Newspaper Page Text
TARIFF WILL
HEAKST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATl/’^A, GA„ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1013.
’’SSSkiSSS, KBcwd Girls Now Want Vote
5 D
His Method of Showing Resentment
of Discipline Leads to
Charge of Arson.
Col. Roosevelt Becomes Their Hero
v«v
Leaders in H aberdashery Trade Fore
see FewCut Prices, More Increases,
but Stationary Values
Men’s Wear Lines.
in
WORCESTER, MASS., Nov. 29.—
George Laprad, an inmate of the South-
bridge Poor Farm here, is locked up on
a charge of arson as the result or a fire
in his room at the larin after he had
been disciplined for refusing to do the
chores allotted to him. Many means
+•+
*• +
Miss Shore Says She ‘Hates Brazil’
.Joan Shore, young woman who was rescued from den in Rio
ciiuics auoiieu 10 rum. Many means: T v » T » • > . m i
are used to discipline inmates who are' Janeiro nv tormer President Koosevelt and Mrs. Koosevelt.
unruly, and the method used in the case
of I,apred was a restriction on what
he had to eat at dinner.
When Laprad returned from the fields
where he had been lying down next to
s«»me work, the authorities denied him
his portion of hash. He raved for a
time and threatened to "burn the barn.”
Then he went to his room, and within a
few minutes the fire brigade was in full
uniform and with half an hour's work
before it. Laprad was caught on his
way to a restaurant.
If any Atlantan who voted for the Democrats who have just
passed the Underwood tariff bill had an idea that he would be
able to buy his suits, socks, underwear, neckties and shirts cheaper
as a result he is very apt to be disappointed. The Haberdasher
has gathered the opinions of some of the leading manufacturers
of haberdashery in America.
Nearly all of these men, prominent in their own branches of
the clothing trade, agree that the high cost of living represented
by the prices of flaming neckties and half hose will not be lowered
by Mr. Underwood’s tariff bill.
The comments seem to indicate that
seventeen items which were made the
subject of Inquiry will show no
change in price; two will show an
advance, and none will show a de
crease which will be permanent.
A situation In the foreign market
has something to do with the prophe
cy that prices will be maintained as
they were under the protective t&nff.
.Although some worth while reduction*
in duty were made in some lines, thi*
will be counterbalanced by the fact
that.the laboring element in the mar
ket across the Atlantic anticipated in
increased demand in this country for
foreign haberdashery and asked for an
increase in wages backed up by .so
threatening an attitude that the in
crease was granted. It is true, says
The Haberdasher, that some imported
hosiery, gloves and underwear are
cheaper already, but this lower price
is conceded to be only temporary.
Back to Normal Profits.
The cost of labor in this country,
which has jumped with such rapidity
In the last two years, is said to hav9
reduced profits to a minimum, and
manufacturers will naturally en
deavor to get their business back on
a basis of normal profits if they find
they can do so through the opera
tion of the new tariff.
Another factor which the Journal
points to Is the very keen competition
to which the retailer has been sub
jected in recent years. He has been
operating with a smaller return on
the volume of his business than ever
before in the passing business gener
ation, and he will try to take advan
tage of any benefit to himself which
the new tariff seems to offer.
Another powerful factor which will
have a great bearing on the situation
Is the well-known daring of Ameri
can business men as compared to
those abroad, who will be compelled
to seek our markets if they are to
profit by the lower tariff.
“It is acknowledged by all close stu
dents of business conditions.” says
The Haberdasher, “that we have pro
gressed so much more rapidly than
the makers abroad that in some re
spects, notably in originality, progres
sive selling methods, commercial dar
ing and appreciation of the power of
advertising, that it would be impos
sible for foreigners to make any dent
in our supremacy here.”
