Newspaper Page Text
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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, SITTEMRER 14, 1013,
!
' 7 D
LONDON
W. Orton Tewson
Chester Overton
PA DIQ Paul Pierre 'Rignaux O TC TQ) IT jl jVT C. de Vidafl-Hondt 0(0) /Ml IK J. M. E. D’AquIn
it / u. Ir^ 11 Marquis de Castellans ID) LL^j 11 1 n Fritz Jacobsohn 'D'a V li iDf George M. Bruce
SUNDAY AMERICAN'S SPECIAL CABLE LETTERS RECEIVED FROM ALL THE GREAT CAPITALS OF EUROPE
U. S. Girls Americanizing Europe’s Blue Blood
••*•4* +•+
Yankee Peeresses Proud Mothers of Nobles
Three American peeresses, who are now mothers, are shown. On the upper left side is Lady Decies, who was Miss Vivien
1 Gould, walking with her baby girl, who is in the nurse’s arms. On the right is Lady Camovs, who recently became the mother of
a handsome boy. Below is the Duchess de Chaulnes, who was Miss Theodora Shonts, with her son, the little Duke. The Duchess i
is a widow.
Women Declare That Franchise
Will Mean Much Toward Moral
Uplift of the Republic,
By GEORGE DUFRESNE.
Special Cable to The American.
PARIS, Sept. 13.—When the Cham
ber resumes, M. Ferdinand Buisson
will submit a report in the name of
the Commission on Universal Suf
frage favorable to women having the
vote. The Paris Municipal Council
has also voted in favor of votes for
women. In order to ascertain wheth
er women would be disposed to use
the vote if it were given to them a
Paris daily recently organized a sort
of symposium on the subject and in
vited opinions from prominent wo
men.
The Duchess d’Uzes considers that
votes for women is a matter of sim
ple equity, and argues that in those
countries where the vote has been
accorded them the moral level has
risen. Mile. Helene Miropolsky, who
is a practicing lawyer, declares that
in criminal jurisprudence it is a fla
grant injustice that women should
not be included on Juries, and Baron
ess Fauqueux asserts that the law
does not protect the woman who
works nor the woman who possesses
a fortune.
Maternal authority is insufficiently
established, and she thitika the time
has come for legislators io make
modern code. The feminine vote,
which would modify the spirit of the
code, would have the support of the
people and the approval of the di
recting classes.
In the opinion of Mile. Helene Du*
trieu, the intrepid aviator, woman
suffrage, thoygh it might be accept
able in Paris, would be disastrous in
the great industrial centers. “We
would have a revolution fomented by
a band of petroleuses,” .she says.
“Have you observed the attitude of
women during strikes?” she asks.
“Their violence knows no limit. These
women would constitute the majority
of our sex. As for the others, believe
me, their place is with their children,
and your reforms would have no use
fulness for them. You will never pre
vent an unhappy wife from being
beaten,” she says, “and if it pleases
her husband to take her wages she
will not be in a position to stop
him.”
Mme. Gladys Maxhance, of the
Odeon Theater, says that women
have distinct qualities which, united,
can give excellent results. She sug
gests that women should simply offer
to collaborate with men—in a word,
make feminism amiable and smiling.
265 Architects Plan
German Embassy
Committee Meets With Unexpected
Response to Offer of Prize for
Washington Building.
>eclal Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Sept. 13.—The German
overnment has met with an unox-
setedly large response to its re-
lest for competitive designs^ for the
?w embassy building in Washing-
m; 265 designs have been submit-
d.
The committee to award prizes,
nounting to $6,000, is already In
■ssion. Probably the result will be
inouneed in a few days. The head
’ the committee is the well-known
erman architect, Professor Franz
thweehten, but it is expected that
m’bassador Von Bernstorff who
ill be called in consultation, will
tve a large voice in the decision,
eing in Washington he best knows
e embassy’s needs.
MRS. FRANK PEARSON
1 sing this (Sunday) evening
at the
hotel ansley
-ing the concert from 6:30 to
0. Mezzanine Floor, overlooking
li’an cafe.
<s^gg| HOTEL
BP ANSLEY
ATLANTA.
GA -
The South’s finest and most mod-
•n hotel. , .
