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TTEARST’S SUNDAY A^fERTPAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, AUGUST 17, 1013.
’ |0ff in Canoe on 7,000-Mile
*!••+ +#*J*
Couple to Make Record Cruise
rgonauts to Visit the South
■a r i . •
5 D
Recently Elected Congressmen
Havedard Time Telling Why
Dstrict Doesnt Profit.
RULE* OF CAUCUS FORBID
Meaures to Build PostofFice at
9|uash Center Will Have to
Wait for a Session.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Green, who have started from Staten
Island to cruise to New Orleans and back in a canoe.
Visits Omaha Stores and Secures
Evidence for the Grand Jury.
Made Up Like Tramp.
By JONATHAN WINFIELD.
WASHINGTON. Aug. 16.—The new
njmbers of the House—there are ap
proximately 150 of them—are begin-
ing to And out something about the
itricacies of legislation at Washing-
' on, and just now thej r are busy ex
plaining away a bunch of campaign
promises. The new member isn’t get
ting anywhere with pet legislation
and he is a sorely distressed indi
vidual.
Nearly 7,000 bills and resolutions
‘have been introduced in the House of
Representatives since President Wil
son called the Sixty-third Congress
into extra session early in April.
About one in a hundred have received
consideration, and the ratio bids fair
to be maintained during the remain
der of the extra session owing to a
rule of the Democratic caucus which
binds the House committees not to
report out legislation before the re^gu-^
lar session, which begins in Novem
ber.
In consequence of this unexpected
caucus rule, the new member who
came to Congress leaving many prom
ises behind is up against it. His
hands are tied; he may introduce bills
and resolutions to his heart’s content,
but they won’t get anywhere for
months, and perhaps not then. It is
embarrassing to make explanations,
especially when a statesman beat out
tome other fellow by promising big
hings for the district.
All Have Horde of Bills.
The average new member, as soon
as he reaches the House chamber,
walks up to the bill basket and drops
therein a bill providing that the town
of Jonesville shall have a $25,000 post-
office. He follows this with a dozen
or so bills proposing that certain wor
thy pensioners in his district shall
have their annual pensions increased.
Then he comes along with the crying \
complaint that the little Ben River'
needs about $50,000 or $100,000 to im-
prove navigation in order that the
towns of Squash Center and Hickory
Hollow may have increased tran»por-
. lation facilities. .
, Congressman Newcomer then pass
ed the word along to the newspaper
correspondent representing the home j
paper that he has introduced the fore-
Koiog bill and will push it to an early
passage. The people back home are
duly elated and begin to get glad that |
they retired the former Congressman
and sent so active a successor in his
P ^In*a short time the new member
around to the committee to
which his various pet kind bills have
been referred. Without desiring to
appear too solicitous, he gently in
quires when he may expect the com
mittee to get together and take up
the pressing need of his district. The
chairman. with. equal gentleness,
breaks the news that it will be abso
lutely impossible to do anything for
the present.
Caucus Rules Forbid.
In the first place, says the chair-
iTdn, a quorum of the committee isn’t
' ii town. In the second place, the
caucus has forbidden the report of
rnvthing except currency, tariff re-
lirm and pressing appropriations bills
,r resolutions at this session. ’I he
tew member is absolutely unable to
gee the justice of such a mandate,
even though he may have been a
member of the caucus. He thought
the rule would apply to the other fel
low, not himeslf. There is general
woe and lamentation.
It is the same old story, told over in
about 50 different ways. Each new
member has a peculiar complaint to
make and peculiar local needs to sat
isfy. There is nothing doing, however,
and tile recruit statesman is told that
he wifi have to wait until the regular
session rolls around.
RECEIVES FORTUNE IN OLD
\GE AFTER LIFE OF DENIAL
INDEPENDENCE, OREG., Aug. 16.
Aftir years of toll and broken health
anc* a continuous struggle in courts,
Janes A. Simmons, of this city, has
received $17,000.
t
OMAHA, Aug. 16.—In order to more
effectively carry on war against vice
of all kinds, the Rev. A. E. Hess,
pastor of the Hirst Memorial Young
People’s ChuVch, of this city, has
been disguising himself as a "rough
neck” dope iiend and scouring the
haunts of the denizens of the under
world for proofs of law breaking to
present to the Grand Jury.
