Newspaper Page Text
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11 KARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 30. 1013.
M RS. HELEN It, ROBIN
SON, of Denver, who
is the only woman Senator in
the eountrv.
Conductor on Limited Ill, it Gets Him
Substitute—Extra Coach Needed,
Has One Ready at the Next Sta
tion-Lighting Dynamos Used.
NEW YORK. Nov. J9.—■The con
tiuctor In charse of the Lackawanna
Limited that left Hoboken for Buf
falo yesterday morning at 10:15
o'clock wag taken ill while his train
running 50 miles an hour, 113
miles this side of Scranton, Pa, Or
dinarily a delay for changing con
ductors would have been necessary —
either a stop this aide of Scranton
while a telegram was sent ahead ask
ing for a relief conductor or else a
wait in Scranton while the relief con
ductor was being found. And every
delay of a train that is scheduled to
run from Hoboken to Buffalo in nine
hours and forty-three minutes is con
sidered a serious matter.
But there was no delay. The train
was equipped for wireless telegraph
•«rvice. it Is the only train no
equipped 1n the world. The conductor
notified the wireless operator, and,
while the train was ruahlng 50 miles
an hour and although mountains rose
high between him and Scranton, the
operator sent a message to the rail
road superintendent there. When the
train pulled into Scranton a little
more than half an hour later, a relief
conductor stepped aboard, grip In
hand and ready to take charge. Th.t
other conductor stepped off and
•ought a physician.
The train was crowded when 1t left
Hoboken yesterday morning, and 40
miles this side of Scranton the con
ductor saw that he needed another
coach. He did not have to stop »o
jH*nd a message by telegraph, and r.o
delay was necessary In Scranton
while the needed coach wai beinj;
brought up from the yards. The vrire-
les.s operator was notified, a wireless
message was sent ahead to Scran
ton. and by the time the train reached
that station the extra car was wait
ing near by for a quick coupling.
The first wireleps experiments w*re
made on the limited which left lust
Friday, and yesterday’s was the sec
ond and more successful. Scranton
and Binghamton are 60 miles apart,
but while the train was between the
two stations it was always in commu
nication by wireless with one or the
other of them.
When Mr. Foley and Mr. Sarnoff
stepped off the train in Hoboken la*t
night, they wer« Jubilant
“In my opinion,” said Mr. Fol*v,
“the wireless will revolutionize rail
roading. We won’t do the revolution
izing this week, maybe not this
month, but the time Is coming, and it
Is not far distant, when the wireless
telegraph on trains will make the
safety and convenience of railroad
traveling 100 per cent greater than
they are to-day. And as a preventive
of accidents i think the wireless will
prove of the greatest value.
"In the Hudson tubes and sub
way. for example, the train dis
patcher sits in his room and by the
flashing of lights knows exactly where
every train is. If two trains get dan
gerously close together, he can w ild a
signal that will almost instantly stop
one or both of them. I believe th.-t
the same thing can he done on rail
roads with the wireless The dis
patcher can sit in front of a board on
which the location of each train on
the lir»e will be .shown by wireless tel
egraph. If he sees trains getting too
close together for safety, he can send
a wireless message that will stop one
of them anywhere out in the coun
try miles from a telegraph station.
"But of course all this is in the
future. At present we are only ex
perimenting As far as they have
gone, however, the experiments justi
fy the predictions. Our first doubt,
when w’o contemplated installing »he
wireless, was about using the rails for
grounding the electric current. You
know there is a ground wire at every
wireless station, but you can’t have
one from a moving train. Bo we tried
sending our ground current to the
rails when we made our first experi
mental trip last Friday. The scheme
worked well and the first difficulty
was overcome.
"And another problem was settled
at the same time, that of supplying
the electric current for the messages.
We simply used the dynamos already
in the train for lighting puri>08es. We
had feared that they would not fur
nish sufficient current for the wire
less or, if they did, that using it would
weaken the lights. But we used all
the electricity we needed and the
lights ware not perceptibly dimmed.
