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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA . SUNDAY, SEPTEMTVER 14, 1,013.
Rays From Brain of ‘Wizard’ Edison I WHS
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Opinions Flash From Thaw to Eugenics
Inquisitorial Body Will in All
Probability Take Up Poison
Case This Week.
Back at Work After Brief Vaca
tion, Inventor Is Still “Human
Dynamo” at Sixty-six.
Thomas Alva Edison, as he appears in his marvelous labo
ratory in West Orange, X. J., in which he labors 19 hours a day.
OiEMTIEI H
mis isu
Tries to Aid Bandit
Who Killed Father
WIDOW SEEMS CONFIDENT
Sees Only Move* in Will Contest
in Charge Brought by Rela
tives of Dead Husband.
Grand jurors of Fulton County will
Isis week in all probability begin
their investigation of the death of
the late Josua B. Crawford, wealthy
Atlantan, whose widow has been
charged with poisoning him in order
to get his riches barely a month aft
er their marriage in 1909.
In the meantime, Mrs. Mary Belle
Crawford, the widow, is at her Peach
tree street home. serenely confident
that if the Grand Jury should indict
her she would be promptly acquitted
by a trial jury. She declares the
bringing of the charge of poisoning
against her was done merely as a
new move of the heirs of the aged
real estate operator,-who are fighting
for the $250,000 fortune that was left
to her.
Poison Presence Admitted.
The report of Dr. H. F. Harris that
traces of morphine poisoning were
found in the stomach of the deceas
ed is not denied by Mrs. Crawford
or her counsel. They simply contend
that this drug was prescribed for
Crawford during his last illness, and
declare that the attending physician
will take the stand and testify that
he administered the opiate to relieve
the aged man’s pain.
The Crawford heirs, however, take
an entirely different view of the mat
ter. They charge a deep-laid con
spiracy on the part of Mrs. Craw
ford and Fred Dumb, a barber non
in New York, and who is sought by
the heirs as an accomplice.
Their contention is that when J. B
Crawford, then in his seventies, went
• < i S‘ u Augustine, Fla., in 1909 in
search of health and to6k board with
Mary Belle Bishop, the woman then
•
and as soon as she could make him
will her his property, poison him, and
then wed Lumb.
The contesting heirs are nieces and
nephews of the man for whose wealth
they are fighting, and though the will
contest has been on practically since
the death of Crawford, it was not
until a few months ago that the
poison charge was made and the
body was exhumed for examination
f the stomach.
Sheriff Issues Warrant.
A Coroner’s jury at' Carrollton, the
old home of the Crawfords, returned
a verdict declaring that the deceased
had come to his death from poison
administered by his wife.
It was then that the Sheriff of
Carroll County mailed a warrant to
the Sheriff of Fulton for the arrest.
When officers went to serve it, Mrs.
Crawford was hot at her Atlanta
home, but she afterward surrendered
to the Sheriff here and promptly fur
nished the $6,000 bond required.
In addition tew the poison charge
the nieces and nephews have alleged
that undue influence was exercised
by Mrs. Crawford to have herself
made the chief beneficiary in the will,
and witnesses have been introduced
at the will hearing to prove that at
the time he uttered the instrument,
Crawford was not only mentally un
balanced through senility, but was
constantly under the influence of
alcohol.
WEST ORANGE, N. J., Sept. 13.—
Thomas Alva Edison, the “Wizard of
Menlo Park,” whose life has been one
invention after another, is back in
his wonderful laboratories here to
day plunged into nineteen hours of
Work a day, after a fortnight’s
cation in New England.
That Mr. Edison should take a va
cation at all is regarded as unusual,
for the “human dynamo,” as he is oft
en called, is a tireless worker at the
■age of 66. Fully recovered from a
slight cold, Mr. Edison has been en
joying himself at Monhegan, Main*,
then at the summer home of his
wealthy friend, Richard Colgate, thi
soap manufacturer, at Lak/ Sunapee,
N. H,
Mr. Edison looks to-day the man he
is. His heavy thatch of. white gives
h:m a distinguished appearance „t a
distance. He is about 5 feet 7 inches
tall and is thick-set enough to weigh
about 175 pounds.