His latest tour was through a num
ber of drug stores suspected of sell
ing "coke.” For his disguise he se
cured the services of a professional
costumer, and so good was his "make
up” that he now has in his possession
a hatful of little wooden boxes, each
containing a few grains of cocaine—
each labeled with the time and place
of purchase, and in many cases the
name of the clerk who sold it.
"I was never so scared in my life as
when I starled out for the ‘dope’ drug
stores,” Mr. Hess. "I was ‘made
u^' like a dope fiend tramp and I was
afraid I would be recognized and
■quizzed. I walked down alleys and
hid in doorways every time I saw a
policeman. Had I been s(ten by one of
them I purely would have been ar
rested.
"At the first drug store I entered
twice before I raked up enough cour
age to ask for the cocaine. The first
time I merelf watched the traffic; and
that was terrible enough. I saw a
woman fairly weep in her plea for tha
drug she craved and for which she
had not the purchase price. Negroes
and white men, trembling with the
‘habit.’ elbowed each, other to the
counter. I was unnoticed; they prob
ably took me for one of their kintW
which was just what I desired. When
finally asked for th« ‘snow’—a slang
term for cocaine—it was handed out
without question. The clerk simpiy
went back behind his prescription
case for an instant and emerged with
the little box and handed It to me—
but not before he took my dime. Eater
I had the contents of the box ana
lyzed. It was 98 per cent cocaine.
"1 got the idea of this Individual
raid while visitin T he Police Court.
I noticed that an alarming per cent
of the prisoner*' showed unmistakable
signs of being dope fiends. After 1
began this investigation I found that
‘coke’ can be purchased at almost any
drug store in the lower wards of the
city. The police don’t, or won’t, get
the evidence with which to stop the
traffic, although, from what I saw,
the evidence is lying abound loose
ready for anyone to pick up and pre*
sent to the County Attorney.”
Mr. Hess is a young man apd his
congregation is composed almost ex-
sirs [XPERT
Knoxville Educator Declares Chil
dren Must Be Given Training
in Method of Living.
DENVER. Aug. 16,—"Ids college-ed
ucation necessary to fit a boy or girl
for life?" P. P. Claxton, of Knox
ville, Tenn., Commissioner of Educa
tion.^ was asked during his stay here
, “Every boy or girl should be given
j training of the kind best fitted to
prepare him for life until he or she
j reaches the age of twenty-one. I do
not believe that every young man or
woman should spend ali of his or her
time studying dead languages or ac
quiring the ordinary cultural educa
tion. Girls are divided into two
classes—pie-crust girls and Shakes
peare girls. The first should have a
! pie-crust training, the latter a
I Shakespeare training.
i "My hobby is the rural schools.
The economic and social value of
j the country school is underestimated,
j It Is in truth the training ground for
J our country.”
Believes in Eugenics.
"Do you believe that eugenics
•should be taught in our schools?”
"There Is one fundamental interest
of humanity, and that is life. What
has to do with the perpetuation of
life and the improvement of the life
of the race should certainly be
taught in our schools," Claxton an
swered.
"I believe that the mother should
teach the child the serious matters
connected with its life, but when she
fails, the school must do her work.
“I can see no sane reason why that
which is of vital importance to the
child should be omitted from its edu
cation.”
In speaking at the University of
Denver on the subject of "Some
Rights of Children,” he said.
"Legislators have more power than
God Almighty to dominate the homes
and characters of children.
Everything in Env ronment.
"When Dr. Holmes was asked when
education begins he answered:
“ ‘With the child’s grandmother at
least. A child should live in such an
environment that his character will
respond Jo Vs healthy influences. It
Is better for a child to be reared in
a hor.'.f* where the living is plain and
the thinking high rather than in a
home where the thinking Is petty
and trivial, though the living may be
as fat as a pig eating swill out of a
golden trough
"The first right of the child.” Clax
ton continued, "is to live and not “>
die. Formerly two out of every five
children died when ven* voung. It is
the duty of parents to see that their
child is born with vitality enough a
live. In the second place, the pa
rents must see that home conditions
are sanitary. Mothers must know
how to care for children. O’r’s
should be taught domestic science
and the care of the children in the
schools.