I think it is certain that we can use
the rails for ground wires and the
ordinary lighting dynamo* for our
current. This was demonstrated on
our first trip,
“Our next problem, the one we at*
tacked to-day, is to get our instru
ment on the train In tune with those
in the stations at Scranton and
Binghamton. You see, on account
of the tunnels and low bridges over
the tracks w’e can not have a high
aerial on the train. But high aerials
are necessary If n^essages are to be
sent any great distance, so we have
built them high at the stations and
are trying to work them w r ith low
aerial on the train. Tills makes the
transmitting of measagee between
the train and the stations more dif
ficult. The Instruments have to be
adjusted until they are In tune, but T
believe this difficulty can be over
come.
MroopMir/ ___
CEVTMCX-;
Woman Senator Has
Cure for Coal Strike
She Favors Compulsory Arbitration
Law for Colorado—Opposes
Hanging of Womin.
DENVER, Nov. 29.—Mrs. Helen R.
Robinson, who is In the Colorado State
Senate, the only woman Senator in the
country to-day, favors compulsory arbi
tration of strikes. She is advocating
such a law to end the coal strike.
She is going to Canada, and later to
Europe to study arbitration systems.
This winter she is planning to assist
the suffrage cause in several Eastern
States, and she will address the na
tional convention in Washington, which
opens December 2.
Of hanging she is a bitter enemy,
and opposes the execution of Mrs.
Wakefield and all other women crimi
nals by States in which women have
had no voice in making the laws
Prunes Welcomed
In Foreign Lands
HEADACHY, BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED,
IE A
WASHINGTON, Nov, *9.—Stowed
prunes, that staple dish of the Ameri
can boarding house, apparently has
found a welcome home in many foreign
lands, judging from the large Increase
In exports from Pacific Coast States.
Figures compiled by the Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce show
that during the fiscal year of 1912 more
than 119.000,000 pounds, valued at $•>.-
000,000, were shipped across the seas. In
1898 the exports amounted only to 16,
(*00,000 pounds
More than sixty different countries
are represented among the prune pur
chasers front this country- Germany
leads all others.
Dr. Lighthouse, Who Had Been
Deposed by Methodists, Cen
tral Figure at Reunion.
WILMINGTON, DEL, Nov. -i>.—A
notable church victory- by the Rev. A.
W. Lightbourne, pastor of the Chris
tian Church, Dover. Del., marks vir
tually the ending of the most bitter
six-year church feud in the history
of Delaware.
Dr. Lightbourne joined the Wil
mington Methodist Episcopal Confer
ence after leaving newspaper work in
New York, a half dozen years ago,
following his successful prosecution of
S. \V. F. Cockran and William H.
■ Baker, well-known preachers, sus
pended from the ministry for slock
gambling.
Lightbourne was deposed for pre
senting alleged fraudulent credentials
from the Congregational Church.
This caused a split, and his follow
ers seceded, and, building a $20,000
j church, joined the Christian denomi
nation.
When the Epworth Methodist Epis
copal Church Sunday School here held
its fiftieth anniversary Dr. Light-
bourne was the central figure.
Evening Cloaks lor
1914 To Be Gorgeous
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Nov. 29 Evening cloaks
and theater wraps are being made as
gorgeous a« dressmakers can make
them. A beaut If ll evening cloak has
h1 been designed for Mine. Edwardes,
wife of the Ci.iuan Minister.
It is fashioned of crevette pink bro
cade of the softest texture, embossed
with velvet flower heads. Its design
distinctly heralds a revival of the one
time popular "circular” wrap
The material is suspended from a
rounded yoke on which If is gathered
low on the shoulders, generous head
ing being provided which is accentu
ated by a band of skunk applique just
below. Brocade hangs from the yoke in
sculptured folds.
Monocles the Rage
With College Girls
NORTHAMPTON, Nov. 29.—Sport
coats, batting hats and monocles
along with men’s evening scarfs worn
for sashes are a few of the latest fads
in dress adopted by the Smith Col
lege girls.