Table d’Hote Dinner served to-
iy (Sunday), September 14th, 6
m. to 8:30 p. m.; price $1 per
irson. , .
Tables should be reserved In ad-
ance if possible. Phone Ivy 1100-
Concert Program
. Overture, “Orfee aux En-
f ers ” Offenbach
. Valse Rente, “Songe d’Au-
tomne" • • • •i8F <c ®
York Medley 1913..A. Von Tilzer
:. Fruehlingsied ••••••%
Mendelssohn
i. Excerpts from the N. Y.
Hippodrome Prcduction,
“America” Klein
i. “There’s a Girl in the
Heart of Maryland”... Carroll
rs. Frank rearson and Orchestra.
Waltz. “Blue Danube”. .Strauss
“Sunshine and Roses”....
Van Alstyne
rs. Frank Pearson and Orchestra.
. International Rag Berlin
Intermission
i. Marche Espagnol Moret
“Allerseelen” Lassen
. “My Hero” Strauss
rs. Frank Pearson and Orchestra.
Grand Selection, “II Trov-
atore” Verdi
. “Song of the Soul” Breili
rs. Frank Pearson and Orchestra.
Bolero in D Moszkowski
. The Rosary Nevm
rs. Frank Pearson and Orchestra.
. “In the Land of My Own
Romance” Herbert
Fantasy on Themes from
“Carmen'’ Bizet
Special Sunday evening concert
y Hotel Ansley Orchestra from 6
o 10 p. m.. on mezzanine floor.
II. S. HIT'S IS
HOPELESS, SAYS
GERMAN EXPERT
Officer Who Visited Chickamauga
During Spanish-American War
Calls Guard No Protection.
By STEVEN BURNETT.
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Sept. 13.—A high German
I officer who visited the United States
j during the Spanish-American war,
and at the same time spent several
I days at Camp Thomas In Chickarnau-
ga Park, while about 40,000 troops of
the American National Guard were en
camped there, the other day express
ed his views on the American-Mexi-
can imbroglio to me. They were not
without interest to my American
readers, I think, although they may
not agree with him.
“You would have no trouble In
making Mexico give in Immediately
to your demands,” he said, "if you
had possessed a regular army worthy
the size and importance of your great
country, but General Huerta knew’
that you were not prepared to back
up your demands with bayonets and
that it would be too great a risk for
you to try to coerce Mexico by force
of arms.
*T must say,” he added, “that it
has always been a puzzle to jne why
you have not increased the strength
of your regular army. You have the
money to do so without feeling the
expense at all; you have no anti
militarists as we have here in Ger
many; nay, on the contrary, your
people are pervaded by a stronger
spirit of patriotism than I have seen
in any country outside of Japan, and
still you are satisfied with maintain
ing an army which is a mere handful
j of men which would not be able to
defend you In case, say, of Japan,
trying to attack you before the open
ing of the Panama Canal.
“You may say that you have your
National Guard, but without wanting
to hurt the feelings of that patriotic
and enthusiastic body of men that I
saw at Camp Thomas during the
Spanish war, I can not help saying
that two or three regiments of Japs
would be able to beat them in no
time, simply because they lacked dis
cipline and training. Let me say
this.” he concluded, “that nowhere
have I seen such splendid crude ma
terial for an invincible army; but, be
lieve me, when I say that, military
training stands for something. To
attempt to oppose a modern-trained
: and modernly-armed enemy with your
National Guardsmen would be noth-
i ing less than criminal.”
Automatic Soldier
Worked by Wireless
Invented by Dane
Experts Say It Is Deadliest Instru
ment of War Ever Devised,
Shoots, Then Disappears.
JEWEL THIEVES
OS INCOGNITO 81 PERSECUTED
ENGLISH HIT IS T8 KBIT 8. S.
Crown Prince of Germany, Wife
and Three Brothers Wander
ing Through Island,
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 13.—Four of Em
peror William’s sons have invaded
England recently. They are in the
strictest incognito, which is just as
well, else some ultra-jingoes W’ould be
crying, “German spies.”
Crown Prince William and his vi
vacious wife have been traveling for
a fortnight as the Count and Countess
of Hohenstein of Potsdam. They
stayed for some days at Clifton. The
Crown Princess also tried the famous
waters at Bath.