"Trie second right of the child is
to reach manhood and womanhood
in good health, so as to do his nr h°r
work with power and strength and
to reach a good old age.”
Rich Girl Takes Job
In Milliner's Shop
Young Woman Works to Equip Her
self for Teaching at Eastern
Girls' School.
U. S. Commissioner’s Idea
Of the Rights of Children
To live and not to die.
To reach manhood and woman
hood in good health.
To be born with a good name.
To have a joyous childhood.
Induction into appreciation of
institutional life.
Induction into understanding of
religious heritage.
Right to ha^ve individuality re
spected.
Foreign-Born Women
Voting Is Restricted
Illinois Attorney General Outlines
Conditions Under Which They
Can Cast Ballots.
SPRINGFIELD. ILL.,* Aug. 16.—In
answer to Mayor Schrlver, of Rock
Island, for an opinion on votes for
women under the new suffrage law
and to govern authorities in an ap
proaching election, Attorney General
Lucey to-day held:
"That a foreign-born woman who
marries a citizen of the United States,
whether such citizen be natural born
or naturalized, by such an act of mar
riage becomes a citizen of the United
States.
"An unmarried foreign-born woman
whose father did not become natural
ized until after she arrived at her ma
jority, would not, by such act of nat
uralization upon the part of her fa
ther, become a citizen of the United
States.
“A woman born in the United
States whose father was not natural
ized prior to her arriving at her ma
jority is a citizen of the United
States.’’
Leaves Rich Man’s
Home for Kitchen
Canadian’s Wife Arrested Says She
Prefers Love to Comfort
and Luxury.
MINNEAPLOIS, Aug. 16.—In order
to be near her first husband, whom
she declared she had always loved, |
Mrs. J. F. Bradford, who says she is
the wife of a wealthy business man
of Medicine Hat, left her husband’s
comfortable home eight months ago
and came here where, until a few
days ago, she worked as a domestic
in a kitchen.
H. M. Cherron, the half-breed In
dian whom sue had married in Still
water fourteen years ago when 3he
was 16. was arrested with her. Mrs.
Bradford, herself part Indian, told
the police that she married Bradford
eighteen months ago in Canada. Life
with, him was not pleasant, she said,
so she took her two children by her
first marriage and was joined oy
Cherron.
Fathers to Learn
To Care for Babies
For Twenty Years Efforts to Put
Woodland. Colo., on the Map
Were Useless.
WOODLAND PARK, COLO., Aug
151—The women of Woodland Park
have started a movement to put the
town on the map of Colorado’s sum
mer resorts.
Twenty years ago the men of the
town tried it and their efforts ende, 1
a few years ago in the best building
lots selling for taxes.
When the men of two decades ago
thought the town offered great In
ducements, they voted $20,000 In
bonds and built a water system and
an artificial lake in the center of the
town.
There wer*’ bandstands built in the
w«ods around the town, and a bard
was maintained for two or three sum
mers. Then the bottom fell out.
The other day the waterworks bonds
became due. The men who had been
the prime movers in the boom of
twenty years ago were discourag'd
and their daughters and wives took
up the affairs of the town.
They organized the Woodland Park
Improvement Association. The asso
ciation succeeded in having the bond
ed indebtedness compromised for
$6,000 and the town now has the
money to pay the bond., and Improve
the water system.
The women have decided to have a
series of "tag” days and entertain
ments by which they will raise funds
to put In street lights street signs,
lights at the Color .(in Midland sta
tion and other improvements.
The women are gning to work now
to make Woodland Park an important
station on the new internati*»nal auto
mobile highway, which probably will
pass through here. They nave an
organization of 50 active members,
and are going to show their fathers,
husbands and brothers the right way
to put a town on the map. They have
done more in a week than the men
have done in twenty years, and the
men have about concluded that they
are amateurs in town building.
Slaver’s Children
Cause Bishop's Plea
Family Needs Prisoner More Than
State, Minister Declares in
His Petition.
0? START
Yearning to See Dixie and West Prompts Young
Pair to Make Hazardous Journey.