The monocle fad is the very latest,
and there is hardly a girl at college
who really wishes to be up to the
minute in style but has one
Raps ‘House Parties’
As Too Exclusive
Which Side of Bed
Is Wife’s? Bachelor
Judge Is Puzzled
Kansas Woman Pleads R:ght to Re
serve One Spot for Her
Own.
KANSAS CITY, KANS., Nov. 29.—
Which side of the bed a wife shall
occupy was a question too deep for
Judge Ewing Bland, a bachelor, to
decide when S. p. Thomas was
brought before him in police court.
I homas was arrested on allegations
that he kicked his wife from one side
of the bed to the other.
Senator Pays Back
A Boyhood Debt
KANSAS CITY, Nov. 29. —This story
of friendship’s reward begins with fisti
cuffs over a game of marbles in Seneca
yens ago. A crafty marble shooter was
Willie Thompson, a slender !ad. He
slipped quietly about the ring and soon
tlic last marble was his
"I won 'em. I won ’em fair, pro-
tes'ed Willie. “I’ll keep 'em, I will."
"You’ll fight, that’s what you’ll do,"
tlv* other asserted.
"1 reckon 111 tend to this bit of
fightln’." BUI Flrstenberger broke in.
"Willie Thompson won them marbles
fair.”
‘"Bill’’ Firstenberger won the fight
l’or his slender school companion.
William Firstenberger, clothing mer
chant, is to get the postmastership of
this city The Thompson boy, now
United States Senator from Kansas, is
paying the boyhood debt.
LOIS IB SUKER
LIKE [SMS
Interest in Development Extends
From New York to Florida.
Work Begins Soon.
In addition to the hundreds of At
lanta people. New York, North and
South Carolina, Florida, Tennessee
and almost every' section of Georgia
were represented in the unusual
crowds which thronged last week the
Silver Lake Estates exhibit at No. 57
Peachtree street.
The exhibition of pretty drawings,
indicating the proposed development
of Silver Lake Estates, along with
photographs and other features, not
only attracted wide attention but
aroused a deep and manifest public
interest, and while many of the vis
itors then and there entered their
subscriptions to an interest in Silver
Lake Estates, hundreds of others left
names and addresses after taking
booklets outlining the plan. General
approval of the plan was expressed,
and many indicated that they would
soon be heard from.
L. P. Bottenfield said that his In
vitation to the public to join him in
this development had brought a most
gratifying and satisfactory response;
that already more than $250,000, or a
full half of the necessary capital,
has been subscribed, and that with
these subscriptions and those which
it is known will come. Silver Lake
Estates is more than assured. In fact,
Mr. Bottenfield says there are enough
prospective subscribers In sight to
establish Sliver Lake Estates two or
three times over.
The opening of the new year will
Witness the beginning of develop
ment of the Silver Lake property into
one of the most attractive residence
communities In the South. This de
velopment will follow close upon or
ganization. after which the L. P. Bot
tenfleld agency will take hold with
a determination of maintaining the
splendid record it has already mads
with sixteen other Atlanta residence
subdivisions.
UGH! NOT CALOMEL, OIL 00 SALTS;
TAKE “CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS
i <
Delicious “Fruit Laxative”
Cleanses Stomach, Liver
and Bowels.
A luirmlesa cure for sick iiea<l;j.i iie,
biliousness, sour stomach, constipa
tion, Indigestion, coated tongue, sal
lowness—take "California Syrup of
Figs.” For the cause of all such
misery comes from a torpid liver and
sluggish bowels.
A tablespoonful to-night means all
constipation poison, waste matter,
fermenting food and sour bile gently
moved out of your system by morn
ing without griping. Please don't
think of "California Syrup of Figs" as
a physic. Don't think you are drug
Sing yourself or your children, be
cause this delicious fruit laxative can
not cause injury. Even the most del
icate child can take it as safely as a
robust man. It Is the most harmless,
effective stomach, liver and bowel
cleanser, regulator and tonic ever da
vised.
