Newspaper Page Text
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TIEATtRT’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA. CA , SUNDAY. DECEMP.ER
9 D
; ,'ist at English Teachers’ Con
vention Tells Responsibility of
Reporters and Editors.
• 'AGO. ILL., Dec. a—Slant?
: red some hard wallops to-day at
ands of the purists attending the
al meeting of the National Coun-
Knglish Teachers, and newspa*
reporters, copy readers and edi-
were told that what they write
• tint lias succeeded the Bible in
v ng the expressions of the public.
- were made to newspaper
i ■ erefore, to us*c their influence
for good English.
!ior< ar<* some of the popular ex-
iiiis which are held up as "hor-
pxamples” by exponents of pure
Whom are you?”
Hh didn’t show un.'
I'm going to take up.”
« going K'me."
- - a’-i the father I go:
real good looking,
made a date.”
This here affair.”
: ni glad that’s over with.”
You've got me going.” .
■•I'm off of that.”
Professor Fred- X. Scott, of the
, r, •rsity of Michigan, who submit-
te.l - list of “horrible examples” now
nrent n the vernacular, was the
iker who declared the lingual in-
Uuence of the Bible was being super-
.. Hd by tliat of the newspapers.
That the daily newspaper is the
powerful and the most per-
?ive influence of our day and na-
■’,i) will, I think, be conceded,” said
Professor Scott. “It is not going t>a
far to sa> that the aims and ambitions
and modes of thought and expression
of ihe younger generation are largelv
moleed by its contents.
Not even the Scriptures can com
pete. with it.”
Dr. Feterkin Believes in Colors
Ui Knife Mer if Well Clad MO TO HOUSE mb
v»v
Says Surgeon s Clothes Aid Work
Dr. 0. Sherman
Peterkin, a
Western sur
geon who be
lieves lie should
never operate
unless there is
is entire har
mony between
his mood and
his attire.
Hence, lie
usually wears
many colors.
Mouse shades,
browns, checks
of gray and
blue, stripes of
white, yellow,
orange and
olive green are
a few of the
colors that ap
pear in liis
every-day
dress.
f'"
<
Town Factions Row
Over Sunday Law
MARENGO. ILL., Dec. 6.—John S.
arber in Marengo, believes
i > liis duty as a good citizen to shave
his friends on Sunday, despite an ordi-
nance making it an offense to keep a
barber shop open on that eay, In con
sequence ho is the center of a fight in
the courts which divided the town and
caused no end of discussion.
Rowland has been arrested five times
since Labor Day.
GIRL MAKES $222 AS FARMER.
POCAHONTAS, ARK.. Dec. 6.—Thor-
•ongh demonstration of what can be pro
duced on a small piece of ground in
Randolph Count\ has been proven by
one of the small girls of the Girls’ Can
ning Club of the county. Lena Baltz,
one of the prize winners in the county
contest, and who made a good showing
at the Hot Springs State Fair, has made
a p. fit of $222.15 from one-tenth
of an acre of ground.
BUSINESS NOTICES.
Piles Quickly
Cured At Home
Instant Relief, Permanent Cure
Trial Package Mailed Free
to All in Plain Wrapper.
Nation’s Offices Overflow With
Exhibits, Cumbering Halls and
Using Needed Desk Space.
•: O
/ V J /V
“If Patriotic, Wear Red, White and Blue,” is
Seattle Physician’s Advice.
CHICAGO. Dec 6.—Dr. O Sher
man Peterkin. of Seattle, believes in
the symphonic garb. The doctor, who
is here attending a series of meetings
of physicians and surgeons, says so
himself. He declared most positively
to-day that there should be perfect
harmony between a surgeon’s cloth
ing and the mood he happens to be
in, if he is to be successful in his
operations.
“An artist is shocked.” said the
surgeon, “when he jsees colors that do
not harmonize. A musician feels like
tearing his hair when there is lack of
symphony. I can not operate success
fully unless the attire I wear is In
sympathy with the particular mood I
am in. Let every man wear the colors
that suit his taste. Do not laugh at
him. Ridicule might drive him to
clothes that would put a damper on
his ambition.”