Would you have a »llm, youthful
figure? Though no longer young,
It may be yours.
Dri"^ “GET SLIM”
A delicious fruit
combination, in pow
der form, to be dis
solved in your drink
ing water and taken
when thirsty, at any
time and In any quan
tity.
Not one drop of
medicine—not laxa
tive. Positively not
injurious. Pure Food
Serial No. 46516.
"Get Slim’’ reduced
me 18 pounds in 4
months without the
slightest change in
my mode of livirg
It improved both my
health and appear
ance. I believe it the
simplest and easiest
way of controlling
weight. Sold Say
Randolph Hairdressing Parlors
Atlanta, Ga.
-or direct from me.
JEAN DOWNS
Your Wholesale Druggist or
334 Fifth Avonue--33rd Street
Opp. Waldorf Astoria.
Call if possible. Booklet on request.
NEW YORK, Aug. -16.—“We have
never been South," said Mrs. Walter
Green half to herself. There was
yearning in her tone.
"Nor West,” said Walter Green,
who heard her.
They sat in their canoe as it drifted
with the tide, their faces turned away
from their Staten Island home, to
ward the South.
Mrs. Green looked at her husband
with a quick inspiration.
"Let's go." she said, eagerly.
And so they planned within a few
minutes the 7.000-mile canoe trip on
which they started yesterday and
which will take them not only South,
but West, revealing to them the
grandeur of the Mississippi, the
warmth of the Gulf Coast and the
stretch of the. Atlantic Ocean. The
two young persons, enthusiastic oa-
no' ! •‘* both of them, and inveterate
campers, will be away from their
home for ten months or more in Lhe
course of the journey.
Will Call on Wnson.
They started up the Hudson River,
going on the first stage of the journey
to Yonkers. Thence they will go
through the Erie Canal to Buffalo,
through Lake Erie to Ashtabula, then
to Beaver Canal and Rochester. Pa.
From there they will go up the Ohio
to Pittsburg, down the Ohio to Cairo,
up the Mississippi to St. Louis, down
the Mississippi to New’ Orleans, across
the Gu|f of Mexico and along tha
coast to St. James City, Fla., through
the Everglades and a. river or two tn
Palm Beach, up Indian River to Jack
sonville, along the Atlantic coast to
Chesapeake Bay, up to Washington
to call on President Wilson and pre
sent a letter from Mayor Giynor. Last
they will go by canal to Delaware
River. Raritan Canal an . river to
New York Bay and home.
A crowd cheered the gay young
couple at their start. A party of
suffragettes, admirers of Mrs. Green
for her daring, presented her with a
"Votes for Women” pennant, which
her craft wil’ L The' life-saving
crew of Clifton, tl Greens’ hom- 3 ,
gave them a pennant, which also be
came a part of the equipment.
Light Equipment Carried.
In order to make the canoe as light
as possible, they took only four boxes
containing provisions, camp equip-
page and clothing, and two large
duffel bags containing a small cir
cular tent and bedding. All was
covered with canvas, which will De
used as floor of the tent.
It is the intention of the couple to
put into a city, town or village each
night, pitch their tent and sleep for
eight hours. When the stores they
carry run out, they will get new sun-
plies at the places where they will
stop.
The Greens are anticipating with
the greatest eagerness the portion »f
their trio that wi 11 ♦'ke them
South, about the gulf and the South
Atlantic coast.
Neighbors Spur Lone j Trees of Ice Age
Bachelor to Marry Found in Illinois
Induce Him to Write to Widow He
Never Has Seen and Wedding
Follows.
CONCONCULLY. Wash.. Aug. 16—Mar
riage licenses have been issued to Bene- ,
diet Gubser, of Conconully, and Carolina
G. Marshall, of Ontario.
Benedict Gubser has been a bachelor, j
living on a ranch near Conconully, Caro
lina G Marshall, was a widow living
alone in Ontario. Neighbors of Gubser’s
took pity on his bachelorhood and pre- ;
vailed upon him to write to Carolina 1
Marshall, who was a friend of theirs, but
who Gubser had never seen and did not
know.
The correspondence was kept up for |
more than a year, and a short time ago i
*he came Jo Pine Creep to visit with
friends. They w r ere introduced at a
neighbor's and in a few days decided to |
be married.