Continuing the article says:
"From a survey of the interviews
we have had we conclude that the new
tariff will affect prices on the various
articles of men’s dress as follows:
“Clothing, no change: if any reduc
tion, it will be only temporary. Col
lars and shirts, no change. Cravats,
no change in low and medium priced
grades; advance in best grades. Hand
kerchiefs*. no change. Shoes, advance.
Night robes, bath robes and pajam.as,
no change. Hats, no change. Under
wear, no change. Hosiery, no change;
a few styles lower. Gloves, no
change. Umbrellas, no change. Sus
penders, no change. Belts, no change
Garters, no permanent change, but a
temporary decrease. Jewelry. no
change.”
The Haberdasher says that the men
who have been asked to give opinions
on the situation are recognized ex
perts in their respective lines of
business. F. F. Peabody, of Cluett,
Peabody & Co., of Troy, N. Y., says:
“It will take some months for those
retailers who may buy foreign goods
to place their orders, adjust their stock
conditions for them, receive the goods
and put them on sale. We have no
means of knowing what the prices
at the counter would be of any such
goods, but we firmly believe that the
imported article will be no cheaper
than the one produced at home.
Whether present home prices will be
reduced in any way to meet the for
eign competition we can not say untT
such a competition is felt, but we
doubt if there will be any reduction
in the prices.”
Neckwear Higher.
Tn the field of cravats and handker
chiefs. J. J. Riker. of J. J. Riker &
Co., of New York, has this to say:
“With regard to high-class neck
wear, if the present condition of for
eign markets both in woven goods and
raw silk, continues, neckwear prices
will be higher. The possible supply
of raw silk is not as great now as it
was twelve months ago. A tendency
that will raise prices of piece goods
silks is the use again of ribbon. That
is always a barometer of the silk
market as affecting prices. The mo
ment that ribbon becomes worn the
prices of raw silk advance, and neces
sarily that advances broad goods.”
“We do not believe that the import
ing of foreign-made shoes will reach
any reasonable figure for at least
twelve months to come.” said Charles
A. Eaton, of the Charles A. Eaton
Company, of Brockton, Mass. “If be
yond that time our markets are
threatened with foreign goods it is
our belief that our home manufactur
ers will find logical methods to meet
any competition offered, but in any
event the retailers will not be bene
fited because of longer operating mar
gins on foreign goods, for in our esti
mation that is a question of local
store management, coupled with local
competitive conditions.
Foreigner Must Study.
“With the details, demands and
methods in our market to study and
develop, it must require close applica
tion and specialization by the foreign
manufacturer if he is to be at all a
factor in supplying it. We do not be
lieve that the permanency of the pros
pects will justify them in the deter
mined and persistent effort necessary
to secure it.”
Ministers Buy Space
To Get Weddings
SEATTLE, Nov. 29.—A silent battle
is being waeed on Courthouse Hill by
three ministers of the gospel, the
Rev. August Sandell, the Rev. George
Kindred and the Rev. A. E. Greene,
whose offices surround the courthouse
on two sides, bearing announcements
of their calling and the further state
ment that they perform marriage cer
emonies. Mr. Kindred goes to the
extent of buying newspaper space.
Underlying the question of mar
riage ceremonies is a total of approx
imately $30,000 paid out annually in
fees.
The Rev. August Sandell, the pi
oneer in the business, uses an auto
mobile in going to and returning from
work.
Before competition became so
strong the Rev. Mr. Sandell is said
to have taken in from $300 to $700 a
month in fees.
Cat Dines on Fish
From Marble Fount
NEW YORK, Nov. 29.—The daily dis-
apearance of some of the goldfish in
the marble and bronze fountain in the
men’s cafe in the Plaza Hotel was ex
plained when a watchman concealed in
the room after it had been closed for
the night, found a Maltese cat from the
culinary department fishing with his
paws in the tank, from which he had re
cently extracted three Japanese gold
fish worth $3 each.
The fountain, consisting of a marble
basin, bronze pedestal, topped by a large
glass globe, into which the fish may
swim from the bottom of the pedestal
was put up a month ago. and stocked
with 50 fish. The fish had vanished so
rapidly of late that it was suspected
that somebody was taking them for
souvenirs.