Prince August William and Prince
Eitel Frederick have been seen prom
enading the streets of Edinburgh,
while the youngest son, Joachim, is
also somewhere in Scotland.
The Kaiser readily gave his sons
permission to visit England on the
strict understanding, however, that
they were to go about as qifietly as
possible, just like ordinary private cit
izens.
This was precisely what his sons
wanted, more especially the Crown
Prince, who, although appearing anti-
British when his countrymen expect
him to be so. is really devoted to
everything English.
Young Prince Joachim, who is the
liveliest of the four, positively refused
to have any attendants, arid his errat
ic movements have caused some anx
iety to the German Embassy.
H.G. Wells Becomes
Ardent Caravanner
Novelist Finds He Can Do Better
Work in One-Horse Wagon
Than House.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 13.—H. G. Wells
Is spending this month in caravan
ning in Kent. He has recently be
come an ardent member of the Cara
van Club, and for the last week or
two he and his one-horse caravan
have been peregrinating in the neigh
borhood of Sevenoaks.
Mr. Wells, who all his life has been
keen on exercise and all outdoor
things, says he finds he does more
satisfactory literary work in a cara
van than in a study.
His next novel, which will appear
in the autumn, is to deal with the
eternal problem of established reli-
I gion. The author labors under no ne
cessity to write, for his income from
' royalties is between $10,000 and $15,-
000 a year. For a single column in
the daily papers he is paid $160.
Special Cable to The American.
ST. PETERSBURG. Sept. 13.—N.
A. Shakhoff, the famous Moscow mil
lionaire, is starting for New York
next week on his first visit to the
United States.
Mr. Shakhoff is famous through
out.Russia as the man who brings up
and educates the children of people
who have got into political trouble.
Some months ago, when the political
police in St. Petersburg raided the
Witmer Academy on the ground that
the pupils were reading liberationist
literature, the latter were forbidden
entrance into any educational institu
tion in Russia. Mr. Shakhoff forth
with defrayed the travel, board and
education fees of any of them who
wished to complete their training out
side of Russia.
Recently the Russian Education
Department selected the 5 per cent
of Jew’s, the maximum allowed in the
higher educational establishments in
Russia, by draw’ing lota, instead of. as
previously, after an examination. Mr.
Shakhoff, who is an Orthodox Rus
sian Christian, is now sending many
of those -who had gold medal quali
fications, but had not draw’n success
ful lottery nurhbers, to finish their
education in France or Switzerland.
Recently there has been some,
feeling displayed both in Geneva
University and In Sorbonne, in Paris,
against foreign students.
Mr. Shakhoff says that if condi
tions there prove unsatisfactory, he
will inquire during his visit to. the
United States whether he can not
send his protege to get an American
education.
Daughter of Kaiser
Meets Hoi Polloi
Shows Independence by Spending
Hour in Hotel Tea Room, Un
recognized by Crowd.
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN, Sept. 13.—Princess Vic-
I toria Louise, the Kaiser’s only daugh-
! ter, recently wedded to the Duke of
J Brunswick, upset the royal traditions
this week by taking seats at the only
vacant tea tables at the Hotel Adlon,
where they were wedged in between
a successful New York lawyer and
the representative of a Chicago pack
ing interest.
Few recognized the pair, nnd for
an hour the Princess scanned the
crowd, keeping her big husband
duly supplied with tea talk.
Under the traditions of the Gor
man court, members of the royal
| family are not to appear in places
j where they might come into contact
with ordinary mortals. Hitherto
I the Princess has strictly obeyed
these restrictions, but now’ she is us-
1 serting her Independence.
Lady Camovs, Lady Decies and Duchess
Chaulnes Rejoice in International
Offspring.
De
Spurious Antiques
Bait for Americans
Cottages Along Roads Out of London
‘Planted’ With Alleged
Old Furniture.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 13.—Pieces of “an
tique” furniture, whose origin only
the Bond street dealers know’, are
increasing. Business is booming in
alleged Jacobean sideboards, old
dressers and Georgian corner cup
boards.
A new scheme has increased the
trade. The spurious furniture is |
placed in cottages on roads most j
frequented by Americans and other ;
foreign motorists and tourists.