As the physician talked the report
er noted his attire, and was glad that
he was not to he operated on by the
doctor in the clothes the latter was
then wearing. His mood would have
been far from sad and serious. This
is a leaf from the reporter’s note
book:
Mouse-colored velour hat.
Brown overcoat.
Check suit of gray and blue and
brown color.
White and dark yellow striped shirt.
Orange tie.
Olive green gaiters.
Brown shoes.
The doctor also believes in patriot
ism plus clothes.
“If a man is patriotic,” he de
clared, “and wakes up some fine
morning to find he is in the spirit
to lay down his life for Fncle Sam—
if he cares to bedeck himself in a
coat and trousers with the colors of
the national emblem—who has the
right to think him out of his mind?
That man’s mood is in direct line
with his clothes, and 1 venture he
will do a better day’s work for It.”
The Pyramid Smile.
.Many rases of Piles have been cured
by .i trial package of Pyramid Pile Rem
edy without further treatment. When
it oroves its value to you. get more
from your druggist at 50c a box. and
b* sure you get the kind you ask for.
him ply fill out free coupon below and
mail to-day. Save yourself from the
surgron's knife ;i nd its torture, the doc
tor and his bills.
FREE PACKAGE COUPON
PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. 402
Pyramid .Bldg, Marshall, Mich.
Kindly send me a sample of Pyra
mid Pile Remedy, at once by mail,
FREE, in plain wrapper.
Name
Street
City..
.State.
Everybody After
Hot Springs
Liver Buttons
People Coming for Miles Around for
Wonderful Constipation Remedy That
Is Better. Safer and Surer
Than Calomel.
Tone up your liver, clean your bowels
of foul waste, drive out poisonous gases.
*nd constipation and fed fine and full
°f energy j n twenty-four hours.
Throw away calomel, it’s dangerous,
you know it. everybody knows it.
HOT SPRINGS DIVER BUTTONS
arc different. They are harmless, act
gently but surely on the bowels, and
do not cause a particle of after misery
»nd are fine for children as well as
grownups.
They are joyfully laxative and more,
the' are fine for laziness, dizziness,
biliousness sick headache, sallow skin
and malaria.
They make everybody feed good be
cause they act as a general tonic, driv
ing impurities from the blood and mak
ing the entire intestinal tract clean and
pure in short order.
Little chocolate-coated HOT SPRINGS
LIVER BUTTONS are 25 cents at aU
druggists, and mondy back, if dissatis-
fied. Free sample from Hot Springs
Chemical Co., Hot Springs, Ark.—Advt.
Minister Now Wants
To Take Wife Back
MARION, OHIO, Dec. fi.—The Rev.
Emmett D. Packer, formerly of the
Holiness Apostolic Church, publicly
admitted he was wrongr two months
ago in declaring his marriage to be
unsanctfoned by God because Mrs.
Packer was a divorced woman.
“I acted in haste,” tie declared.
"After reading the Scriptures and
giving the matter prayer and medita
tion 1 believe that I did wrong, and
if such a thing be possible 1 would
welcome a reconciliation.”
"Our parting was in sorrow and
tears,” he continued. "We did not
have any quarrels or any unpleasant
ness. I want my wife and child back,
and later will be glad to make a com
plete public statement.”
Novice, 26, Winner in
His Race for Mayor
HAMILTON, OHIO, Dec. 6.—Fred
erick A. Hinkle, 26, just out of college,
a novice in the political life of the
city, January i will assume the offl< e
of Mayor, having, as Socialists’ lead
er. defeated Charles E. Mason, banker
and Fusion candidate, and M. O.
Burns, Democrat, both seasoned poli
ticians.
Hinkle worked his way through
Miami University and last June was
given a free scholarship in the Cin
cinnati Law School. He will spend
the next six weeks in visiting several
cities getting acquainted with city
affairs.