Your only difficulty may be in get
ting the genuine, so ask your drug
gist for a 50-oent bottle of "Call
fornia Syrup of Figs,” then see that
it is made by the "California Fig
Syrup Company." This city has many
counterfeit “fig sirups," so watch oui
—Advt.
Lost for Fifteen
Days in the Wilds
HALIN’A, KANS., Nov. 29.—Caught in
a fog, Sanford Godfrey for fifteen days
imitated in a manner the woods life ul
Artist Knowles, who spent eight weeks
in the woods of Maine.
Godfrey lived on berries he saw
neither man nor beast; he had no meats,
bread or vegetables.
He estimates that he walked 200
miles looking for his camp.
ieorg© H. Mayr, From:
aent Chicago Manufac
turing Cn*m;st, owner
>f two of tbe oldest
ind asoet reliable
drug stores In tb«
City, and manufac
turer of Mayra
Wonderful Stom
ach Remedy,
You re bilious! You have a throb
bing sensation in your head, a bad
taste in your mouth, your eves hurt,
your skin is yellow, with dark rings
under your eyes, your lips are i«rc.h-
•d No wonder you feel ugly, mean
and ill-tempered. Your system is full
of bile and constipated waste not
properly passed off. and what you
need is a cleaning up "inside.” Don’t
continue being a bilious, constipated
nuisance to yourself and those who
love yx>u, and don’t resort to harsh
physics that irritate and injure. Re
member that your sour, disordered
stomach, lazy liver, and clogged bow
els can be quickly cleaned and regu
lated by morning with gentle, thor
ough r&sc&rets, a 10-cent box will
keep your head clear and make you
feel cheerful and bully for months.
Get Cast'a rets now—wake up refresh
ed—feel like doing a good day’s work
make yourself pleasant and useful
Clean up! Cheer up!
CANDY CATHARTIC
Your Dental Work
Sate in Onr Hands
No experiment* or expertraoutors tiers
Every dentigt u skillful and axperieoiceii no students
or failure*.
All Work
Guaranteed
Ten Years
Exami
nations
FREE
These Are Our Prices lor Best Quality Dental Work
Gold Crowns, 84
Set ot Teeth, 85 Bridge Work, 84
Atlanta Dental Parlors
DR. C. A. CONSTANTINE. Proprietor
Cor. Peachtree and Decatur Sts. "Entrance W/ 2 Peachtree
mnaiwfci i -if ntrrrtt 1 "v rr-rrr-^^
Fort Screven Troops
Plan 100-Mile Hike
SAVANNAH, Nov. 29.—The full gar
rison of Fort Screven will leave to
morrow for a 100-mile hike in heavy
marching order and a ten-day war game
at Bluff ton, S. C.. opposed to a gar
rison of coast artillery from the forts
at Charleston.
Every man and officer at the fort
will have to go. under the orders from
I the War Department, and the offi
cers will come In for as heavy work
as the men. The large guns will be
carried on a wagon train, as It Is
the plan to avoid the use of the rail
road entirely, and in h great many in
stances a pathway will lie cut through
the woods
’HandsUp! NoMoney?
Here's Gun, Join Me'
LOS ANGELES. Nov. 29.—H. F. Py'ie,
a street cur conductor, had a narrow
escape from becoming a hold-up man by
| proxy early yesterday when Kate threw
Pyle into the hands of a negro high
wayman. Pyle met the negro on East
Seventh street. A revolver was thrust
In his face. He said he had nothing of
value and a search proved his state
ment.
"Well, you're up against it. too,” said
the bandit. "Take this gun and come
with me. 1 can take >ou to some easy
money. ’
Pyle stood with the revolver in his
hand. He had no desire to become a
highwayman
A second later he pointed the gun at
the negro anil told him to leave. The
l negro ran
Girls, Don't Be
Pimply ami Sallow
Your liver Is wrong, that's
all: Hot Springs Liver But
tons will put the right
kind cl action into it.