The traveling public noticed him at
Monhegan, Maine, in Lowell, where he
and Mrs. Edison stayed overnight, to
break their long automobile trip, and
and Negro Finds Pistol of
Revolutionary Days,
BRUNSWICK,, Sept. 13.—A mys
tery comes to this city bordering on
one of the treasure stories of Cap
tain Kidd, and as a result Dr. W. B.
Burroughs is in possession of tin
old flint and steel pistol of the type
used in the* Revolutionary War.
A few days ago John Edwards, a
negro, was at St, Marys, and while
there a party of strangers engage!
him to take {'. < n\ o Talbots Islam,
which is non*- Fomandina. When th?
party reached the island, they landed
and instructed Edwards to wait on
the sho e until they returned. The
strangers came back in two hours an t
had in their possession three boxes.
After he had taken his passengers
Son
of Victim of Coffeyville
Would Pay Fine of the
Slayer.
Raid
‘FATAL’ CHARMS
JOPLIN, MO., Sept. 13.—For more
! than a decade Jame.s C. Brown,
{Joplin miner, lived with the Intention
of killing PTmmett Dalton, the only
surviving member of the notorious
Strangers Dig Up Three Boxes American Will Present New Plea|san g that terrorized Kansas twenty
I years ago. but last night he was here
to Italy When He Faces Trial
as Slayer of Wife.
Safer ‘Harbors’ for
Germany’s Airships
Even Subterranean Dock is Planned
for Kaiser's New Aerial
Dreadnought Fleet.
Special Cable to The American.
BERLIN. Sept. 13.—Germany i6 pro
viding airship “harbors” along the
French and Russian frontiers. Al
ready she has 30 hangars that shelter
40 dirigibles and are supplied with
stores of hydrogen end petrol.
* New and improved hangars, each
capable of holding two Zeppelins,
will be built at Darmstadt, Mann
heim, Hanover and three other cities.
Some will revolve as the wind varies
to admit monster airships entering or
leaving.
A subterranean dock is planned
to protect the airships from overhead
attack.
Now Well After Using
Eckman’s Alterative
The makers of Eekman's Alterative, which Is
doing so much for Lung Trouble, are contin
ually In receipt of wonderful reporta of recov
eries brought about solely through the use of
this medicine. Investigate the case of this
writer, who used Eekman's' Alterative and who
Is to-day enjoying good health:
421 Second Ave.. Aurora, Ill.
“Gentlemen: Pardon me for not writing
sooner, hut I wanted to see if I would stay
cured. I can now truthfully say I am per- \
fectly well. I have no pain, no tough, nov
night sweats, no hay fever. Since a child of S
two years I have Iteen ailing with lung trouble, )
which grew worse as I grew older. At the age S
of fourteen the doctor said If I could not lie £
sent South I would surely die of Consumption.
Every winter 1 would be sure to have either
Bronchitis, Pleurisy or Pneumonia. I had
Typhoid-Pneumonia one time. I had catarrh ^ |
of the stomach and bowels and had Pay Fever '
for the last few years; but have not anything
4 ,
ters sent to me. asking a history of my casp,
from any one suffering with lung trouble." ’
(Affidavit) ETTA PLAT#.
(Rl.x years later reports still well.)
(Above abbreviated: more on request.)
Eekman’s Alterative has been proven by
manv years* test to Is* mi«t efficacious in can s
of seven- Throat and Lung Aff (ti ns. Bron
chi#
at Lake rfunapee, where the Edison*
wound up their New England stay.
Unusually Vigorous.
Those who failed to recognize the
inventor saw in. him an unusually
vigorous man for his years.
If his hat was off, one noted in
stantly the wide, lofty brow, the brow
of a thinker. As General Lew Wal
lace said of Simonides, the steward in
“Ben Hur,” it is apparent that a man J
with such a head must have a tre- |
mendous brain from cubic capacity, if
nothing else.