Good Roads Idea Is
Boosted in Pulpits
CHEYENNE, WYO„ Dec. 6—So
thoroughly has the "good roads" idea
taken root in Wyoming that many
ministers preached sermons which
dealt -with the general movement in
the State for Improvement of the
highways.
This was done In response to a
suggestion from Governor Carey, con
tained in tin official proclamation,
that the ‘‘hurrhes of the State take
notice of the location through Wyo
ming of the Lincoln memorial high
way.
War Veteran Aged 90
Gets $100,000 Legacy
ST. PAUL, Dec. 6.—With the an
nouncement that he was the bene
ficiary of $100,000. under the will of
Mrs. Julia Lorillard Butterfield, of
New York City, General William Le-
Duc. 90, of Hastings, Minn , ascends
from poverty to a position of com
fort. The late General Daniel But
terfield and General LeDuc were
close friends.
General LeDuc is a. native of Ohio
and took prominent part in the war
between the States. He also served
as Commissioner of Agriculture un
der President Hayes, and has been
active in financial work of the North
west.
Recently he applied for a pension
and, by special act of Congress, ob
tained $40 a month.
4 Priests, Brothers
Of Bride, Officiate
MILWAUKEE, AVIS., Dec. 6.—When
Miss Marie Georgina Stehling. a mu-
Ric teacher, decided to get married,
there was no scarcity of pastors to
perform the ceremony.
She has four brothers in the priest
hood, and they a had a part in the
ceremony which united her and Nich
olas Wahl on, Jr.
‘Leichfertig’ Libel,
Says Canada Court
#—
VANCOUVER. Dec. 6.—Baron Von Al-
vensleben, a millionaire real estate oper
ator. accused Dr. G. Schumacher, editor,
and F. Ft. Blochberger, publisher of The
Westllche Canada Post, of stating that
Baron Alvenslehen acted In an unscru
pulous manner toward his clients.
The case turned upon the German
word “leichfertig ’ as applied to the Bar
on’s methods. The Judge sentenced the
accused to a nominal sentence.
PASTOR MAY BE CHIEF.
GRAND JUNCTION. COLO.. Dec. 6 —
Grand Junction may have a minister
for its chief of police. Friends of the
Rev. J. A. Becker, former pastor of the
Congregational Church, are urging
Mayor-elect Cherrington to give him the
appointment.
By JONATHAN WINFIELD. .
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.—Govern
ment departments in Washington
within the next few years will resem
ble an old curiosity shop, if the pres
ent rate is kept up in accumulating
antiques and curios. Although the
National Museum, the United States
Museum, the Smithsonian Institu
tion, Medical Museum and Congres
sional Library are filled with things
that are of interest to the visitors,
each Government department has its
own little museum or collection which
it strums a h mg ils corridors for '• ;'•
benefit of tourists. In some of the
buildings there is not space enough
to show the collections that have been
gathered and they have overflown to
the storage rooms in the basements of
the buildings.
To remedy this plans are afoot for
building a great Hall of Records. Con
gress has been asked to give the; need
ed funds.
In the War Department, for in
stant j, the upper floors of the big
built dug are crowded with exhibits
of all kinds. Not only can one see the
various uniforms worn by the sol
diery of tlie United States Govern
ment at different periods from pre-
Revolutionary days to the present
t|ne, but one can see exhibits of the
sculptors’ work and models of the de
fenses of the United States along the
coasts and inland waters, as well as
of battloghipa.
All of these exhibits are placed in
the corridors of the buildings, usual
ly on the top floor, this part of the
btiilding not being used to the extent
of the lower floors.
Portraits Adorn Walls.
In the State Department wing of
the State, War and Navy Building the
portraits of former Secretaries .of
War, of Senators and foreign diplo
mats- adorn the walls of the Secre
tary of State’s office and of the offices
of his subordinates. In one instance
i the picture of a foreign diplomat has
been relegated to the messengers’
room.