Don’t fool with calomel or salts or
harsh purgatives that act violently,
many times injuring the lining of the
bowels and causing serious illness.
HOT SPRINGS 1.IYKR BUTTONS
arc mild, gentle, yet absolutely cer
tain. They always act blissfully on
the bowels and never fail to unclog
the stubborn li\er. and compel it to
do its work properly.
Physicians in Hot Springs Ar
kansas. prescribe them because they
know that there is nothing better for
lazy liver and constipation. Take
little chocolate <-oated HOT SPRINGS
LI\ ER BI [*T< -\s as dli ett i....
zet i ill of i onstipation. dizziness, bil-
j iousness. sick headache, malaria and
sallow, pimply skin
They are u fine tonu for they drive
, impure matter from the blood, make
j the bowels and stomach work prop-
! erly and regularly, and create a
hearty appetite.
All druggists. 25 cts.. and money
hack if they are not just what you
! have been looking for. Free sample
from Hot Springs Chemical » ». Hot
1 Springs, Ark.—AdvL
MADISON. WI8., Nov. 29.—"While
the house party may be pleasant for the
few who participate in It, it is a detri
ment to the university."
This view was given by President
Charles R. VanHise. ‘The house party
may be legitimately objected to on the
ground that relatively few can partici
pate and that the greater number of
students are put on an unequal foot
ing with a more favored class.”
GOES FAR FOR FALSE LEG.
MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 29.—Minne
apolis has been “put on the map"
again. As a market for wooden legs,
its laine has traveled all the way to
Mexico City. Likewise, Felipe Bra-
oho has traveled all the way from
Mexico City to get a wooden leg. It
was a journey of 5,000 miles by sea
and land.
WOMEN NOMINATE TICKET.
HAINES. OREG.. Nov. 29.—'The Civic
Improvement Club, an organization ox-
clualvely for woman, has nominated a
complete Independent ticket for the mu
nicipal election to be held December 2
to oppose the Citizens’ ticket.
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 months old.
It would come In patches
and went almost all over
her in that way. The
places were like ring
worm and as they would
spread they would turn
red and make sores and
itch. The trouble went
to her fare and dis
figured her badly. Her
clothes irritated 1%.
“I used several different kinds of salves
that wnce recommended for the trouble and
and .but they did no good.
I saw the advertisement of Cuticura Soap
and Ointment and I got a sample and in oue
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-
flre-cenl cake of Cuticura Soap and two
fifty-rent boxes of Cuticura Ointment, which
cured my baby. She was well In three
months." (Signed) Mrs. Bertha Sawyer,
Oct. 11, 1912.
Why not have a clear skin, soft white
hands, a clean scalp and good hair? It is
your birthright. Cuticura Soap with an oc
casional use of Cuticura Ointment- will bring
about these coveted conditions In most cases
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.”
49~Men who shave and shampoo with Cu-
ticura Soap will find it best for skin and scalp.
These Atlanta
Stomach Sufferers
Know and Will
Tell You So—
ASK THEM?
M AYR’S WONDERFUL STOMACH REMEDY
has made thousands of stomach sufferers happy right
near you—saved them thousands of dollars in doctor's
bills, as they will tell you, saved operations, relieved them at once,
as you can be relieved--by one dose. Here are people who are
near you, perhaps friends and neighbors. ASK THEM. Then
go to your druggist and get a bottle TODAY.
ip]
rii
The Only
Old-Fashion
Corn Whiskey
Distillery
in the World
In ft little old-fashion distillery down
here in Alabama we are working every
day, except Sunday, distilling corn whiskey just like it used
to be made in Georgia before Georgia went dry—made just
across the river from Georgiaat Girard, Ala. Our whiskey is
GOOD STUFF
CORN LIQUOR
4 Honest Quarts $3, express prepaid
This is the only corn whiskey distillery in the world sell
ing direct to the consumer. Whenever you’re by this way.
drop In and see our old-style still.