Species Have Been Preserved
Through Thousands
of Years.
CHICAGO, Aug. 16.—Members of the
International Phytographic Society who
made studies among the hills and cliffs
about Lake Bluff this week discovered
there species of trees and shrubs that
have been retained in the region since
the Ice Age. This species, the Europeans
found, have been preserved through
thousands of years.
The poplar and creeping juniper, ex
amples of the Ice Age flora, rarely found
in this part of the temperate zone, were
seen flourishing vigorously beside the
beech, birch, oak and maple, which fol
lowed them in the normal succession
Lake Bluff is said to he "farthest south"
for the cieeping juniper.
clusively of young He is col
lege and city breu. and he "knows the
ropes” as well as the ordinary young
man about town. Ills sermons on th-
uplift of the city have attracted much
attention. During his “coke” tour ue
secured enough proofs of law viola
tion to close half the drug stores n
the lower part of the city.
Predicts Dancing Is
To Be Part of Church
Dr. G. Stanley Hall, President of
Clark University, Declares Grace
Should Be Encouraged. ^
GREELEY. COLO.. Aug. 16.—That
dancing is one of the best forms of
exercise that is possible to take and
that eventually it will become a part
and parcel of the church \vh/?n the
grosser forms of i! have been elim
inated. was the statement made by Dr.
G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark
University.
"Dancing in itself as practiced in
ancient times is what kept the Greeks
and Romans healthful and graceful.
The dances of those days were far
different from the kind which are
pcpular now and made strong men
and graceful women.
"Rhythm Is the basis of all physi
cal movement, and I am convinced
That this form of amusement, under
: he proper supervision, will become
not only an adjunct to the church,
which is proper and right, but to the
schools also."
ST. LOUIS Aua. 16.—Miss Delphlne
Force, prefty society girl and daugh
ter of wealthy parents, is now a mil
linery apprentice at $2 a week and
savs eha likes it. She recently ac
quired fame by quitting society to
become a professional cook Not that
sh** means apprenticing to be- her life
work; she is going to be a teacher of
domestic science at Dana Hall. Wel
lesley, Mass., in the fall, and as
millinery comes in the curriculum,
she han to know it.
Two months ago she applied for a
position at a big St. Louis store. She
was offered $ 1.5ft a week. She refused
and got $2. On July 26 her pay was
raised to $2. She Celt so good about
having her proficiency recognized that
she took a week’s vacation.
CHANCE REVEALS $200
SECRETED IN A TABLE
Dog Carries Mail 10
Miles for Master
Faithful Canine Postman Prefers
Making His Trips Between
Sundown and Dark.
COVINGTON, IND., Aug. 16.—
Charles Keller, south of this city,
owns a dog which carries letters from
Mr. Keller’s home to Philip Keller’s
home, ter. miles. When Mr. Keller
wishes to communicate with his fa
ther he fastens the letter on the dog’s
neck and Instructs him to deliver it.
The trip Is always begun between
sundown and dark, as this seems to
be the*time of day that the dog likes
to travel best. The following evening
the dog will return to hiy master with
a reply.
BRISTOL, PA.. Aug. 16.—Because
* table was too big to get through th<-
door at the sale of the household ef
fects of Joseph Hall, who committed
suicide, it was taken apart, when a
roll of bills totaling $200 dropped out.
BRPAKS TOOTH ON PEARL.
AKRON. OHIO. Aug. 16.—While
eating clams at a restaurant here.
Jack Newman, a waiter, bit into
something hard, breaking a tooth. lie
found a pearl worth $1,000.
Philadelphia Hospital Will Have
Training School Feature for
Paternal Nurses.
PHILADELPHIA. Aug. 16. -Physi
cians in charge of the Children’s Ho
meopathic Hospital have decided to
have a w’eekly clinic for fathers.
Heretofore they have conducted
throughout the year a clinic far moth
ers in order that a free course of in
struction might be given to show the
mothers how to care for the babies
and children. The course has given
such success that many of the moth
ers frequently expressed the desire
that their husbands might hear the
lectures, too. for they said that many
of the things that they went home
and told were not believed.