Mr. Edison has bright eyes, gray-
blue eyes, that gate ever so keenly
But they are not merely sharp eyes.
They are kindly ones and humorous,
too; for “Wizard” Edison exemplifies
the old saying:
“A little nonsense now and then
Is relished by the best of men.”
Witness his Mttle joke about “run
ning up to Colgate’s to take a bath’’—
a sly illusion to the soap with which
his host is ever associated.
Brain Works Like Flash.
Dressed usually in a sack suit of
dark mixture, Mr. Edison is neat in
appearance. -*ny idea that an inven
tor has to wear mussy clothes anl
necktie askew does not apply to Mr.
Edison. Maybe he is naturally natty,
maybe Mrs. Edison sees to it that her
distinguished husband always is pre
sentable. Anyhow, he ! as well kept
as a man need be.
Speak to Mr. Edison and right away
you realize that you have started |
something.
He replies quickly.
His brail* seems to work like a j
flash.
His answer comes on the instant,
and is a full, complete one. Mr. Edi- i
son knows what he knows and when 1
he makes a reply he covers the j
ground.
He uses few gestures, but he keeps
his right hand cupned up against his 1
right ear because he is hard of hear- j
ing in the left ear and he uses the
right one. He has put his hand up »o j
that ear so many thousand times that j
he has actually pushed the lobe of the !
ear out a little.
Cordial and Democratic
He is as cordial as he Is alert and {
as simple and democratic as he is ;
cordial. Such is the best known liv- i
ing Inventor in appearance.
Mr. Edison has pronounced ideas on :
about every topic of current 1 hough*. 1
from “X-ray” gowns to mental stand
ards and from eugenics to “Casii*. ) j
Johnny,” as he dubs Harry K. Thaw. ,
Spellers Stumped by i
1 Rhythm’ First Word*.
Chicago Cl*ib Members All Miss and
Judges Order Spelling Bee
Started Over.
HERE ARE MR. EDISON’S VIEWS
ON SOME OF THE LIVE TOPICS
DANCES AND DBE3S—The weird dances and freakish
dressing are not an indication of moral deterioration, but mere
ly the expression of peculiar mental flights. They ate here to
day and gone to-morrow.
EUGENIOS—A splendid ^proposition. Affection will not
be subordinated. As physical and intellectual evolution takes
place affection will be deeper and more wholesome.
THAW—It is about time we lost “Casino Johnny.” The
country is better without him and too much publicity has been
given him.
AMERICA—A merica is the hope of the world. Here we
are constantly advancing, because the mental standard is con
stantly improving as the result of public school education.
TRUSTS—Trusts are good and bad. Government control
means the end of the trusts that conspire against the public
good. It is for the Government to regulate, the trust business,
eliminating the bad and protecting the good.
ROOSEVELT—A solid man, an honest one, who has been
under fire for twenty years, without *ne shaft by the enemy
striking a vulnerable spot. /
POLITICS—! am a Progressive. Advancement cannot be
attained without these changes. The Republican and Demo
cratic parties stand for the old order of things.
MEXICO—I jatins and Anglo-Saxons .do not mix and never
will. Mexico is incapable of self-government, ft would not he
wise for us to interfere.
VACATIONS- it does seem great to have a day off. What
a wealth of material there is for the human mind to enjoy if
one only has one’s eyes open to it.
WORN —Sometimes, after nineteen or twenty hours’ work;
I hate to give it.up, even for a few hours’ rest.
SLEEP -Sleep is largely a matter of habit.
ELECTRICITY We are in the infancy of electricity. If
is taking the place of sfoam the world over.
“CANNED” MUSIC—It has been the aim of all phono
graph manufacturers to eliminate the scratching noise of the
needle and the composition. Eventually wo will produce music
minus all scratching sound.
back to St. Marys, Edwards return d
to the island. He searched about the
place and found three square holes
out of which the boxes had been lift
ed. In one of the sinks he found the
pistol.