If NO PRESENTS. It you want something good, order from j
u«. No free goods, no premiums, no faking—just straight. I
pure old-fashion corn liquor—the best that can he made. It!
has a fine taste.
If you don't say it’s the best corn liquor you ever saw. keep a quart for j
your trouble, return the rest and we will refund your fS.OO.
MOORE’S DISTILLERY, Box 22, Girard, Ala.
Proprietors, Registered Distillery No. 3, District of Alabama.
ATLANTA, QA.
Mm. M. R. Elsey. .R.FJ). No. 6. Box 61
Mrs. H. J. Burke ... 58 Nelson St.
Matilda Harris. R.F.D. No. », Box 201
Mr. E. Crouch 263 Lee Bt.
J- M. Hall 3S N. Lee Bt.
Mrs. W. H. Reynolds . 128 Cooper Bt.
Mrs. L. Marsh 145 Curran Bt.
Miss Oarrle Cook . ,113 W. Fair St.
Mr*. D. M. Lord . 80 Neal St.
Dr. *. Douglas . . 562 Washington St.
Ciias. P. Poche . . . 24 P. 0. Bidg.
Mrs. A. J. Evers. ... R.F.D. No. 7
Mrs J. 8. Donaldson R. No. S, Bot 71
Ld/ward White, Jr
. . . . care St. Inri'rmt. Gel, Offioe
R. E.
Mrs. Copps ..... 16 Flora Ave.
B. Duncan 138 Peachtree St.
Miss D. Willis 161 Bimpfton 8t.
Mr*. F. N. Woodcock I Poplar Circle
J. H. Couch .... 459 Stewart Ave.
Mrs. C. M. Gibson . , 56 Fraser St.
Geo. Lyle 1M Griffin St,
Walter Neville .... Atlanta, Oa.
Mrs. Nora Cannon . 181 *"ains Avs.
Mrs. Sarah Parker ... 90 Pearl St.
R. R. Brown ... 343 Cooper St.
Mrs. M Buchanan . §‘.'•7 CM on wood Ave.
F. H. Butler 643 8. PryoT St.
Mrs. 7® Grant St.
j Heal ...... 60 Venabie
Nathan R-uexesr s © « • 16 Wiiooa Nv
Mr. R. Wilt. .... 203 Spring 8v
Mr. Wm, Griffith . *90 Hemphill Ave
W. H. McClain ... 441 N. Boulevard
Mrs. L. V. Elliott . 139 S. Hunter 8t.
P, r*. Pound . 387 If. Boulevard
W. B Carroll . 317 Grant St.
Xrv. W. L. Quinn . 113 Highland Ave
Mrs. W. R. Quinn. . 192 Highland Are.
Mrs. M. J. Miller . 624 Peachtree St
H. Sterne* 86 N Pryor St.
Mrs H. C. Shumate . 85 Flora St.
Ed L. Humphreys . 101 8. Forsyth 8».
Mrs, J. B Lang lev . R.F.D. No. 7
Mm. H. H. Bentley . 1 LaTrance St
Mrs. W. W. Lampkln . 98 Mangnm St.
Read What a Few of Them S/1V--
THIS PARTY HAS BEEN THE
MEANS OF SELLING HUNDREDS
OF BOTTLES IN AUGUSTA
George fcL. Mayr:—
K'nd/mej you will find express order
for 93.00, for which please soekI me
l^wo Bottles of System Regulator and
ionic. 1 think I am the first to take
your medicine i Q Angusta, but you
will find yon will get a good tn&nv or
«4»r» from Augusts soon.
W. H. WOODY.
14 Houetoo Ht, Augusta «,a
June 13. 1910
/Vo "Long" Treatment
one dose positively convinces. Many
tied teat only one dose is necessary.
w*assu||j? ! :
B
SOM!'> ( t
RflffBr j r -
gfcllff!