The doctors began to plan an in
vestigation, and they found that many
of the errors of childhood might be
corrected if the "Old Man” only knew
what to do in emergencies.
ST. PAUL. Aug. 16.—Explanation
of the recent request of Bishop Ed
win H. Hughes, of S \n Francisco,
that the Minnesota Board of Pardon**
consider favorably the application of
Matthew H. McNabb, is contained in
a letter to Governor Eberhart. Bishop
Hughes, a boyhood playmate of Mc-
Nabb, who was convicted of white
slavery, writes:
"My appeal >as not based on be
half of McNabb himself, but rather
in behalf of his wife and six chil
dren, who sorely needed his financial
support.”
McNabb’s application for a pardon
was denied.
Wedding Ring Made
Smaller for Another
Wife Enters Suit When She Finds
Husband Had Bridal Token
T ransformed.
LOF ANGELES, Aug. 16.—When
she discovered that her husband had
caused her wedding ring to be re
melted and made small enough to fit
the finger of another woman, Cleroa
Prentiss, a vaudeville actress, began
suit for divorce, according to her tes
timony before Superior Judge B. V.
Sargent, sit tine, for Judge Caban iss.
Judge Sargent, after listening to
her story, granted an interlocutory
decree from Colonel D. Prentiss, an
actor. The grounds were statutory.
Asks Court to Keep
Mother-Tn-Law Away j
Wealthy Nebraskan Gets Out Injunc- '
tion to Curtail Visit of His
Wife’s Parent.
OMAHA, NKBR., Aug. 16 Mrs. Levi
I A. Gardner, of Harvard, III., was yes-
1 terday placed under a restraining order
from the District Court ordering her to
} keep out of the house of her son-in-law,
j Leslie L. King, a wealthy business man
[ of Omaha.
I Mrs^j iardner has been visiting the
King family for some months, and, ac
cording to King, is causing trouble be
tween him and his wife. Mrs. Gardner
j refused to leave when requested to do
I so, and King applied to the court and
secured an Injunction. Mrs. Gardner |
moved to a hotel
According to King’s petition, he fur
nished his home at a cost of $15,000, and
ottered to pay his mother-in-law ex
penses to the amount of $15 per day if
she will go somewhere else in the city.
—
Government Authority Declares
There Are Big Profits in the
Diamond Backs.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 16.—The dta-
mond-back terrapin, aristocrat of the
dining table and king of the banquet
menu, need not disappear from the
sandy shores of the United States and
be lost to disciples of Epicurus for
ever if the business men of the na
tion will allow themselves to be awak
ened to the fact that there are fat
dividends In the breeding of the ani
mals.
Uncle Sam Is sponsor for this state
ment. Experts in the Bureau of Fish
eries are anxious that business men
shall read its report.
At Beaufort, N. C., the experts
started out four years ago with 40
females and 18 males, terrapin such
as may be found from Southern Vir
ginia all along the coast down to
Florida. From this small breeding
stock the experts procured 295 eggs
in 1910. Of the 295. eggs only 7 fail
ed to hatch.
In 1911 513 eggs were procured,
and of these 421 were hatched.^Even
better results were obtained in 1912.
when 650 eggs were procured and 538
hatched. The number of eggs laid and
hatched in 1913 Is expected to be far
greater. Of course, a terrapin must
be five or six years old before he i?
In the best shane for the table, but
this slow growth Is offset by the fact
that "one man may care for several
thousand terrapin.”
Terrapin farms, the Government
report says, should be situated on the
shore line of tidal salt water, where
a supply of fresh water also is avail
able; low’, swamp land where fish and
crabs are plentiful being preferable.
Best results are obtained by breed
ing the terrapin in pens specially
built, but not expensive in construc
tion.
Unlike the chicken breeders and
the breeders of other food animals,
the terrapin breeder need not worry
about disease in his stock. The Gov- j
ernment experts say: "So far as is
known, diamond-back terrapins are,
not subject to* epidemic disease, and
after reaching the age of two or three
years have no Important enemy ex
cept man.”
BANKRUPT’S REQUEST TO
PAY DEBTS JARS COURT
COLUMBUS, OHIO, Aug. 16—In
John Mitchell, of Troy. Federal Judge
Sater has discovered an honest man.