Yt .-terday the negro came to Bruns
wick and showed the relic to Dr. Bur
roughs, who, being a collector of wa>
time guns, purchased it. It is be
lieved the boxes the strangers carried
r .“ ■ i the island contained treasure
or were valuables buried there during
the civil War by residents of St.
Marys or Fernandina. The island i?
not inhabited, and it is thought 'he
men had learned of the burial of the
boxes by some of their ancestors. No
ether solution was offered, as none
of the party has ever been heard from
or seen since that time by the ne-
Speclal Cable to The American.
ROME, Sept. 13.—From the beau
tiful Italian lakes to the sunburned
hills of Sicily the chief topic of con
versation is the trial of the Ameri
cano, and a feeling of pity has been
aroused at the thought of the added
bitterness of the man fighting for his
life before a court in which he can
not understand the language spoken.
Porter Charlton himself, however,
has so far seemed undisturbed by
this consideration and has already
made arrangements to take lessons
in Italian—a desperate effort which,
of course, will have no appreciable
result in the few weeks at his dis
posal.
Lawyers are all agog over his
counsel’s intention to introduce into
Italy the hitherto unknown defense of
“brainstorm,” which is expected to
havb a great vogue with certain
classes of criminal lawyers. They
have decided that in'Italy It will have
more effort if designated as “morbid
fury” and “irresistible force.”
Prisoner Is Tranquil.
Of this “irresistible force” there is
at present very little Indication in
the prisoner. Ills conduct and words
are tranquil and deferential almost
to humbleness, while he neither ex-
: presses remorse nor seeks to justi
fy himself. Indeed, his attitude seems
to be that of a person taking a rest
cure.
Charlton has already exercised his
small amount of Italian upon his
jailers, and is much puzzled at the
difference between the Como dialect
land that of the Genoese stewards on
board the Re d’ltalia.
The slovenliness which was a
: marked characteristic of Charlton
j during his sojourn with his wife at
Moltrasio has entirely disappeared.
Indeed, although alone in his* cell and
unvisited by anyone, his dress is kept
in an Immaculate state. On one point
he is classed with the “crazy” Eng
lish, as he insists upon having an ex
tra supply of water for his ablutions,
over which his jailer grumbles, say- j
ing. “What is the use of washing
and then doing it all over again next
day?” But a few lire soon soothes his
ruffled feelings.
Wilson's Influence Talked.
Absurd rumors are flying about as
to what is being done for Charlton in
the United State*; as, for instance,
that ex-President Taft is using his
Influence witli the Italian Govern
ment, and that, if things go badly for
I the prisoner, President Wilson will |
i ask to have him pardoned—all of
! which is absolute nonsense, since
once he is in the hands of Italian
j justice and tried by a jury, even the
King himself can do nothing for
; < ’harlton.
In fact, any extraneous interfer
ence would probably prejudice his
case. Of this the American Govern
ment Is well aware, as It has not
even communicated with the Embassy
at Rome or the Consulate at Milan.
I at the city jail attempting to have
the former bandit released. «
Dalton was fined $25 and costs in
Joplin Police Court a few* days ago
when he pleaded guilty to being drunk
for the fourth time within a week.
Brown attempted to have his fine re
duced, and said if this was done he
would pay it.
“I want to return good for evil,"
the miner explained to Chief of Po
lice J. H. Myers. “In the Coffeyville
raid Emmett Dalton killed my father.
“I nursed an oath to kill Dalton for
thirteen years. Then I saw the folly
of my way of thinking. A few’ years
ago 1 gave up the idea and now 1
want to do Dalton a good turn by
getting him out of jail.”
Gum Chewing Brings
Health, Says Doctor
The Habit Exercises the Jaw and
Cleanses the Teeth, Speaker
Tells Ohio Physicians.
CEDAR POINT. OHIO. Sept. 13.—
A discussion of diseases and abuses
of sanitary conditions, described ad
causing most of Ohio’s sickness and
suffering, marked the sessions of the
sixty-eighth annual convention of the
Ohio Medical Society.
Gum chewing was approved by Dr.