- m
IB) "j
Save Expense and
Surgeon's Knife
Whatever you've tried, give my safe
Remedy this one chance before you go
on wasting money needlessly for no uee
or good. Don’t for a moment consider
allowing a surgeon or doctor to out into
your body to try to cure you before you
have at least tried ONE DOSE of
Mayr’e Wonderful Stomach Remedy
"MADE HER FEEL LIKE NEW,”
George H. Mayr:—
rlease iwrod me one bottle of the
Wonderful Stomach Remedy and one
bottle of Tonic and Regulator, for
which I enclose $2.00. Yonr sample bot
tie made me feel like new T sore am
ringing Its praise*.
MISS DIPT WTtXJS,
151 Simpson St., Atlanta, Fulton re,
•Georgia.
Sept. 13, 1912.
HAS DONE HER MUCH GOOD—
GAINED STRENGTH AND
FIXE APPETITE."
weerge H. Mayr:—
l have taken your remedy for about
five weeks and am still taking 1t- It
has don* me much rood Thanks to
roil. I have passed many a llttb white
atone from my ayatem and yellow ones
Hito. 1 fewl like 1 hardly know my
strength— mv appetite is fine. Youre
truly, 8AU8TA THOMAS.
53 La France St.. Atlanta, *»a
FEELING BETTER THAN HE HAS
ns FOUR YEARS AFTER TAKING
THIS WONDERFUL REMEDY.
tieorge ll. Mayr:—
T bare taken your Wonderful fM©mad>
Remedy and am feeling bettve than I
bare felt in foar yearw. Yonr remedy
does just what you claim It will do
1 believe that after taking your medi
an, I bav« parsed 300 <*r 800 ga
stories. 1 tried several doctor*, but
rhev did me no gnod. so 1 am glsd
that I found yonr Wonderful Remedy
I ba*e rw-nmnended yonr Wonderful
One dose of Mayr’*
Wonderful Stomach
Remedy will con
vince overnight if
you’ll go to your
Dmgg : »t and get it
TODAY
Remedy to some of my neighbors thst
used It. Yours truly,
X. A. WWW,
Route No. 8, Woodstock, Oa.
Feb. 221, 1018.
MINISTER OF THE GOSPEL JUST
ESCAPED THE OPERATION TABLE,
i^eorge H. Kayr:—•
Since using the «1x bottles of yo*»r
Wonderfnl Htoioach Remedy. I feel
another man. It baa been gtdfa *
wonder to me bow one could have a
stomach disease like mine acd live and
do the work 1 did. The medicine rw
moved hundreds of gall atones of dif
ferent sUea. I just eao&ped t&a opera
t>on table. Now J caa e«t What X
pieasa and It don't hart me night
day. X would be glad if everybody inf
faring wltb stomach trouble eouki learn
of. jour remedies I atn telling all
my ft leads slvnt your wonderful ram*
dy *sd think you will got many orders
from bare in the fotkfa, Xoura,
RBV. J. vwrBLU
Dev. *1. 1912. Statesboro. CR
ONE BOTTLE DID fO MUCK GOO**—
WANT* MORE."
ftenrge H. Ma/rs—
Enclosed find 82.00 for pint**
tend me two bottlee of your Stomach
Remedy. I took one bottle of MAyr •
Wonderful Stomach Remedy and It did
me eo mneb good that I want to osm
tine# tha treatment, ao kindly a«*od «
at once. U DUNCAN.
ISS W Prachtree »t.. Atlanta, Ue
April 2. 181$.
Manufacturing Chemiat-~-Chica go *
Leading Druggist, 154 Whiting Street,
Chicago.
2 TRAINS DAILY
Lv.7:I2 AM.,5:10PM.
Especially recommended in Atlanta by Jacobs’Pharmacy and almost
all Leading Drug Stores.
Trade Supplied Promptly by the Following Atlanta Wholetaler*-^-Jno. B. Daniel, and
Lamar dk Rankin Drug Company.