On the Navy side, the corridors are
filled w r ith models of the first and
last step in naval architecture and
construction. The model of “Old
Ironsides” looks like a penny sail
boat of childhood days alongside the
modern dreadnought as typified by
the model of the Wyoming, which
stands just outside of the main en
trance to Secretary Daniels’ office.
Submarines. aeroplanes, wireless
cruisers and the navy hospital ship,
the Solace, can be seen in these mod
els. The model of the Arkansas, a
sister ship of the Wyoming, cost the
United States Government $25,000 to
build. Many other models of the
earlier vessels of the navy are kept
in packing cases in the cellar of the
building.
In the Treasury Department the ac
cumulation of paintings of the for
mer Secretaries has overflowed from
the walls of the offices of the Sec
retary and his two assistants into the
corridors adjacent to tjie Secretary’s
office. The Revenue Cutter Service,
which also is in the Treasury De
partment, has an interesting exhibit,
hut only part of it can be seen, as
there is not sufficient space in the
building to display it.
Patents Display Inaccessible.
The Patent Office locks Us exhibits
in one immense room, where the gen
eral public can not find It—that is to
say, it is so near the top of the build
ing and in such an out-of-the-w.iy
corner that half of the clerks em
ployed in the building do not know
that the Government pays four
clerks $6,000-a-year salary to keep up
the exhibit and prevent curio hunters
from carrying away valuable models
of patents that have been filed with
this department. The Indian Office
and :he Land Office each has its ex
hibits, but they also are in such un
frequented places in the buildings
that the average tourist walking
through these structures never would
be able to find them.
The need of a Hall of Records or a
building to house these exhibits has
been suggested in a request for an
appropriation now before Congress.
No action has been taken on it, and it
seems that the measure will “die” in
committee.
A discussion during the last Ad
ministration by architects from va
rious parts of the United Slates
clothed with official authority by
President Taft was productive of a
comprehensive, scheme for adminis
trative offices of the United States
Government.
Architects Offer Plan.
In the plan was a suggestion by
New York architects for a Hall of
Records to be the center of a group
of public buildings on the south side
of Pennsylvania avenue between the
Capitol Building and the Treasury
Department. The two top floors .f
the building were to be devoted to :i
collection of Government exhibits
that do not find space In either the
Smithsonian Institution or the Na
tional Museum. The purpose of th*
architects evidently was to clear out
of the present buildings owned by thj
Government the exhibitions that now
are hous'd there In order that mol*|
office space could be obtained.
This plan now forms one of the
Interesting exhibits in the Congres
sional Library. Tt is possible that
within the next several years Con
gress will make such an appropria
tion that will change the present
aspect of the downtown section of
Washington, throwing the south si te
of Pennsylvania avenue between the
Capitol and Treasury Into one huge
park dotted here and there with pub
lic buildings. Plenty of room will be
made for all Government building*,
and at the same time exhibits will oe
planned so that -visitors coming to
the city can obtain, almost at a
glance, a comprehensive laea of what
the Central Government of the United
States is doing.
What Prince of Wales Shall Do
When He Leaves Oxford Is
Cause of Quarrel.
Special Cable to The American.
By HERBERT TEMPLE.
LONDON, Dec. 6.—In spite of for
eign visitors and visits to the coun
try residences of various lords pos
sessing famous hunting preserves, the
King and Queen have found time to
discuss tiie important subject of tli«
immediate future of the Prince of
Wales, who is to leave Oxford next
July.
If the Prince himself were to do- •
cide, it is well known at court that
he would prefer a year of Incognito
traveling, after another cruise with
the fleet in liis new position as a naval
lieutenant.
Queen Is Opposed.
But his ideas are opposed by Queen
Mary, who hates the idea of exposing
her impressionable son to such a va
riety of uncontrolled foreign influ
ences as would result from a year of
traveling without the restrictions
placed on royalty
Queen Alexandra, however, Insists
that a long foreign trip would have
the much-needed effect of broadening
the Prince's mind and strengthening
his character, and she is as strongly
opposed as ever to Queen Mary’s fa
vorite idea of arranging an engage
ment between the Prince of Wales and
a daughter of the Czar, who might
act as liis tutor.