H. C. Brown, of Columbus, president
of the National Dental Association.
Guin chewing exercises the muscles
and the tissues of the mouth, at the
same time cleansing the surface of
1 he teeth, said Dr. Brown, who added
that the American people do not use
their molars enough.
“It ie a fact to deplored that the
uncivilized have better teeth than the
civilized,” said Dr. Brown.
Weird Fascination of Woman in
Case Is Brought to Notice
by Friends.
DENVER, Sept. IS—The young
and handsome wife and the friends of
Francis W. Keeler, a Denver
have brought up another defense fc
his arrest with Mrs. Jacquanna Ru»
sum.
They point to the past record of
the woman whose weird fascination
has. according to the writings of Pro
fessor Oscar L. Trigg, of Chicago
University, caused several other men
to give all for her smiles.
Keeler and Mrs. Russum were ar
rested here in n hotel room at.d he. is
now a defendant in an alienation mil*
for $75,000 damages brought by tlie
woman’n husband, Thomas Russuni.
of Chicago. Keeler’s firmest friends
assert that Mrs. Russum had an irre
sistible influence over him.
”1 did not know the woman was
married,” Keeler told close friends.
“She had a fatal fascination for me
that seemed irresistible. When I
found she was married I suspected a
blackmail scheme, thinking she and
others had conspired against me, be
lieving I was wealthy.”
Blackmailers Reap
Harvest of $200,000
Los Angeles Chief Says Swindlers
Work Under Quise of Being
Private Detectives.
STOCK OWNER ENRICHED.
SPOKANE, Sept. 13.—Nearly twen
ty years ago Patrick Hurley paid $170
for 4,250 shares of stock in a Coeur
d’Alene mine. The stock is now worth
$1 a share, and Hurley han been lo
cated by officers of the cohipany after
six months’ search.
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 13.—Declar
ing that Los Angeles Is infested with
blackmailers, operating as private de
tectives, Chief of Police Sebastian
recommended to the County Grand
Jury and to the Police Commission
the passage of an ordinance licensing
all private detective Institutions.
Sebastian said he based his recom
mendations on a record showing the
payment of upwards of $200,000 in
blackmail tribute.
MEALS (ill BUCK DYSPEPSIA, BUS,
S81 STOMACH?—PLPE’S OiAPEPSIfi
‘Count the Flies,’Now
Slogan of Kansas
Novel Method of Making Merchants
Drive Out Pest Decided on
by Board.
TOPEKA. Sept. 13.—“Count the
I Hies!” instead of “Swat the fly!” will
| be the slogan of the State Board of
i Health for next year.
Without getting nearly the amount
; of advertising from such a war cry,
; the Health Board of Ohio has been
| getting results that are entirely satis-
factory by the application of a clever
I idea which the Kansas board has de-
I termined to appropriate.
Arctic Has No Terror
For College Girls
University of Galifornia Graduates
Sail to Spend Year Teaching
in Alaska.
BERKELEY, CAL., Sept. 13.—-A
winter in the frozen north has no ter
rors for Miss Florence Getchell and
Miss Lorraine Andrews, two intrepid
young Berkeley girls, who will leave
soon to teach in the high school of
Juneau, Alaska.
Miss Getchell and Miss Andrews are
| both recent graduates of tne Univer
sity of California, where they were
very prominent in college doings
They sailed to-day for Alaska and
will be gone a year.
Miss Getchell will teach mathemat
ics and Miss Andrews will teach Eng
lish. A number of sorority girls will
go up to Alaska on a jaunt next
spring, and will join the two girls and
return with them in the summer.
Try It! in Five Minutes Indi
gestion Goes and Stomach
Feels Fine.
Time it! In fjve minute.s 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 Diapep8ln is noted for its
speed in regulating upset stom
achs. It Is the surest, quickest
stomach doctor in the whole 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 a large fifty-cent case of
Pape’s Diapepsin from any drug
store and put your stomach right.
Stop being miserable—life is 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, it is
handy to give instant relief.