Cow Devours Vest;
6-Year Suit Ensues
COLUMBUS, OHIO, Nov. 29.—Be
cause a cow ate a vest July, 1907, six
years of litigation and hundreds of dol
lars in court costs followed.
The vest contained a lease on gas
land in Licking County and provided
that the Bennington oil and Gas Com
pany lease 245 acres of land from Park
DeCrow. The vest was hung on a rail
fence by Justice Shipley, who drew the
instrument, while the Magistrate drank
from a spring. The cow grabbed the
waistcoat while Shipley’s back was
turned Litigation over the lease en
sued and has been going on ever since.
Vctim of Pellagra
Drinks Carbolic Acid
SPA'RTANBI’RG, Nov. 29. -Afflict
ed with pellagra. W. M. Meares, a
white man 52 years of age. drank
three ounces of carbolic acid at his
home on West Perry street and was
later found dead by members of the
family. •
Meares, a carpenter, eontraetod the I
disease about a year ago and it had !
affected him in a manner that he i
was unable to work at his trade. It 1
is thought the disease had affected his
mind.
Boy of Sixteen on
Hike of 1,180 Miles
Uses His Fishing Rod
To Loot Two Homes 1
They Have Families to Support,
and Demand Right to Get
Fat or Grow Beard.
It’s the Longest Word in the
Language, and It Ought to
Squelch ’Em.
Came in Patches. Almost All Over
Her. Like Ringworm. Made Sores
and Itched, Cuticura Soap and
Cuticura Ointment Cured.
Clarendon. N. C. — "My baby was
broken out with a red, thick and rough
looking humor when about two month* old.
It would come in patches
A - and went almost all over
y her In that way. The
places were like ring
worm and as they would
spread they would turu
red and make sores and
itch. The trouble went
to her face and dis
figured her badly. Her
clothes irritated it.
"I used several different kinds of salves
that woe* recommended for the trouble and
and .but they did no good.
1 saw the advertisement of Cuticura Soap
and Ointment and I got p sample and in one
night s time I could see a change in the
redness and in two days the place would be
nearly gone. I sent and got one twenty-
five-cenl cake of Cuticura Soap and two j
flfty-cent boxes of Cuticura Ointment, which '
cured my baby. She was well in three
months." (Signed) Mrs. Beftha Sawyer.
Oct. 11. 1912.
Why not have a clear skin, soft- white
hands, a clean scalp and good hair? It is
vour birthright. Cuticura Soap with an oc
casional use of Cuticura Ointment will bring
about these coveted conditions in most ca.*es
when all else fails. Sold throughout the
world. Liberal sample of each mailed free,
with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card
"Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston."
Sg-Men who shave and shampoo with Cu-
ucura Soap will find it best for skin and scalp.
COLUMBIA, MO., Nov. 29.—Jefferson
Branson, 16 years old, a Boy Scout from
Great Bend, Kans., was here recently on
a hike to Woodlawn, Mich., a distance
of 1.180 miles.
He has been walking about 40 miles
a day. and has followed the Santa Fe
trail and the Old Trails road from his
home.
From St. Louis to Woodlawn he will
follow some of the routes mapped out
by the Boy Scouts. He expects to cover
the whole distance in a month.
The boy aspires to be a second Wes
ton.
Locomotive Pictures
His Fad; He Has 995
KANSAS CITY, Nov. 29.—According
to the University Missourian. J. H.
Westbav. of Columbia, whose fad is
the collection of photographs of .oco-
motives, has already 995 pictures. Nine*
ty-five railways in the Cnlted State!,
one in Canada and one in France are
represented.
He has the likeness of the oldest en
gine now in service, a Frisco engine,
built in 1869.
Her Age Fools Him;
Must Pay Alimony
MILWAUKEE WIS., Nov. 29.—That
he was duped into marrying Beatrice A.