Several months ago, when Mitchell
filed his petition in bankruptcy, his
liabilities so exceeded his assets that
his creditors decided that the estate
offered "poor picking.”
Judge Sater rubbed his eyes and
read twice when he received a lette r
from Mitchel] stating he had recently
come into possession of enough prop
erty to pay off entirely his outstand
ing claims. It will take about all, he
said, but he desired to escape being
declared a bankrupt.
■“How's the Health?”-
Cun you *ay “I rnn filing fine ft” If
you’re run down and hate that “don’t rare”
feeling, you need
Dulb’s Pun Malt Whiskey
hpurune It Imparts and stimulates the mental
alertness and physical energy which attend*
perfect health. A tabloupnonful in milk <»r
water before meals ami retiring corrects stom
ach and t>owel disturbances, aidin'? digestion
and helping build new tissues by purifying, en
riching and revitalising the blood, thus restor
ing functional activity to the entire system.
right
bottle
s
A./ fw
BOLT KILLS HIM ON GRAVE.
CLIFTON HEIGHTS, PA.', Aug. 16.
Lightning killed Patrick Tooraey, 47
years old. on a grave In Holy Cross
Cemetery.
Suffice
..Aching Feet from
Congested Nerves
^.'French-heel Strain
- Excess Sweeting and Bad Odor
i-Mushroom Corns
Flat Corns
Corns
Between Toes
Inflamed Bunions''——
and Knob-joltu*
Tells Positive Core
For all Foot Troubles
Science has proven that nearly all foot trou
bles originate from a common cause; that of
injured tissues. The following information will
be welcomed by thousand* of victims of daily
foot torture. Xo matter how many patent medi
cine* you have tried in vain, fhls treatment
which was formerly known only to doctors will do
the work. T)6n't waste time. Get It at one*.
“Dissolve two tabiespoonfula of Caloclde com
pound in a basin of warm water. Soak the feet i
for a full fifteen minutes, gently rubbing the sore \
parts.” The effects are marvelous. All pain dis
appears instantly ami the feet feel simply de- I
lightful. Corns and callouses esn be peeled right 1
off. Bunions, ai hlng feet and sweaty, smelly J
feet get immediate relief. I’se this treatment a ,
week and your foot troubles will be a tiling of ,
the past. Caloclde works through the pores and (
removes the cause. Any druggist has Calocide i
in stock or will get It from his wholesale house. 1
Don’t be influenced to take something else In- 1
stead. A twenty-five cent box is said to be 1
enough to euro the worst feet.
MADE
SAME DAY
Get fee'ino
NOW—Buy a
TODAY!
The genuine Duffy'
*ure Malt Whiskey
is sold in SEALED
BOTTLES ONLY, by
most druggist*, gro-
s and dealers.
Should our friends for
any reason be unable
secure it in their
locality, we will have
it shipped to them
from their nearest dealer, express prepaid (cash
to accompany order) at the following prices:
4 Large Bottles, $4.30
6 Largo Bottles, $5.90
12 Large Bottles, $11.00
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey should be In erorv
home and we make the above announcement so
that you may become familiar with a Source of
supply.
Remit by express order, post office order, or
certified check to
The Duffy Malt Wtdskey Company.
99 White St., Rochester, N. Y.
Your Teeth
Examined
WITHOUT CHARGE
DR. E. G. GRIFFIN'S
GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS
24* Whitehall St.
Telephone M. 1708
Over Brown & Allen’s
HoursiS to 6; Sundays, 9 to 1
TWICE EACH YEAR
CROWN AND
BRIDGE
WORK
You should have your teeth
examined at least once every
six months, to see that they
are kept healthy. They may
or may not need treatment.
WE MAKE THESE EXAM
INATIONS FREE.
OUR PRICES, WITH FULL GUARANTEE:
SEv* OF TEETH . . $5 GCLD FILLING . . $1
GOLJ CROWNS . . $4 AMALGAM FILLING, 50c up
BRIDLE WORK . . $4 PLATES REPAIRED. 50c up
TEETH CLEANED, NEW PROCESS . . $1 up