"Unwillingly” the cottagers sell
their “heirlooms” for a high price, j
If the buyer should pass again he
would find precisely similar "an
tiques” awaiting a new purchaser.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON. Sept. 13.—The charm of
Yankee girls is Americanizing the
blue blood of some of the most aris
tocratic families in Europe.
Lady Camoys, who was Miss Mil
dred Sherman, of New York, is the
latest American girl to aid in this
movement. She is the mother of a
fine baby boy, whose American ances
try is spoken by every feature of his
face.
Lady Camoys is the third New
York girl within the past five years
or so who has married into the no
bility and who has given birth to a
chilfj. The two other American peer
esses who are the mothers of titled
heirs tare the Duchess deChaulnes,
formerly Miss Theodora Shonts,
daughter of Theodore P. Shonts, the
traction magnate, and Lady Defies,
w’ho was Helen Vivien Gould, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs, George Jay Gould.
Miss Sherman was one of the
bridesmaids when Lord Decies, one
of the Beresfords, led Miss Gould to
the altar in February. 1911, in St.
Bartholomew's Church in this city.
Lord Camoys, a friend of the bride
groom, came to thi* country to attend
the wedding and he and Miss Sher
man met for the first time.
Before long it became apparent to
their friends that there was going to
be another wedding march. Expecta
tions in this direction were fulfilled
and in November of the same year
the heiress to the millions of Mr. and
Mrs. William Watts Sherman was
married to the head of one of the
most ancient houses of Great Britain.
The ceremony, in startling contrast
to the pomp and splendor of previous
inernational matches, was performed
in a tiny room on the third floor of
the Sherman mansion, 838 Fifth Ave
nue. it was stipulated at the time of
the marriage that any issue of the
union was to be brought up in the
Catholic faith.
Lady Camoys’ mother sailed from
America in March and was at her
daughter’s bedside when her son was
born.
The marriage of Miss Gould and
Lord Decies was an event that will
long be remembered by New York
Society. The ceremony was perform
ed by Bishop Greer in the presence
of many members of the nobility and
of distinguished American families.
A baby girl was born in August of
last year.
Miss Shonts and the Due deChaul-
nos were married in February, 1908.
Six weeks later the Duke died sud
denly in Paris, and In the following
November the young Duke w'as born.
The birth of a son fully established
the right of the widowed Duchess to
a place in exclusive French society.
Lost Passport Costs
Him Dear in Russia
American Prospector Is Mulcted by I
Means of Cablegrams by Offi- *
cials In Irkutsk.
Special Cable to The American,
ST. PETERSBURG, Sept.* 13— Bari
D. Blowers and Ralph Cottrell, of the
Linscott Drilling Company, of San
Francisco, who have been prospect
ing for gold in the Yakutsk region
of Siberia on behalf of the South
Africa Exploration Company, have
just returned to St. Petersburg after
extraordinary adventures.
When they arrived at Irkutsk,
Blow’ers found he had lost his pass
port. The local Governor made an
important matter of it, detaining
both at Irkutsk for a month to “con
sult” St. Petersburg, Blowers pay
ing considerable sums demanded for
“propaid telegrams” to the Depart
ment of the Interior.
He still is involved in rumbersoni'
negotiations at St. Petersbuig to get
a new passport to leave the country.
American officials here say they re
ceived none of the telegrams for
which Blow-ers paid.
Special Cable to The American.
PARIS, Sept. 13.—The automatic
soldier, the deadliest Instrument of
war ever devised, has been patented
by a Danish engineer, it is reported.
This machine is governed by wire
less telegraphy from a distance of 5
miles if need be. It consists of a
steel cylinder sunk vertically in the
earth and containing another cylin
der which rlve» out of the ground
when the delicate machinery is set
in motion by wireless.
In the second cylinder is affixed an
automatic rifle which immediately
pumps bullets in the direction in
which it Is pointed, firing 400 time*
with speed and accuracy.
Then the rifle and its cylinder sinks
back into the buried cylinder, w r here
an enemy can find it only with great
difficulty.
Some hundreds of such automatic
soldiers could defend a position
against a large force of infantry.