Logue by being told she was 48. when,
it is alleged, she was 68, was charged
by Peter Logue when he appeared be
fore Judge Eohweiler for failure to pay
$4 a week alimony.
Attorney for the. woman said Logue
bought a diamond ring on installments
and tantalized the woman by flashing
the sparkler. Logue was ordered to
pay $16.
A PtAL CABARET I!
— v cvr/i/ //am- tzwn
J1EPniA.1T/
P-KUELDINNEi?
Germs on Pencils;
Will Be Sterilized
ROCKFORD, ILL., Nov. 29.-Rock
ford’s School Board and Board of Health
are on the trail of the germ that has
its habitat on the school pencil.
In the drawing classes each pupil
has his individual pencil, which is col
lected after class. When the class is
called again each pupil Is expected to
take ii's own pencil from the collec
tion, but perhaps, as often as not, he
gets another’s.
.''terilization of the pencils Is to be
followed.
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 29.—Police here
are searching for a burglar with a long
fishing rod who opened windows at
two homes, fishing out articles of
value.
Frank Meier reported that a burglar
opened the sqreen and after ‘‘fishing ’
a few minutes obtained his vest, g<»)d
watch and chain, a sea compass, gold
eyeglasses, gold spectacles, fountain
pen and pearl-handled knife.
At the home of Charles P. Garben,
the thief cut a hole In a curtain and
hooked a pair of trousers and $4.
Strawless Panamas
Now Made in Japan
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 29.—The
Japanese are now making Panama
straw hats without straw, and are
making them so well that it took three
experts of the ''nited States appraisers’
office and a microscope to find out that
they are not the real thing.
“Toyo Panama hats” is the commer
cial designation of these near-Panamas,
and they are made entirely of cotton
thread and paper. The paper, which
is enameled, is wound round the cot
ton thread and out of this cable the
hats are woven.
Actress Wants a Warship if She Ever Visits;
South America
N'toW YORK, Nov. B9.—Choru* boyn
have families to feed. Chorus girls
(some of them) have grandchildren to
educate. They have tried to do 1*.
on nothing a week while rehearst »g
and on $16 a week while showing.
But It has been a failure. That’s why
the International Alliance for Chorus
People was produced for the first time
In the rooms of the Women's Trade
Union League, No. 43 I3ast Twenty-
second street, last night.
That only 40 chorus boys and a doz
en chorus girls—most of ’em out of a
Job—attended the meeting doesn’t da-
tract from Its seriousness. Moat of
the countries of the world were rep
resented, it was pointed out. So 'Tn-J
ternatlonal” is not a misnomer.^
One chorus girl, who indignantly
denied that she weighed 300 pounds,
drew sympathetic tears by describing
how she was “fired” from a Broadway
chorus because of her constantly in
creasing plumpness.
Ability Alone to Count.
“And if we have a union,” she said.
“It won’t make an difference how
stout we get. We’ll hold our jobs
because of our abillt”.”
This same girl didn’t pay her 50-
cent Initiation fee in the new organi
zation. She asked If anyone had
change for a $50 bill. Nobody had.
A chorus boy, who announced he
had eight children and unappreciated
J genius, said:
"If we come on stage without a
shave, these young managers wax of-
! fleious. Even if* we should wear
beards, what Is wrong about that? A
I beard is an honorable possession.
1 When our union Is formed, thank
heaven, a beard or two In the chorus
won’t matter.”
Miss Mary Drever. president of the
Women's Trade Union League, spoke
j first. She said it was wrong for cho-
j rus people to be forced to rehearse
I sixteen weeks without pay. She
’ thought chorus people should organ
ize.
Miss Melinda Scott talked next.
I James A. Helbron, the temporary
chairman, talked after that, and Or-
! ganlzer Duffy said a few words.