GIRL DREAMS COMBINATION
AND OPENS COUNTY VAULT
NEVADA, MO., Sept. 13.—A dream
aided Miss Blanch Richardson, Deputy
Treasurer of Vernon County, and as a
results the door of the vault in the
Treasurer’s office is open again.
A little girl visiting Miss Richard-
v v. n;; - , . j son saw the shiny knob on the vault
xt year the proprietor of the res- door and turned the lock. The office ,
!;! ’ 1 * nr store who permits Hies to force was -new and no one knew the!
-•
Rheumatism
which sometimes causes suffering almost beyond endur
ance can only be eliminated from the system by driving
out the uric acid poison from the blood.
Warner’s Safe Rheumatic Remedy
Roes directly to the seat of the trouble.
It is purely vegetable and contains no
harmful drugs; does not constipate, but
repairs the tissues, soothes inflammation
and irritation, stimulates the enfeebled
organs and heals at the same time. It is
an effective tonic and stimulant to diges
tion and awakens the torpid liver. Pre
scribed by doctors and used in leading
hospitals for rheumatism. Refuse substi
tutes.
" Three years afro my husband had rheuraa-
tlsm. Warner’s Safe Rheumatic Remedy cured
him when nothing elRe did anr good.” Mrs.
George Wright,210 Waverly St.. Belmont, Mass.
EAC0 rosA PUBP0SE
1— Kidney and Liver
Remedy
2— Rheumatic Remedy
3 Diabetee Remedy
4 Asthma Remedy
5- Nervine
a P;l1« /Conatlt»atlon\
6 PilU LlSlilousne.s )
BOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS
Write for a free sample
giving the number of rem
edy desired to
WARNER’S
SAFE REMEDIES CO..
Dept. * Rochester .N.Y
■X
i io may expect to find in his daily ma
j small cards* bearing some such mes-
j -age ns this:
2
business yesterday I counted fourteen
j flies. Yours respectfully.
“JOHN DOE.”
That is the Ohio idea. The Kansas
j Board of Health will hfve a lot of
card. 4 - printed and will get the wom
en’s Hubs over the State to distribute
to drill into the door. j
Miss Richardson dreamed of a com- '
bination that would open the lock. She
tried it and the lock opened.
hem.
BELLS ON FRUIT TREES.
LANCASTER. PA., Sept. 13.—Hi- j
ram Wagner does not propose to have (
his choice peaches carried off by •
thieves, bo he has placed bells on the 1
trees, which will ring with the slight- |
est movement of the limbs.
-WW 1 s- . . , gg
MA!
II
LOVE "CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF
ACCUSED SWINDLER IS
V0MAN ELECTED ON
Bronchi)
Stnbtx
y -t* m. Poes not contain j
/narcotics, poisons «*r habit-forming drugs. Fori
} sale by at! Jacob?' Drug Stores and other lead- <
( mg druggists. Wriie the E< knian La»>or»tory. *
S Philadelphia. Pa., for booklet telling of reeov- '
j erics and additional evidence.
CHICAGO. Sept. 13.—The word
“rhythm” almost broke up a spelling
match at the outing of the Empire
Stat£ Club at Rautina.
It was the first word given to the
twenty-five contestants—all former
New Yorkers now living in Chicago—
and not a person could spell it.
The? judges- conferred and started
over again, after promising that
“rhythm” would not be given again.
Mrs. Alexander Dennison finally won.
J after her ciose-'t con*:^; :L>rs had
| stumbled over the word “judgment."
About three hundred attended t!v*
| outing, which was in charge of J. CL
! Merrill, president of the ciub.
TRAILED FOR 5,000 MILES! PROGRESSIVE COMMITTEE;
CENTRA LI A, ILL., Sept. 13.—Alter
having traveled more than 5,000 miles
in an effort to run down a crook, Spe
cial Agent J- E. Stoy, representing a
Chicago furniture company, arrived
here this afternoon.
Stoy has been on the trail of this
man nine months, covering Colorado.