Auto, Like Cat, Lands
On 'All Fours' After
Plunge of Sixty Feet
Four Americans Have Narrow Es
cape From Death When Car
Leaps Into Chasm.
Special Cable to The American.
TURIN, ITALY, Sept. 13.—Four
Americans, tw’o women and two men,
are in the hospital at Aosta suffering
from injuries received in an accident
w’hich missed being a w holesale trag
edy by a hair's breadth.
Mrs. Beverley Duer, her son, a Mrs.
Smith and their American chauffeur,
w'ere on their w’ay to Savoy in a mo
tor car when the machine got beyond
the driver's control and plunged over
a 600-foot chasm near Little St. Ber
nard Pass. Instead of falling to the
bottom the machine landed upright on
a ledge 60 feet from the top The two
women were severely injured, but the
tw’o men were only jarred, bruised and
cut. The machine was demolished.
Bagpipe Craze to
Come to America
Englishmen Have Taken Up Scot
tish Instruments and Visitors From
U. S. Follow Example.
IS 51,12,18
At Least Six Bands Are In the
International Combine—Two
of Them Are American.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 13.—There is a
craze to learn to play the inspiring if
not always tuneful bagpipes, and
Americans are among the most eager
to master Scotland's national musi
cal Instrument.
The Prince of Wales set the fash
ion. He learned the bagpipes at
Oxford and now delights his Scottish
friends by skirling "The Flowers of
the Forest” and “The Land of tho
Seal.”
“Usually I have about thirty pupil*
a year, but at the moment I have
as many as sixteen at once,” said
O. H. Starck, the pipe-major of the
London Irish Rifles, who makes and
teaches the bagpipes.
“An American told me the other
day I ought to go out there. 'There's
a fortune for you there Just now,'
he said. 'People arc crazy to learn
the bagpipes and to hear them
played.’ ”
W0MAN781, CROSSES SEA
TO WED SUITOR, AGED 70
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Sept. 13.—Another case
of “love’s young dream” has Just come
to light. Mrs. Mary Brown, aged 81,’
has left her home in Kent and gone
to Victoria, British Columbia, to be
married to a man of 70. The couple
have been corresponding for the past
ten years.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Rept. 13.—About $1,662.--
500 of Jewels, gold and bonda has
been stolen during the last eighteen
months by the members of a gigan
tic international trust of jewel
thlefves.
Of all these Immensely valuable
gem* few have been recovered, de
spite the earnest and sagactoue ef
forts of the detectives of seven coun
tries. America, England, Russia, Bel
gium, France, Holland and Germany.
These astounding statements are
made on the authority of the highest
officials of Scotland Yard, They say
that the search for Max Mayer’s
$750,000 peArl necklace, stolen in
transit by registered mail from Lon
don to Paris last July, revealed the
existence of this international trust
of Jewel thieves.
Six Bands In the Trust.
The trust comprises at least six
bands of scientific thieves. In the
actual robberies, each band works
by itself, they combine only to dis
pose of their spoils. Two of the
bands are American, one is composed
mainly of Russians, another of Part-
elans, a third of Englishmen.
The Scotland Yard detectives as
sert the bands combined two years
ago so that thye might find new
markets and so outwit the police of
Europe and America, who had learn-'
ed where they sold their loot.
Said a Scotland Yard inspector to
day:
"There is no business so profitable
as that of Jewel-thlevlng on a whole
sale scale, and accordingly the ap
pointment of 60 or so trustworthy
agents in the hitherto unexplolted
cities of far-off continents, though
perhaps expensive for one or two
gangs to attempt alone, became a
simple proposition for half a dozen
to handle.
“A rope of B0 pearls can be broken
up, and through this organization be
disposed of In a dozen cities as far
apart as Melbourne and Pekin.”
Here is a list of the ten successful
thefts, involving $1,662,000 committed
by the members of the international
combine in the last eighteen months:
Some Recent Robberies.
March 14, 1912: Jewels valued at
$25,000 were stolen during transit
by train from Paris to Amsterdam.
July 12, 1912: Three bonds valued
at $60,000 were ■Rolen from tha
Credit Fonder d’Algerie Bank, Paris.
July 23, 1912: Jewels valued at
$25,^00 were Rolen from the Princess
of Thurn and Taxis at Ostend.