When the speaking was over, ini-
; tiation dues of 50 cents were called for
—and the rooms were emptied quick-
! iy-
Fifty Girls Use One Room.
The chorus girl who said that 50
i girls had to undress in one room in a
! tiieater in Manhattan drew an inter
ested crowd when she continued:
"There is a window in the room.”
“Where is it?” asked the chor s
| men.
"Oh, what I mean," she sniffed, "is
' that there, is a window in the roof
that the management never opens, so
that we never get enough ventilation. ’
"And I’ve had to make my changes
| In a room with 60 other girls with
j only a sheet between us and a lot of
supers,” a new voice interrupted.
"The modestv of chorus girls must
and shall be protected," said a chor is
; boy. “Our union will see to that.”
Helene French, a showgirl in the
, “Oh, 1 Say” company, who was sup-
, posed to have started the present un
ion. did not attend the meeting. It
was said that she and several hun-
1 dred other Broadway showgirls had
i dinner engagements.
Will Get Charter.
The new union will first obtain a
j charter. After that it will try to get
half pay during rehearsals and more
pay all the time for its members. One
enthusiastic member moved that it
try to obtain courteous treatmen*
from managers, but she was shouted
down.
Deaconess Jane H. Hall, founder of
: the Three Arts and Rehearsal Flubs,
1 which are doing much good work in
i the city, attended the meeting. Dea
coness Hall Is interested in the union
and hopes It succeeds. She believes
! with many others, that choruses
should be paid during rehearsals.
“What’s the longest word tn th#»
English language?”
It’s just been admitted to the new
edition of the Standard Dictionary.
To pronounce It:
Stand erect Shoulders back.
Lungs well Inflated and mouth open.
Then begin.
It comes out of Shakespeare, in
“Love’s I.,abor Ix>»t.”
Here It ia;
Honorificabilitudunltatibu*.
Here is the modem form, as it will
appear In the new dictionaries:
Honoriflcabllltudinlty It has lost
two syllables.
ill S 1 1
Gel Out “ol the
Rut”
Don't continue, day after
day, In that half sickly
condition—with poor appe
tite, sallow complexion and
clogged bowels. You can
help Nature wonderfully
In overcoming all Stomach,
Liver and Bowel troubles
by taking a short course of
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH
BITTERS
TRY A BOTTLE TO-DAY
AVOID SUBSTITUTES
III I I I
GIRLS! BEAUTIFUL. CHARMING Hum.
NO DANDRUFF—2HEHT OANDERINE
Try
This! Doubles Beauty of
Your Hair and Stops It
Falling Out.
Your hair become* light, wavy,
fluffy, abundant and appears as soft,
lustrous and beautiful as a young
girl's after a "Danderine hair
cleanse." Just try this—moisten a
cloth with a little Danderine and
carefully draw it through your hair,
taking one small strand at a time.
This will cleanse the hair of dust,
dirt end excessive oil and in Just a
few moments you have doubled the
beauty of vour hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at
once, Danderine dissolves every par
ticle of dandruff, clea-fines, purifies
and invigorates the scalp, forever
stopping itching and falling hair.
But what will please you most will
be after a few weeks’ use when you
will actually see new hair—fine and
downy at first—yes—but really new
hair growing all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of It. surely get a 25-cent bottle of
Knowlton’s Danderine from any
druggist or toilet counter, and Just
try it—Advt.
80
■Whitehall
Street.
THE GEM
80
Whitehall
Street.
21 Shopping Days Until Christmas
Do Your Christmas Shopping
At the “GEM” and Do it Now
The "Gem” has advanced ideas about "Christmas”
Shopping. The Gem Says Shop Now.