Prince To Be Officer.
King George, as always, bewildered
by the contrasting influences of his
wife and mother, is naturally unabie
io decide anything, and is rather In
clined to put off the question for a
while yet. It in said, however, that
as a compromise the Prince of Wales
will be made a lieutenant in the Tenth
Regiment of Hussars, who are about
to return from South Africa, and, af*-
er a year’s service in the army, he will
be permitted to leave on a personally
conducted tour through the British
overseas dominions.
If Queen Mary can posfcibly prevent
it. the Prince will not be allowed :o
visit the United States, but as It Is
almost certain that the Prince will
wish to pass through the Panama Ca
nal it is difficult to see how an in
vitation from the American Presi
dent, which would naturally be forth
coming. could be declined.
Denied Forever Right
To Run Automobile
FRESNO, Dec. 6.—That lie be denied
forever the privilege of running an au
tomobile was one of the provisions rec
ommended by County Officer Sessions
in reporting for parole, in the rase of R.
L. Herring .of Reedlay, convicted of
failing to stop and give aid and his
name after running down a young man
last summer.
The victim of the automobile acci
dent. was killed.
40 Years in Office,
Mayor Not Citizen
SALEM, OREO., Dec. 1.—Although
he has held public office in this coun
try for more than forty years, has
served on juries and otherwise acted
in public capacities. J. R. London
was unseated as Mayor of Wood-
burn by Judge Kelly in the Circuit
Court on the ground that he Is not
an American citizen.
Landon came to America as a
child, and did not know naturaliza
tion was necessary for him.
1,000 Years’ Study
Ends in ‘CPs’ Defeat
Since Caesar’s Time, ‘Cimex Lectu-
lari*,’ the Bedbug. Has Been Ene
my to Man’s Slumbers.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6. No longer
need the Cimax Leetularis be feared,
because the experts of the Depart
ment of Agriculture have found a way
of exterminating the evil, pest, plague
or whatever “cimex” may he.
“Cl” has been operating since the
days of Romans, and In modern days*
lias adopted various disguises, but is
commonly known a» “bedbug.”
It is asserted by the scientists that
“benzine or kerosene, or any petro
leum oil, Is the most practical way’*
to eradicate ”ci” and his brethren.
They also assert that “corrosive sub
limate i<* of value,” and that the
"liberal use of boiling hot water,
wherovev it may he employed without
danger to the furniture,” Is also an
effectual method of “destroying both
eggs and active udults.”
Son Orders Father's
Arrest as a Vagrant
NEW YORK, Dec. 6. As an elder
ly man laid a dime on the bur for a
drink In a saloon at Lenox avenue
and 120th street, at 6:80 o’clock last
evening, a younger man ran in from
the street, took the coin, led the other
to the door and passed him to a po
liceman who stood there.
“You don’t mean to say that you
would have your old father arrested?”
thf\old man protested, his voice trem
bling.
That is just what I am doing,” tho
younger man replied, curtly. “You
have been a nuisance long enough,
and I am tired of it. Officer, take
him along.”
In the Lenox avenue police station
the elder man said he was Charles
Henry Hawkins, 69 year old. living in
tin Bon Ton Hotel, a lodging house.
The father was locked up on a
( barge of vagrancy.
GIRLS SEW
[
Students at “Walk-Around” Ex
hibit Last Word in Fashion.
Cost Two to Ten Dollars.
Redfield Going After
South America Trade
WASHINGTON, Dec . 6. Cam
paigning in the interests of the Amer
ican exporter to South America will
be included in the program of Sec
retary of Commerce Redfield next
year, it became known to-day.
Secretary Redfield has included an
item of $100,000 In his budget to Con
gress, which will be used in sending
advance agents to South and Central
America, to prepare the way for
greater sales of American goods with
the opening of the canal.