July 31, 1912: At Moscow the
Princess Schakowski was robbed of
gems valued at over $500,000.
August 4, 1912: Jewels valued at
$75,000 w’ere stolen from Senor Cruz,
a diamond merchant of Lisbon.
November 27, 1912: Gold Ingots,
W'orth $25,000 were stolen during
transit between Bremen and Switzer
land. '
March 3, 1913: The Grand Duchess
Marie Pavlowna ti a robbed at St.
Petersburg of Jewels valued at $200,-
000.
June 16. 1913- Jewels valued at
$12,500 were stolen from a w’ell-
known Paris hotel.
July 16. 1913: The theft of the
$750,000 necklace during transit by
post from Paris to London.
The Scotland Yard inspector ha*
left out of his reckoning the value of
the jewels stolen at American sum
mer resorts estimated at $300,000 in
1911—the year the international trus-
was organized—somewhat less in
1912 and $500,000 in 1913.
Yuan-Shi-Kai’s Sons
To Be Quite English
Chinese President's Boys, Under
Lord William Cecil’s Wing,
Introduced to Nobility.
6peclal Cable to The American.
LONDON. Sept. 13.—Two sons of
Yuan-Shl-Kat, President of the Chi
nese Republic, bright, intelligent
youngsters, 17 and 14 years old. have
arrived in England with an English
tutor. They spent last week-end with
Lord William Cecil at the Rectory.
Hatfield.
Lord William, who knows China
and Yuan-Shi-Kai himsolf, is inter
ested In the boys and has given them
numerous introduction to nobilities.
The lads can not speak English.
They will be educated at Eton or
Harrow, then at Oxford or Cam
bridge.
MEALS HIT BACK? DYSPEPSIA. GAS,
SOUR STOMACH?—PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN
Try It!
Five Minutes Indi
gestion Goes and Stomach
Feels Fine.
Time it! In five minutes all
stomach distress gone. No indiges
tion, heartburn, sourness or belch
ing of gas, acid, or eructations of
undigested food. no dizziness,
bloating foul breath or headache.
Pape’s Diapepsin la noted for its
speed in regulating upset stom
achs. It is tile surest, quickest
stomach doctor in the w'hole world,
and besides, it is harmless.
Millions of men and women now
eat their favorite foods without
fear—they know It is needless to
have a bad stomach.
Get u large flfty-cent case of
Paj>e’s Diapepsin from any drug
store and put your stomach right.
Stop being miserable—life la too
short—you’re not here long, so
make your stay agreeable. Eat
what you like and digest it; enjoy
it. without fear of rebellion In the
stomach.
Pape’s Diapepsin belongs in your
home. Should one of the family
eat something which doesn’t agree
with them, or in case of an attack
of indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis
or stomach derangement, ft is
handy to give Instant relief.
Human System Poisons Itself
OtherwiseMostof UsWould
Live to Be Methuselahs.
ach and intestines, dissolves the tnio
acid which has accumulated and expels
it with the fermenting waste.
Take JACOBS' LIVER SALT in the
morning before breakfast. You will do
a better day’s work, and live longer.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is better than
calomel for constipation and bilious
ness Acta quickly and more thorough
ly requiring no Heanslng after-dose of
ell; causes no after-danger of saliva
tion; never gripes or nauseates. It
effervesces agreeably. No other liver
tonio has the same mild, natural flush
ing action, though many imitations
“ * ''-1st
Scientists say that almost every mo
ment we are poisoning ourselves Au
totoxemia. they term ft, or fl»lf Poison
ing Eliminate Autotoxemia, and we
could live to be hundreds of years old.
All food eaten leaves in the stomach
some waste, unused particles. This
waste ferments and generates uric acid.
and when urlo acid gets in the blood , , * *
it poisons the system—self-poisoning (in name) are offered. Insist that rour
Constipation. Indigestion, biliousness, druggist supply the genuine JACOBS’
dyspepsia, sick headache, lar.ruidnesa . TJ\ER SALT. If he can not, full size
and a weakened physical condition all
result from self-poisoning. j pi
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT i Jj
jar mailed upon receipt of price, $5c.
postage free. Made and guaranteed by
Jftpebe’ Co„ Atlanta.—(Advt.)