The "Gem” will show you, if you31 call, that it holds
out substantial inducements for you to buy now. Induce
ments that spell a saving of from 25 to 50 per cent on high-
class novelties and necessities. The “Gem” says again shop
now and colLect at your leisure in the luxury of spare time,
and avoid the jostle and jam, the hurry-scurry, the brief at
tention and courtesy of overstrung salespeople; all this bus
tle and congestion of universal buying for Christinas is just
a short time ahead, history will repeat itself, so The "Gem”
is giving wise advice when it appeals to your own comfort
and convenience and says buy now. The Gem has scores
upon scores of suitable Holiday gifts ready for sale, right
now, that will gladden the hearts of kith, kin and friends at
Christinastide. I
Make The Gem your Christmas shopping headquarters
and start your buying now.
80
Whitehall
Street.
THE GEM
80
Whitehall
Street.
Again.
Big Fortune Hidden
In Old Miser’s Shop
FORT SCOTT, KANS., Nov. 29.—
When a brother of Thomas Lahey and
a lawyer searched the little junk store
and pawnshop in the negro district
where Lahey had lived many years,
they found more than $60,000 in Gov
ernment bonds and other securities and
a large amount of cash hidden away.
They also discovered that I^ahey
owned thirty-three houses in various
parts of the tow.n besides several farms.
Lahey often said that he Uvea on $1.50 a
week.
NEW YORK, Nov. 29.—"I never
thought much about suffrage before,
but now I want to vote so that I may
help elect Colonel Roosevelt to some
thing,” said Miss Gladys Waddell.
She and her chum. Miss Joan Shore,
are the two American girls who were
aided by Colonel and Mrs. Roosevelt
at Rio De Janeiro when a Brazilian
vaudeville agent wished to compel
them to honor a contract that they
found to be one that they could not
with safety fulfill.
“When l remember those ugly little
policemen with their fierce miistaches,
wicked swords and volley of language
that we could not understand, I arn
prompted to believe that 1 was in an
opera comique. The necessary thrill
ing rescue came at the psychological
moment, and we escaped through the
offices of a real hero. Richard Hard- j
ing Davis could have imagined noth- |
ing better. George Barr McCutcheon i
was never more romantic. I’m sure I I
do not know what we would have J
done ha 1 it not been for Mr. and Mrs. 1
Roosevelt.”
Miss Shore, who is but 19—one j
year older than her companion—nod- '
ded in approval. Miss Waddell is liv
ing at No. 64 West One Hundred and ;
Fourth street, and Miss Shore was her j
guest.
“We were in Rio hut two hours,” i
said Miss Shore, “and never again will j
we go to South America unless on a j
battleship. We wish also to give
thanks to Captain Cadogan, of the'
steamer Vestris, on which we went to !
Rio, for his share in our rescue.”
To Overcome Winter
Complexion Troubles
Leaves Wife andChild
Penniless on a Train
JASSAIC. X. J., Nov. 29.—John
Jaeobsky, his wife and child took a
train at Bridgeport, Conn., the man
declaring theySvere "moving” to. Pas
saic. Suddenly he said he had left
hi 1 * grip at the station and jumped off.
The train left without him.
Without money, Mrs. Jaeobsky and
the baby arrived in Passaic. They
have been sent back to Connecticut.
Body 50 Years in Lot
Now in Family Vault
SAVANNAH. Nov. 29.—The remains
of Louis Barie, who died In 1853, head
of an aristocratic French family that
made history In Savannah, are to-day at
rest in the old family vault in the
Cathedral Cemetery, after lying 50 years
In a vacant lot, in the heart of the res
idential section, in an unmarked
grave.
Mystery surrounds the circumstances
under which the body was exhumed, for
the last Barie is said to have died sev
eral years ago. Whether some provi
sion was made several years ago for
the ceremony that was performed this
week can not be learned.
(From Woman’s Tribune.)