Wyoming. South D’»; m. Mi — ourl
and Sm; .ben -dt ’.'rate- <-f '
OarbomhUe. Duquoin and * S; a union.
He takes orders for a f a'. uuse,
the orders, ajid .he
LOS ANGELEss, Sept. 13.—Mrs.
John I>. Hooker, of San Francisco and
Los Angeles, has been unanimous'v
elected by the Progressive National
Committee at Washington to the of
fice of California national commit
teeman, to fill the vacancy caused by
the resignation of Mrs.
tr
Harmless “Fruit Laxative”
Cleanses Stomach, Liver
and Bowels.
M rs.
I goods are not delivered.
Progressive pa
is one of the- h* at known, woine^n a.
California, is now traveling in
Europe,
A delicious cure for constipa
tion, biliousness, sick headache,
sour stomach, indigos’ion, coated
tongue, sallowness—take "Cali
fornia Syrup of Pigs.” For the
cause of all this distress lies In a
torpid liver and sluggish bowel:’.
A tubioooonf.’l ro-pPJU means
all .constipation, poison, waste
n:i iter, fennepting fond and sour
bile gently moved nut of yojar sys
tem by morning without griping.
Please don’t think of “California
Syrup of Figs” as a physic. Don’t
think you are drugging yourself
or your children, because this de
licious fruit laxative can not cause
injury. Even a delicate child can
take it as safely as a robust man.
It is the most harmless, effective
stomach, liver and bowel regula
tor and tonic ever devised.
Your only difficulty may be in
getting the genuine; so ask your
Night School at Georgia Tech
Will Open September 17. Enrollment and
Registration September 15 to i9 Inclusive
Courses in Architecture, Mechanical Draw-
ing, Electrical Engineering, Woodwork,
Carpentry and Joinery, Foundry Practice,
Machine Shop, Mechanical Engineering,
Mathematics, Chemistry, English.
This Night School Is a Regular Department of Ga. Tech
Contingent Fee $5 Per Term. TUITION FREE
For further information write J. N. G. Nesblt.
Human System Poisons Itself
iruggist for
“<’a!!?ornia Syrup
to y*?ur drug.B. M t,
it’ll made by the
Syrup Company.’"
many counterfeit
watch out.
f*rt bottle of
OtherwiseMostof UsWould
Live to Be Methuselahs.
! Scientists say that almost every rno-
1 inent we are poisoning ourselves Au-
i< toxemia, they term It, or Seif Poison
ing Eliminate Autotoxemia, and we
' could live to he hundreds of years old
' All food eaten leaves in the stomach
Ho.-rie waste, unused particles. This
generates uric a’
ach and intestines, dissolves the uric
acid which has accumulated and expels
it with the fermenting waste.
Take JACOBS’ LIVER SALT in the
morning before breakfast. You will <fo
a better day’s work, and live longer.
JACOBS' LIVER SALT is better than
calomel for constipation and bilious
ness Acts quickly and more thorough-
I' - reoulrlng no cleansing after-dose of
oil; causes no after-danger of sadva-
i.nu; iitver gripes or nauseates. It
uT rvesces agreeably. No other liver
tonic has the same mild, natural flu
'' * ‘ • ' • .* > nt xio ' rule I X ' 1 J-r 1 ■ an ' mu . | l OH 1C I lie fillll- • III JIU. Uct l in a I IIU-
"1 v u't uilc / ; nd wV.t'ii iir' c ac<i gets n the blc-.d I ir.f action, though tr ary vroU th .
’< *■!:fo: ma F ig S :i poisons the \Hen. se.if-pu'soning. < in name) are offered, insist that y< . *
, . } Co) y 'nation, ir.digcc bilious • . j druggist supply the genuine JA»VH. 4
che mirukS] ei f\ ER SALT if he can not, full ■-)/.•
' * *1 ’ \ ami a weakened physical condition aJl j jar mailed upon receipt of price. 25c.
e i pr_
result from self-poisoning.
JACOBS' 14Visit SALT tiualuM
Jft£ub*' PlisrpiAcy Co., AUaiua4-(Adrt.j
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