PushcartPeddledGets
PushcartPeddlerGets
MINNEAPOLIS. Dec. « After scour
ing the country for eight years to give
Walter Lilly, of Philadelphia, a for
tune of $340,000, William Rohrer, an at
torney. discovered the object of his
search liere.
The money was left by Lilly’s father,
said by Rohrer to have been a wealthy
soap manufacturer of Philadelphia. Lil
ly, who is 50 >ears old. was found liv
ing in a ramshackle cabin. He has lived
here eleven years, and supported himself
by selling coal from a pushcart.
SCIENCE WILL GUIDE CUPID.
NORTH YAKIMA. WASH , Dec. 6.—
As a result of lectures on eugenics given
by a local physician, a number of young
men, members of the gymnasium classes
of the Young Men's t’hristian Asso
ciation, ate planning to delve into their
family records for Information on which
to base a scientific selection of their
wives.
NEW YORK, Dec. 6.—The Wash
ington Irving High School girls gave
their annual fall fashion walk-around
In the big assembly hall of the school
yesterday morning and if any spec
tator thought there was anything in
the wav of late models absent—well,
then there was something the matter
with her eyes.
Miss Jeanne Causeret was made
moiselle in charge of the demonstra
tion. but that does not mean that
there was anything French about the
exhibition, for all the little frocks
i were made in the school, every one
of them. The highest cost price cov
ering everything In any gown was $10,
and the prices ranged down as low
as $2.
Girls Show Skill.
The upper class girls were showing
the first-year students what a goxl
thing it was to make one’s own
gowns That is the real purpose of
the walk-around. The Washington
Irving is such a big school—eleven
floors of it and hundreds of girl, and
the Washington Irving right hand
does not always know what its lef;
hand is doing. And making gowns is
an important item in these days of the
high cost if living, so after the walk-
around there is always a big influx
of new girls in the dressmaking de
partment. and a run on small pat
terns of dress goods in the shops.
Many Suit* Shown.
The admiring spectators yesterday
saw minaret gowns, three-tier an l
draped skirts. pannier*. < hiff.m
sleeves, net blouses, wide Spanish
girdles, besides Peter Thompson subs,
suit* with middy blouses, and “just
plain littl# school suits.’’
56,228 YEIHLY
IF 15 SPENDS
With $150,000 in Reserve for
Miss Ogden, Permission to Use
$4,000 Annually Is Asked.
NEW YORK, Dec fi.—Miss Mar
garet VanCortlandt Ogden, who is lf»
years old. is perplexed by the high
cost of living, but she can solve the
problem if Surrogate Fowler will
grant her petition and direct the pa-T
ment of $4,000 a year to her parents
from her trust fund. She spends $6.-
220 a year, according to her Item
ized list, and with $150,000 in trust
with the Lawyers Title Insurance and
Trust Company site fees no reason
why ends will not always meet.
Miss Ogden is the daughter of Fran
cis L. Ogden and Mrs. Gertrude Og
den, residents of this city, who spend
the greater part of the time at Cannes.
France. Miss Elizabeth G. Smith-
Cliff left the trust fund by her vril*
to Miss Margaret, and it was to have
accumulated in care of the trust com
party until she becomes of age.
The petition says that her parents
are wealthy, and that in the event of
their deaths she will have a large in
come. 8he i* not dependent on the
trust fund and does not expect to be,
but the trust fund i* there, so why
may it not pay a part of her own ex
penses?
Surrogate Fowler yesterday read
the list of expenses which Miss Mar
garet finds essential to her education
and pleasure. He decided that he
could reach no decision until he had
additional information concerning the
incomes of Mr. and Mrs. Ogden. When
that is presented to him he will see if
Miss Margaret’s problem should be
solved In the way she suggests.
$25,000 FOR WIDOW
nriLADELBHl A, Dec. 6.--By the
will of William A. Gilman, of No. :iO!i
Lindley avenue, the bulk of his estate,
valued at more than $25,000 is left to
the widow. Elizabeth Gilman, in trust
with the proviso that she does not re
marry-.