If the chill air causes your skin to dry
and scale or become unduly red or spot
ted, before you go to bed spread a thin
layer of ordinai-y mercolized wax over
your entire face. Remove next morn
ing with warm water This is The Ideal
complexion treatment for the winter
girl. The wax gently absorbs the dead
particles of surface skin so gradually
there’s no discomfort. This gives the
underlying skin a chance to breathe and
to show Itself. In a week or so the new
and younger skin Is wholly In evidence
and you have a really matchless com
plexion. Naturally all its defects disap
pear with the discarded cuticle—as
chaps, roughness, blotches, pimples,
freckles, blackheads, sallowness. Usual
ly an ounce of mercolized wax. procur
able. at any drug store, is enough to ren
ovate even the worst complexion.
Wrinkles reed bother you no more if
you’ll use this simple face wash: Pow
dered saxollte, 1 oz.. dissolved In witch
hazel, Vfe pt. Just one application will
affect even the deepest lines, and soon
your skin will be smooth as a child’s.—
Advt.
s PELLAGRA Remi
Recommended By
Old County Health
Officer!
EATING MEAT HEEULAR CLOGS THE
Buster Brown
Camera $2.00
A perfect machine—satisfaction g larsn-
teed. Size picture 2 1 4 x4 1 2 - Leather cov
er- d; all metal parts highly polished. Iy>ads
in daylight. 6 or 12 pictures on a film. Mail
ed on receipt of price. Send for catalog G.
E. H. CONE, Inc., 2 Stores, Atlanta.
Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally take a tablespoonful in a glass of
J J water before breakfast for a few days
With a Tablespoonful of Salts *T? y ° ur kidnf '> s » in u ‘ en
r This famous salts is made from the
to Avoid Danger. acid of grapes and lemon Juice com-
° bined with lithia, and is harmless to
flush clogged kidneys and stimulate
them to normal activity. It also neu
tralizes the acids in the urine so it no
longer irritates, thus ending bladder
disorders.
Jad Salts is harmless, inexpensive,
makes a delightful effervescent lithia
water drink which everybody should
take now and then to keep their kid
neys clean, thus avoiding serious
complications.
A well-known local druggist says
he wells lots of Jad Salts to folks who
believe in overcoming kidney trouble
while it la only trouble.—Advt.
Most folks forget that the kidneys,
like the bowels, get sluggish and
clogged and need a Hushing occasion
ally, else we have backache and dull
misery In the kidney region, severe
headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid
liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and
all sorts of bladder disorders.
You simply must keep your kidneys
active and clean, and the moment you
feel an ache or pain in the kidney re
gion, get about four ounces of Jad
Balts from any good drug store here,
Pellagra can be cured — ia
being cured by Baughn's
Pellagra Remedy. Here is
positive evidence. This
wonderful remedy
NEVER FAILS
f «ur timplf directions are followed.
Write today for our FREE book
which tells all about the disease,
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AMERICAN COMPOUNDING CO.
Box 587— D JASPER. ALA.
Ala.. July n. 1M*
gnlllgent.
r>r J. H Grant.
Corpus Chrtotl. Tens*.
Dwr Doctor:—
You arc eorraet ; I am quits familiar
with toe Baughn Pellagra Curs. You
can prescribe It with perfect Impunity
and safety. It has cured a merchant
here a man 50 years old, a lady «• and
a child 4 years sf age. All were bad
cases ; ail are sound and wsll now
Doctor there Is on use in dabbling
with this serum treatment nor any
other do ' ‘ul remedy. The Bmughu
Pellagar* •• is the only established
aud sucoei-.ui treatment of today. No
oue here double ths efficacy st the eure
sr all.
We all know that pellagra is os the
increase and that Its invasion or fool
hold should be stamped out before we
have a widespread epidemic ef it 1*
this country as once prevailed with all
its deathly horrors in Itajy, Austria,
Gascony, Roumanla and Corfu.
As to my opinion of the Baughn s
remedr will say that I hare the moot
implicit confidence in It and when you
once try It you will prescribe no other
Vsry respectfully.
Your friend.
(fltgnedl D. D HOLLIS. M. D
*a County Health Officer, Lamar C*.
Alabama.
2 TRAINS DAILY
Lv4:12AM„5:10£M.