there
fore, be more than mildly int re-ting.
Alex Lawrence, of Chatham, xvlio
manages very cleverly Io eoiiceal <l
- ay s, when he so elects from his right
hand that which hisjvft hand is doing,
blexx into town today, topped off with
an ancient straw lid that looked as if it
long ago had been claimed tor me'an
eholy’s very ox'n and sighed for noth
ing so much as a lodge in some vast
j wilderness xvi’er,- Alex Lawrences are
unknoxvn.
"You Atlanta people make me tired,"
said Mr. Lawrence, his straw hat hav
ing been “kidded" unmercifully in the
Kimball house lobby, "and you imagine
xx e south Georgia folks have to set <>ur
paces according to your ideals. Let mo
tell you that a Savannah m in res, r'cs
the right to wear a straxv hat right
along to New Year's day. if he wishes,
and it is not considered anybody's
[particular business. This is my first
I summet with this hat. anyway. I got
lit last April, and it still looks pretty
; good to me. Next April I can got It
j made good as new for a dime —we have
'a place In Sivairmfi that fixes them
up fine atjd dandy for a dime. You
Atlanta folks think you have tn call In
your straw hats ev. y September 15
you think that just because some New
York dude once said It is the fit and
proper caper. It I: a comfort and a
pleasure to live jn a town like Savan
nah. where folks mind their oxxn busi
ness, and one may wear a straw hat
whenever he gets ready, and no foolish
questions asked! lUusi r.itive of the
manners of you Atlanta people. I was
walking along Peachtree street an hour
or so ago. xx hen a pert young thing,
with a big picture hat on. sniggered
right In my face. and. pointing to my
I straxv. giggled to her companion, ‘There
Igoes one of ’em now!’"
That was the longest ovation any
body present ever had heard Mr. Law
rence deliver, and it made an impres
sion accordingly!
It .stopped the “knocking." too, as
I suddenly as Mr. l.awrenee's appearance
in the lobby had started It.
There is many a politician in Geor
gia whose heart beats sadder today
that "Jack" Wilson is no more.
“Jack” Wilson never went in very
much for politics, but he knew all the
politicians and he was held in high es
teem by a very great majority of them,
i oo!
A minor incident in Wilson's life here
in Atlanta serves to illustrate precise
ly what manner of man he xxas.
When John Temple Graves ran for
vice president of the I'nited States a
few years back. Georgia did not rally
to him as generously as it might have
done; hut one of those xvho did vote for
him xxas "Jack” Wilson.
The night before the election Wilson
was sitting at a table In one of the
Atlanta clubs, and the election xvas be
ing discussed. \s the conversation
proceeded. Wilson made his compan
ions a little speech, and this Is about
xvhat lie said;
“As for me. boys, T am going to the
noils tomorrow and vote for John Teni-
WOMEN ASK BOY
ROBBER GO FREE
Sisters. With Letter From Gov
ernor Marshall, Plead for
Drug Store Bandit.
To secure the release of Charles Sut
ton, one of the drug store bandits who
terrorized Atlanta two winters ago.
Mis. M. E. Beacham and Mrs. Mamie
Penniston. of Indianapolis, will go to
Governor Brown today with a letter of
introduction from Governor Marshall.
After that they will use evei-y other
possible means to get him from the
state farm.
They declare the life of their aged
mother in Indiana depends upon the
return of the youth, xvho is but 21. and
that he xx .is a gooil boy xx ho xvas forced
into becoming a robber because he had
a young wife to support and could not
get work. Sutton is at the state farm
.where he was sentenced soon after he
and four others made a daring escape
from the Toxxer early in 1911.
The story of the two sisters is pa
thetic. and they firmly believe that the
governor will listen tn their plea ami
let the box- go home to his mother. They
declare that he never did any wrong
until A. R. Knox, his bandit partner,
persuaded him to come to Atlanta.
pie Graves for vice president; and I
may say I am not much interested in
the election beyond that. I do not sup
pose John expects to bo elected, but I
am sure he does expect old Jack' to
vote for him. and 1 shall nor disap
point him. I don't know Sherman and
I don't knoxx Kern, hut John is my
friend, and In Atlanta was one of my
crowd. Friendship is more to me than
anx thing else—and John, therefore,
gels my vote. If you fellows want to
please me, you will tote for John to
morro'x."
And it is a fact that every man about
the table promised Wilson he .vould do
that very thing.
Ijeonard, the colored porter of the.
executive department In the state Cap
itol. has about as many friends among
the passing throne as anvbody in the
big building.
Leonard is an institution all within
himself, and bx his alwavs oolite and
courteous manner has made it more or
less unconsciously incumbent upon all
visitors to pass him a pleasant word
going in or coming out of Governor
Brown's office, as the case may be.
Notwithstanding his <'hesterfeldiap
air generally, however. Leonard had a
terrible fall taken out of him recently,
and sufl'ered much undeserved but re
signedly sustained embarrassment.
A careless newspaper reiiorter. in
mind wandering with respect to Lieu
tenant Colonel Jesse Perrv’s grand and
gorgeous new uniform, understood to re.
cord Leonard's remarks thereon, and ho
put a lot of "dialect” and half-baked
words In l. onaid's mouth that never
had been the,,-, really, and that rang
exeeedinglx’ tin-Leonardesque.
lie had Leonard calling Colonel Per
ry "Cunnui.” and he also had him
speaking of a certain piece of the Perrx
military regalia as a “bellyband!”
I' wouldn't have been so bad had not
Leonard's Sand i 1 school class got hold
of it and > ailed him down about it!
His repiitttiion for using correct and
impressive English xvas fixed in the
minds of that class, and it demanded
to knoxx xvhat his “condition” coulc
have been xxymn lie said those things
about "Cunnui” Pert ;, and his 'military
"bellyband! ’
For (lie fits! time in many moons
Leonard failed to shoxx up at Sunday
school this xxeek.
"Emba r> asstnent and chagrin so oh
sessed my 5,,0l on Sunday. In retro
spective eon'enijd ,:i >n of that ealumir
heap, d upon me." explained Leonard
th;,; I Inti’ 11. tai! the vmiage to face
my class. 1 am eeite sure the mem
bets under.-lood lha. I never was gtli>-
t> of the assault xxith intent l > mjt
dci the Kni lis i language charge
against me. but it occasionally is bar
to elucidate the situation, never! iv
less!"
Covernoi Brown ha- undertaken 'h
leli'ate task ol interceding for the re
porter who aif'onted Leonard, but L
gave no assurance in advance that hi
diplomatfc mission will be successful.
The highes' point of woman's hap
piness is reached only through moth
srhood, in the clasping of her child
within her arms. Yet the mother-to
be is often fearful of nature's ordeal
and shrinks from the suffering Inci
dent to its consummation. But for
nature’s ills and discomforts nature
provides remedies, and in Mothers
Friend is to be found medicine of
great value to every expectant mother.
It is an emulsion for external
application, composed of ingredients
which act with beneficial and sooth
ing effect on those portions of the
system involved. It is intended to
prepare the system for the crisis, and
thus relieve, in great part, the suffer
ing through which the mother usually
passes. The regular use of Mother's
Friend will repay any mother in the
comfort it affords before, and the help
ful restoration to health and strength
it brings about after baby comes.
Mother’s Friend
is for sale at M j \
Write for° our HmMIS fOtW
free book for j|fj & **
expectant moth-
ers which contains much valuable
information, and many suggestions of
a helpful nature.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Allaeta. Ga.
3