PEEL HEADACHY, DIZZY, BILIOUS?
CLEAN YOUR LIVER! A DIME A BOX
Sick headaches' Always trace them
to lazy liver: delayed, fermenting food
in the bowels or a sick stomach. Poi
sonous, constipated matter, gases and
bile generated in the bowels, Instead of
being carried out of the system, is re
absorbed into the blood. When this poi
son reaches the delicate brain tissue, it
causes congestion ami that dull, sicken
ing headache. Caocaret* will remove
the cause by stimulating the liver, mak
ing the bile and constipation poison
move on and out of the bowels. One
taken to-night straightens you out by,
morning—a 10-eent box will keep your
head clear, stomach sweet, liver and
bowels regular, and make you feel
bright and cheerful for months. Chil
dren need CascareU, too.
CANDY CATHARTIC
Pimples to Go
They’ll Leave in a Hurry If You
Use Stuart's Calcium
Wafers. Trier! and
Proved By Thou
sands.
“Oh. they’ll go away as 1 grow older”
—perhaps. But why wait for old age to
correct the disorders of ypung blood
when Stuart’s Calcium Wafers will de
stroy the eruptions caused by blood
impurities in the course of a few days?
Why he subjected to the annoyance <.f
a pimply face for years and lose all the
admiration and love that youth holds
dear when ihe remedy is so simple?
Thousands of people throughout the
country owe the beauty and attractive
ness of their complexion to Stuart’s
Calcium Wafers. Why not gain for
yourself the blessing these have ob
tained?
Lost Horse Is Wild
When Finally Found
ISHPEMING, MICH.. Dec. 6.—Clar
ence Dawson and Bert Walker, Ish-
pemlmr men. havo recovered a horse
that had broken away from them in the
wilderness 20 miles from the city early
last spring, when they were on a Ash
ing trip.
A homesteader saw the horse a few
days ago and notified the owners. The
horse was as wild as a deer and was
corraied with difficulty.
“Don't Wait for' Old Age. You Will j
Never Lose Pimples This Way Until j
You Lose Your Beauty.”
Skin disorders -except those caused j
by parasites are also blood disorders. ,
Purify the blood and at the same lime j I
you drive out the pimples. Calcium 1
sulphide, the chief constituent of Stu
art's Calcium Wafers, is the greatest of
blood purifiers and is recommended by
all physicians. It converts the polsotig
in the blood into gases that the pores
can easily eliminate. Stuart’s Calcium
Wafers will cure the most acute case of
plmptes, brash. blackheadR ami lteer
spots in three or four days.
Stuart’s Calcium Wafers contain noth
ing harmful to the systerti. They not
only purify the blo«xl, but make it
healthy and vigorous, bringing the glow j I
of youth to the cheeks and, vigor and I
•strength to the body. You will never I
know how glorious it is to live until 11
you have a pure, vigorous, abundant I
blood supply coursing through your I
veins. There are not only good looks. I
but health and happiness in every box I
of Stuart's Calcium Wafers. i
Stuart's Calcium Wafers are conve- II
nient to carry and pleasabt to take 11
Get a. 50c box of your druggist. te
Xhe
Dcience
Or
TT 1 i 1
liealth
T
Is
;J b^r
FOOD
Take NUXCARA and eat, get well, strong and happy. Send for
the NUXCARA book, a scientific treatise on digestion, full of testi
monials from those who know. Cut out the guarantee, take it to
your druggist and ask him if he stands behind it. NUXCARA COM
PANY stands behind him, and behind NUXCARA. Five years’
research studying stomach troubles and ten years testing the remedy,
with the result that everyone who takes it gets well and strong.
TAKE NUXCARA—EAT ANYTHING
Price $1.00 Per Bottle, Six Bottles $5.00.
For sale by
EDMONDSON DRUG CO . 11 N Broad St.,106 N. Pryor St.
COURSEY & MUNN. 29 Marietta St.
LAMAR & RANKIN DRUG CO., Wholesale Distributor*
NUXCARA COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga.