Newspaper Page Text
4
?fll]fl MAN, HEIR
Alfred Daly, Entitled to Quarter of
Uncle's Fortune, Contented
To Be Pocr.
IS PUZZLE TO HIS WIFE
Helpmeet Can't Undertsand Hafl'sf
Reluctance With Riches in
His Grasp. 1
CHICAGO, Peb 27 - -Alfred xmfv
spparently is satisfiad with his iot in
Hfe He is content with three meals
a day and & place to hang his hat at
nlght
Even the lure of riches falls to at
tract Bim. He s&t peace with the
world and wants to be let alone. He
fan't socentric. elther
Daly frowns on the suggestion that
e give up firing bollers for a life full
of flm and sase. He also scouls
the idea of relinguishing ha right to
bunk when he is tived on the floor
close 10 the kitchen sink in the two
room cottage where he and his wife
Mve
Daly 19 one of four helrs 1o AR 8-
tate worth approximately 35150000
But he refuses to get excited over
his prospects of wealth. To quote his
own language, he “doesn’t give a
darn” whether he getia 1t or not.
Puzzle to Mis Wife.
The estate In which he ls expected
to share ia that of his uncle, James
Daly. & hotel keeper. who died re
ently In Toronto, Canade It eon
sista partly of real estate. Healden,
there i 515000 in cash left by the
uncle’s brother, who disappeared from
Toronto nineteen years ago and was
never heard of afterward, and which
2 to be divided bhetween Daly, his
brother and two sisters
To his wife Daly is a puzsie. She
san not comprehend his aeemingly In
difference when it comes 10 money
mattera
“Alfred Daly is too desp for even
his wife to fathom.” she says “We
have heen married two years, and yet
1 fall to understand his ways. He
has his own ideas regarding the phi
fosophy of life, and nothing changes,
Wants Oair Toil,
“With riches within his grasp, he
refuses to develop enough ambition to
g 0 after them. He fsn't interested
even to the extent of hiring a lawyer
He would rather spend the rest of his
days In toll and hardship
“The roar of a furnace seems to be
music to his ears. 1 play the plane,
but he doesan't seem to on;\y 1t half se
mouch. | wouldn't have to keep 'ay
plano In the kitchen, either, If he ware
A different man. We could have nice
things to eat and something besides
four bare walls to look at. He could
have a pood bed to sleep on at night,
too, instead of a hard bunk on the
oold floor. You can’t tell me that my
husband isn't a foolish man. Whoe
would ever ocomsider walving the
rights to a fourth part in a $150,000
estate ™
Daly before coming to Chicago
lved In Toronto. He was & member
of the Queen's Own Rifles. Fear of
being drafted into the Canadian army
for service in the European war is
sald to be one of the reasons why he
is not Inclined to go to Canada to
olaim his share of his uncle's estate
Two Drink $8 Wine on
City in Excise Case
NEW YORK, Feb. 27.--The city paid
for two &urt- of champaligne at &..20
@ qnfl en two detectives were on an
exc case at Woodmanstein Inn, ac
cording to testimony In Speclal Ses
“l'd like to know who pays for the
champagne ™' sdld Justice Fleming.
“The c“'B:" the two detectives de
sponded. e case falled.
e S ———————
To Discard Aged or |
Weather-Soiled Skin|
To free your skin of chaps, blotches,
roughness, muddiness, over-redness or
any cutaneous dlffleultr. the best thing
10 do I 8 to free yourself of the skin it
self. This Is easily accomplished by
the use of ordinary morcofind WX,
Use at night as you use cold cream,
washing it off next morning. Imme
diately the offending surface skin be
gine to come off In fine powder-like
Enldu. Gradually the entire cuticle
absorbed In this way, causing no
m or inconvenience. Nor does the
exhibit any evidence of this treat
ment. The second layer of skin now
in evidenoce Yn“m. A sparkling beauty
and youthful robustness obtainable In
R other way we have ever heard of.
e mercolized wax can, of course, be
found in any drug store and you won't
need more than an ounce of it,
To free yourself of wrinkles or crow's.
feet, there's nothing better than the
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gl ounce of powdered saxolite In a
f rlm of witch hazel and bathe your
face in the solution, The effect is quite
remarkable, the lines being less in
evidence even Aafter the first applica
tion.—Advertisement.
May Help if You I
.
Have Tuberculosis
l’rogor dlet, fresh air and temper- !
ate abits aid persons suffering ¢
from Tuberculosis. Often more Is |
needed. Reports show that Eck- {
man's Alterative has brought.about
many recoveries. Read what it did |
in this case: §
Madison Lake, Minn, g
“Gentiemen:—lin December, 1908, '
' was taken with hemorrhage of n\} 0
ngs, which confined me several !
‘3.3:.. each time to my bed. My |
g::n“w”d me to go West. In |
ber | started for Denver, !
Colo. After m‘ arrival | met Mi.
chael Brody, who, upon learning of '
condition, urged me to take ick- F
an'o Alterative. | kept on taking ¢
medicine and improved fast. In
March, 1910, | returned home. | am
entirely well, have a good appetite |
{ and sleep well. When | left Den- {
ver my wolym was 130 pounds. |
now ml&:‘ 65, my normal welght. /
1 thank and bgrom- Alterative for '
my heaith.” ;A evlltod.‘ 0
gmuvu) AUL L. FASNACHT, |
kman's Alterative is most es- 3
ficacious in bronchial catarrh and |
1 severe throat and lung affections
? and upbuilding the system. Con- ¢
{ tains no harmful or habit-forming )
g 8 Accept no substitutes, |
size, $1; regular mize, $2. Sold |
leading drmu Write for |
t of recov ¢
| Laboratory, Philadeiphla.
Persons to Head State Senate
Burwell to Remain Speaker
Political Forecasters Agree
W H BURWELL, who
o will get another term
as Speaker in the Georgia As
sembly, and below, Ogden
Persons, expected to be Presi.
dent of Senate.
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Wifebeater Is Given
Whipping by Squire
Pennsylvania Man Gets New Idea of
Rights of Husband—ls
Jailed, Too.
WILKESBARRE, Feb, 27--John
Kotch, aged 40, who believed Ameri
can laws gave him the right to hoss
his wife by beating her, has a differ
ent knowledge of the law now, for Jus
tice of the Peace Henry Miller, of
Swoyersville, treated Kotch to a dose
of his own medicine,
Mrs. Kotch came to the justice with
both eves blackened. ‘ She told Miller
how she had been beaten, and lhv‘
squire Immediately sent a constable in
search of her husband.
Kotch appeared proud of his ability
to beat his wife, and said ‘“‘the laws
of this country let men boss women."
Squire Miller told him to get his
coat off, and then began one of the
stiffest fights Miller ever fought.
Kotch fought hard, but two blows on
the nose caused the crimson to flow,
which unnerved him. Miller buurredi
his face badly.
Kotch was taken to the jail, and
when he agrees to quit beating his
wife Squire Miller will free him.
Chicago's Trouserets
NEW YORK, Feb. 27.-—Some ex
citement was caused by a dispatch
from Chicagoe which read that trous
erets, presumed to be the same as
pantalets, were coming into vogue, :
The old garment, the dispatch said,
would be seen daintily showing be
neath the full and ruffied skirts.
Inquiry among the leading New
York houses revealed the report was
absolutely without basis, Trouserets
will not be worn here, even by the
most advanced thinkers.
“You may say,” asserted an author
ity on fashions “that no styie ever
started in Chicago.” . Akt
Contests for Georgia Legislative
Officers Are Rapidly Tak
ing Shape.
The next President of the Senate of
Georgia will be Ogden Persons, of
Forayth, Monroe County, Senator
elect from the Twenty -second Distriet,
The next Speaker of the Georgla
House of Representatives will be W.
H. Burwell, of Sparta, Hancock Coun.
ty. who will succeed himaself in that
Political observers throughout the
State have set these predictions down
as final
Benator Persons already has far
more than a sufficlent number of Sen.
ators ptdful to elect, and Mr. Bur
well, who Is without announced oppo
sition, has mors than two-thirds of
the membership of the new House
outspokenly favorable to his re-elec-
The race for the Secretaryship of
the Benate to succeed the late Charles
8. Northen is between D. F. Me-
Clatchey, of Fulton County: Jesse G.
I‘-wh. of Mitchell, and M. C. Tarver,
of itfield.
Mr. McClatchey's friends clalm he
has this race won beyond a doubt, and
::o' a list of 30-odd Senators pledged
Tarver Boom Kept Dark.
The friends of Mr. Perry. do not
concede Mr. McClatchey's election, but
they do not ciaim to have a sufficient
number of Senators pledged to Mr
Perry to elect. Mr. Tarver's boom
has been kept somewhat under cover,
:r no claims yet have been made in
behalf.
Senator 8. C. Dobbs, of Cobb Coun
ty, seems the best bet for President
Pro Tem of the Senate. No other can.
didate has announced for this posi-
An early settlement of these vari-
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it
'oua contests seems to make sure that
the' Legislature will be organized n
June without friction or undue ex
citement, which is rather a remarka
‘ble exception to the usual rule ob
taining in matters of this kind, par
ticularly in Georgia, where politicians
“dearly love a fight”
Senator-elect Persons will not be a
stranger in Georgia's legislative halls,
He has served two terms as Repre
sentative from Monroe County, and
while in the House made an enviable
record for efficiency. One of his nota
ble achievements was the passage of
the convict parole law, which later
was essentlally adopted as the stand
ard of the National Government,
Friend of Farmers.
He has also been prominent in leg
{slation touching public schools and
agricultural interests, He served one
term as judge of the City Court of
Forsyth.,
Speaker Burwell has served In the
Legislature continuously, with the ex
ception of one term. for twenty vears.
On the floor of the House and Senate
he has been a leader of marked ef
fectiveness.
Mr. Burwell was elected Speaker of
the present House without oppesition,
and is generally conceded to be one of
the best presiding officers the House
ever had. He is an expert parilamen
tartan, quick and ready in his ruling,
and is one of the few members who
may be understood distinctly when
speaking In the hall of the House of
Representatives. Mr. Burwell is a
lawyer.
Indiana Law Aims to
Stop Press Monopoly
INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 27—By a
vote of 33 to 10, the Indiana Senate
passed the Clarke bill, which would
prohibit a press assoclation from re
fusing to sell its news service to any
one who applies for it.
An effort was made to put this bill
through sooner, but objection was
raised that the bill had not been print
ed. Senator Clarke explained briefly
that the object of the measure was to
prevent a monopoly.
There was no debate on the bill, It
is expected to be discussed when it
HEAKST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA. GA. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 28 1915
KITGHIN 9AY:
NEW TARIFF f 3
NOT A FAILURE
Democratic Leader Likewise Gives
Praise to Trades Commission
as Help to Business.
Continued From Page 1
and Payne act, were $29.551.471, while
on August 1, 1914, first year of the
Wilson administeation and Under
wood act, they were $75.547.081—tw0
and a half times as much-—an excess
in favor of the Wilson administration
and Underwood act of $44.395.580,
Gold Balance Increases.
“The gold balances in the Treas
ury (exclusive of the $150.000,000 re
serve for redemption of the United
States notes) were:
“On August 1, 1912, §118.747.660.
“Omn August 1, 1911, §112,780,238,
“On August 1, 1910, $75.421.353
“Hut on August 1, 1914, under the
Wilson sdministration and Under
:‘oo:“u't. the gold balance was §130,-
1.
“It will be noted that, while there
was an excess of the Wilson admin
istration and Underwood act over
sach of the Taft administration and
Payne act years, the excess of the
first year n{ the Wilson administra
tion and Underwood act over the first
year of the Taft administration and
Payne act was $52,129.971
Denies Extravagance.
“3. It is charged by Senator Weeks
and his party that the Wilson admin.
istration and the Democratic Congross
have been extravagant in appropria
tions of the public money and made
larger appropriations than the Taft
administration.
“There Is no truth in this charge.
“The fact s that, exclusive of the
postoffice appropriation act, for
which Senator Weeks and .nra Re
publican In the Senate and ouse
voted, we appropriated, for the cur
rent fiscal year, ending June 30, 1915,
belng the first and only year's l&pro
priation under the Wilson administra.
tion, $17,258,000 less than the last an
nual appropriation under the Taft ad
ministration
“But suppose. for argument's sake,
we had heen extravagant —suppose we
had made larger appropriations than
were made under the Taft adminis
tration, why should a Republican
complain? With what face can he
make the charge of extravagance? On
every Appmg:h!lon Commities of
House and nate the Republicans
have the requisite membership. Not
a minority "tm' not a protest from
a single Republican member of a sin
gle Appropriation Committee, was
made against & single dollar appro
priated! The Republicans all, In Sen
ate and House, voted for every one of
the lpmgeflnlon acts. The charge,
now, of mocratic extravagance s
one of pure ignorance or hypocrisy.
“And yet I suppose the Republican
stand-patters and croaking politl
clans, including Senators and Mem
'bers of the House, will continue to
‘(‘Wfl that the Underwood act is a
fatlure as a revenue producer; that it
destroys our export rade; that It
causes deficits In the Treasury; that
it empties the Treasury of Its gold;
that the Democrats are extravagant, et
cetera.
Lauds Trades Commission.
“Senator Weeks says, ‘The main
trouble with business is the uncer
tainty which surrounds it;' that, in
his opinion, ‘the Trades Commission
bill, which passed last year, after a
long time and much pressure, will ac
centuate this condition,” and he at
tempts to make an lssue with the
Wilson administration on this act.
“We understood-—-the country un
derstood and the husiness interests
understood—that the Clayton anti
trust act and the Trades Commission
act were intended to remove, and
would remove, the uncertainty with
which the Taft and Roosevelt ad
ministrations had surrounded busi
ness. These acts made certain and
clear the lines and fields of Immmatol
business activities, big and little,
“But how can the Senator or hll‘
party make an i{ssue with the Wilson
administration and the Democratic |
party on the Trades Commission .wtl
when it received the vote of every
Republican in the House, and only five
Republican votes in the Senate were
recorded against it. Neither the Sen.
ator nor his collague, Senator Loage,
voted against it!
“As for the Clayton anti-trust act,
the chief objection to it, in the Houao.‘
on the part of the Republicans, was
that it did not go far enough; that It“
was not stringent enough, and did not
strike the big interests and big bqu-I
ness hard enough; that it was tOO
gentle with them.”
Talcum Powder as
.
Weapon Saves Girl
CHESTER, PA., Feb. 27—Hurling u.l
package of talecum powder she was car- ‘
rying in her hand into the face of a
man who grabbed her, Miss Sabin Win
ters was able to break loose from and
make her escape. 1
The girl told the {mllce she was pass- ‘
Ing along the street when a tall white
man, wearing a long coat and slouch
hat, accosted her,
When Miss Winters started to scream
the man clapped his hand over her
mouth and told her if she didn't shut
up he would choke her. Miss Winters
struck him in the face with the package |
of talcum powder, which broke and the
powder filled his eves. He released her.
and while he was hrushlng‘ the powder
out of his eves, Miss ‘inters ran
screaming down the street. I
0 « )
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world-wide use. g S
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almost helpless g%
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I—Warner's Safe Remedy for the Kidneys
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2—Warner's Safe Rheumatic Remedy $1.25
3 Warner's Safe Diabates Remedy $1.25
4—-Warner's Safe Nervine 50c and SI.OO
s—Warner's Safe Asthma Remedy 75
R —Warner's Safe Pills .50
| Warner's Safe Remedies Co,,
Dept. 435 Rochester, N. Y.
FUTURE ARTIST
WILL PAINT BY
- NOTE, HE SAYS
Californian Has Already Perfected
.
Scale by Which He Can Trans
.
mit Landscape.
LOS ANGELES, Feb 217.--Art took
a long stride forward when Thomas
Nash, an artist of Redondo, was found
to have perfected the hitherto ehi
merical idea urr'r!nmu by note.
Nash has carried his color-note plan
’la a point where one artist has been
able to deplet faithfully In color &
scene he has never gaszed upon. Now
comes the detall stage, says Nash, of
causing color notes to correspond in
such A manner with musical noles
that an artist will be able to paint &
pleture with pothing to guilde him but
a planoforte composition,
“In & few weeks 1 will be In a posi
tion to offer to faithfully paint from &
plece of music a landscape 1 have
never seen.” says Nash.
Nash's plan, in simple terms, is &s
follows: He takes for his keynote the
zenith of the sky at the time when the
picture is chosen for painting. From
this keynote, which is usually blue.
Nash runs up and down the scale of
his chart, making further notes of the
various colors of his landscapes. Thus,
for instance, & tree in the foreground
will be many notes lower than the
keynote, while runlight glinting over
the mountains may be many notes
‘Mcher- or lighter,
The artist, following out this plan.
therefore, can do as its deviser has
often done already—namely, he can
idnw a pencil sketch of his landscape
and then, upon his chart, which corre
sponds somewhat to the musical scale,
he will make his color notes
A day, a week or a year later he can
finish the picture. From the chart he
’wul get the actual color values which
existed at the time he saw the scene
fm be portrayed,
. More than this: Nash has been col-
Ih\honun‘ with Charles Monk, a Los
Angeles artist, with such success that
Nash has been able to make a dnulfls
and color chart of some scene, sen
‘both to Monk, in Los Angeles, and the
latter, with no further guide has
imlnu-d the scene not only true to na
ture, but in exact duplication of the
same scene as executed by Nash,
j h‘ making his color chart into mu
'sical form, however, Nash expects to
popularize the idea of painting by
note
Ie e —
~ Men to Earn Farms
! WASHINGTON, Feb. 27.—-A dele
' gation representing the National For
- ward to the Land League of New York
conferred with Secretary Wilson, As
‘slnant Secretary Post and Secretary
lof Agriculture Houston In an effort
to secure co-operation of the Depart
‘ments of Commerce and Agriculture
in the movement,
The delegation was composed of
Mrs, Haviland Lund, D. J. Meserole, C.
. Higgins and George H. Polhemus,
of New York. The Secretaries were
informed that the league Yelleved a
man who had no money should be
glven an opportunity to earn the flnt]
payment for a farm, and that men
with no knowledge of farming should
be trained. :
The delegation was adviged to place
before both departments in a formal
manner the steps it desired them to
take to co-operate in the movement,
Girl Wouldn't Wed
Without a Necklace
—_— |
KULPMONT, PA., Feb, 27.—Accusing |
her promised husband of having fsflefif
to buy her a gold necklace, as he had
promised, Miss Mary Barmesk tore up
the marriage license as the ceremony
was about to be performed. 1
Bazel Dizezich, a discarded suitor,
heard of her action and hastened to her
side. “I will wed you,” she declared,
“provided you buy me a gold necklace
with a dlamond pendant in it He
romised, and tosether they went to a
Yewelry store and picked out the one
she desired.
Poor Tailor Is Heir
To $50,000 Fortune
ST. LOUIS, Feb. 27.—Louis Free
man, 27, tallor at a downtown hotel,
has received word that a cousin, Meyer
Cimat, of Newark, N. J., has dled leav
(I)r(l)g an estate and mone{ valued at $50,-
i F‘reellnf ug- he is the only heir.
He has employed an attorney to look
into the case.
Freeling say- If he obtained the mon
ey and property he will give a banquet
and wlfi7 X(emnte $5,000 to St. Louls
charities.
“] shall continue in my tailoring busi
ness,”’ he adds.
Makes Stubborn Coughs
Vanish in a Hurry
Sarprisingly Good Cough Syrup
Easlly and Cheaply
Made at Home
If some one in your family has an ob
stinate cough or a bad throat or chest
cold that has been hanging on and re
fuses to yield to treatment, qet from
any drug store 2% ounces of Pinex and
make it into a pint of cough syrup, and
watch the cough vanish.
Pour the 2% ounces of DPinex (50
cents’ worth) into a pint bottle and fill
the bottle with plain granulated sugar
syrup. The total cost is about 54 cents,
and gives you a full pint—a family sup
ply—of a most effective remedy, at a
saving of $2. A day's use will usually
overcome & hard cough. Hasily i)re
pared in flve minutes—full directions
with Pinex. Keeps {)erfecny and has
a Ipleasam taste. Chlldren like fit.
t's reani' remarkable how promptly
and easily it loosens the dry, hoarse or
tight cough and heals the inflamed
membranes in a ?elnful cough. It also
stops the formation of phlegm in the
throat and bronchial tubes, thus endlng
the persistent loose cough. A saplendi
remedy for bronchitis, winter coughs,
bronchial asthma and whooglng cough.
Pinex is a speclal and highly concen
trated com{’ound of genuine Norway
pine extract, rich in gualacol, which is
so heallnJ to the membranes.
Avoid lu&pgolntment by asking vour
druggist for ‘2l ounces of Pinex,” and
do not accept nnythln’aam. A guaran
tee of absolute satisfaction goes with
this preparation or money promptly re
funded. 1.n1.h. Pinex Company, Fort
‘Wayne, —Advertisement.
»
Give Widows $25,000
Documents Just Admitted to Probate
| Dispose of Two Considerable
| Estates
CHICAGO, ";i:b !I Two widows
are given estates valued at §15,000 and
SIO.OOO in wills just admitted to pro
bate. Both documents were made
more than sixteen YeArs ago
Frederick (" Parker bequeaths his
$15.000 entate to his widow, M Nara
Robinson Parker, No. 4343 Oakennald
avenue. Bhe I 8 named exscutrix Mr.
Parker was head of the Manufactur
ers and Retallery’ Company
Mrs. Margaret M. Egan, No 2918
Groveland avenue, is given SIO,OOO,
the estate of her late husband, James
J. Bgan. Mr 'l‘" was connected
.vflh Exan & Prindeville, architecta
e e
Detroit to Build One
3 '
If Car Line Won't Sell
DETROIT r:b 27 —Subject to the
approval of three-fifths of the VOLers,
an offer of $24,900.000 has been made
by the Street Rallway Commission of
Detroit for properties of the Detrott
United Rallways in the one-fare sone,
with a demand that the company &¢-
cept or decline within ten days
Last week the city rejected the
company's price of $25 500,000, The
city's offer merely covers the rmaill
way's bond lssues, and its rejection Is
sald to mean construction of inde
pendent lines by the city.
.
Farmer, 82, Dies on
. . ’
Learning Wife's Dead
BURLINGTON, VT, Feb 27.~T0M
that his wife was dead, Bdward Kim
ble. §2. a farmer of Coopertown, ex
pressed a desire to join her In death,
‘uad a few minutes later breathed his
ast.
Both were victims of pneumonia,
and had been in good health until a
few days ago. Mrs. Kimble, who was
$0 years old, died yesterday. There
wlm be a double funeral for the cou
ple.
. B
City People Shy on
Phone, Says Expert
CHICAGO, Feb. 37.—People living in
cities are shy in telephone OCONVersa
tions, according to C. Y McVey, of
Cleveland, who was elected president of
the National Independent Telephone
:::.ochtlon at the annual convention
“The country bo{ makes love over a
ten-party line with & farmer's wife
listening At every receiver,” McVey
sald
.
19th Chicago Woman
.
Acquitted of Murder
CHICAGO, Feb, 27 —Mrs. Belle Heas
ley has been acquitted of the murder
of her husband last November.
She was the ninetenth woman tried
for murder and found not guilty in Chi
cago in four Years.
Try the Favorite Recipe of Old
Folks.
- Every one knows that
L Buchu and Juniper
b properly compounded s
€ the best medicine for
. weak kidneys or blad-
J‘_ . S.. der, of which the follow
-2 = IR, {,g are the symptoms:
\_ Urine becomes cloudy,
el g ¢ unusual flow of urine,
W scalding, dribbling,
w ifl"" straining or too frequent
’ - I passage from the blad-
Y I 4 gl der—head and back
& hddrio, pa ‘ aches—ankles or eyelids
\ | Il are swollen or puffy,
gl Pk R spots before the eyes,
" CORBIAL 1 leg cramps, shortness of
| = ‘iai': breath, sleeplessness
l = . ! and despondency, dizzy
|52 ez ooaie [JI spells, —dropsy. Don't
ety waste time wondering If
.::.:'.':_%'_:- you will - get Bright's
== : sease or diabetes, but
| 53"-%:- = get from any rellable
| i‘ff;'-_’:x'-»iér? il druggist a bottle of
R S { Stuart's Buchu and Ju
“-—;—-———:‘-‘ |niper Compound. Take
a spoonful after meals
In a day or so your kidneys will act fine
and natural Stuart’'s Buchu mixed
with Juniper has been used for years to
clean out impurities from the kidneys
and bladder, also to neutralize the uric
acid in the blood and urine so it no
longer irritates, thus ending all kidney
and bladder weakness and dulng away
with all {rritating symptoms Stuart's
Buchu and Juniper is a fine kidney reg
ulator and has helped thousands of suf
ferers from weak kidneys.
c————
Felt as Though On Fire. Couldn’t
Bear Anything to Touch It. Used
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint
ment. Skin Cleared and No Trace
of Trouble Left,
it
R. F. D. No. 3, Lexington, Okla.—"l
had a severe eruption on my right side
which was about four inches wide and ex
tended half way around my body. It came
suddenly, was bright scarlet in color and I
felt as though [ was on fire all the time,
The eruptions commenced exactly like
prickly heat and looked like it. They
itched fearfully. I couldn't bear anything
to touch me at all.,
“1 sent at once for a cake of Cuticura
Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment and
my relief dated from the first application;
I slept that night for the first time in days.
1 washed the eruptions well with the Cuti
cura Soap, dried them and applied the Cu
ticura Ointment. It was not long before
the skin cleared and no trace of the disease
was left.” (Signed) Mrs. W. W, Harbison,
October 27, 1914.
Keep your skin clear, scalp clean and
free from dandruff, and hair live and glossy
with Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment.
Sample Each Free by Mail
With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad
dress post-card ‘‘Cuticura, Dept. T, Bos
ton.” Sold throughout the world.
PAOF. PUPIN HAo
WIRELE3S PHONE
TOREACHEURDPE
NEW YORK, Feb 27.-The opening
of the transcontinental telephone Hine
between New York and San Francis
co resulted in two announcements of
vital interest to both sclence and com.
merce
1. Professor Michas! Idvorsky Pu
m of Columbla University, whose
ing colls scattered along she
3.400-mile line carried the volce from
o wireless ‘:h;:“ e Mn:
perfocted a t one whic
could enable Americans to talk with
N!Tonr the islands of the Pacific.
2. John J. Carty, chief engineer of
the American Telephone and Tele
graph Company, to whom was given
chief credit by fellow officials for es
tablishing the transcontinental tele
‘bou service, stated that the New
ork-San Francisco line would be
developed soon into & much greater
system that would link all the mpor.
tant cities of the United States lo
gether
Heretofore Professor Pupin has al
luded to his wireleas telephone
vaguely. Not until Alexander Gra
ham Rell, inventor of the Jlell tele
phone, predicted telephone communi
cation between America and Europe
has Professor Pupin consented to re
veal any of the detalls of hig latest
and most wonderful invention.
He sald: “1 am convinced the wire
telephone will be supplanted by the
wireless telephone for all long-dis
tance service. .
“My Invention brings Into use aerial
waves, and may be used for telegraph
as well as (olo@ofie When properly
installed, the New Yorker can take
down his recelver in his apartmem
and talk with his daughter in Parls or
his brother in London.
“This new transcontinental tels
:hmo line was sald to represent a
2,400,000 outlay. On the other hand,
the wireless telaphone means small
expense. For trans-Atlantic service
the two necessary plants ought not to
cost more than SIOO,OOO each. This
will mean low rates and bring it with.
in the popular purse.”™
The statements so Professor Pupin
are regarded as the highest authority
among engineers of the telephone
world,
“There 18 no man who has studied
this oubrfl with greater research and
depth of thought than Professor Pu
pin” sald Chief Engnm Carty. of
the Bell company. ad it not been
for his loading colls every eight miles
along the 2,400-mile line, the achleve.
ment would have been impossible™
————————————————
HOW FRENCH PEOPLE
CURE STOMACH TROUBLE
A household remedy of the French
peasantry, consisting of pure vegela
ble 011, and sald to possess wonderful
merit in the treatment of stomach,
liver and intestinal troubles, has been
introduced in this country by George
H. Mayr, who for twenty years has
been one of the leading downtown
druggists of Chicago and who himself
was cured by its use. So quick and
effective is its action that a single
dose !s usually enough to bring pro
nounced rellef in the most stubborn
cases, and many people who have
tried it declare they never heard of
anything to produce such remarkable
results in g 0 short a time. It is known
as Mayr's Wonderful Remedy and can
now be had at all leading drug stores,
It is sold with the positive under
standing that your money will be re
funded without question or quibble if
ONE bottle fails to give you absolute
satisfaction.—Advertisement.
Mirror Say to You
If Your Face Is Not Fair You Are Not
Fair to Your Face. Use Stuart's
Calcium Wafers and Banish
Pimples, etc.
Before heauty can ever be realized
it must hdave a complexion that adds
to its luster, that makes a magnificent
face contour radiate an artistic color
The charm of all beauty rests chiefly
in the clear skin, the pure red blood,
the soft cream-like complexion
x>
d
\/
“} ~ :
“
S . ol
' ~ N !
“It Is an Exqulsite Joy to Look lin My
Mirror ‘Now-—Stuart’s Calcium
Wafers Gave Me Back My
Clear Complexion.”
Stuart's Calclum Wafers act directly
upon the sweat glands of the skin,
since their mission is to stimulate the
excretory ducts They do not create
perspiration, but cause the skin to
breathe out vigorously, thus transform
ing perspiration into a gaseous vapor.
'The calcium sulphide of which /these
wafers are composed consumes the
germ poisons in the sweat glands and
pores, hence the blood makes a new,
smooth skin lin a surprisingly short
time
You will never be ashamed to look
at yourself in a mirror, once you use
Stuart’'s Calclum Wafers Nor will
your friends give you that hinting look,
as much as to say—for goodness sake,
get rid of those pimples.
There is no longer any excuse for
any one to have a face disfigured with
skin eruptions, when it is so easy to
get rid of them. Simply get a box of
Stuart's Caleium Wafers at any drug
store and take them according to di
rections After a few days you will
hardly recognize yourself in the mirror.
The change will delight you immensely
All blemishes will disappear
All druggists sell Stuart's Calelum
Wafers at 5¢ cents a box. A small sam
ple package mailed free by addressing
F. A. Stuart Co., 176 Stuart Bldg., Mar
shall, Mich.—Advertisement.
USE SUNDAY AMERICAN
WANT ADS.
Does Real Work in Cleaning
= z.
W\ -
E“ -
L
. Loy y
,\ »
e o) ,
/‘,/ ,J i!‘ .
- * y
It is to the skin that bleod impurities
are driven by Nature. And It Is In the
skin that & 85 5., the famous blood
purifier, has Its most pronounced Infly
ence For It 1a Dere that you see the
results. 8 B 5 s none the less effec
tive In the joints, glands and mucous
surfaces in driving out rheumatism,
overcoming bolls and ridding the system
of catarrh
The purely vegetable Ingredients in
£ B B are naturaily assimilated, but
they enter the blood as an active med!
cine and are not destroyed or converted
while at work. It s this peculiar sea
ture of 8. 8. 5. that makes it so offec
tive. It stirs Into action all the forces
of the body, arouses digestive secre
tions, stimulates the bicod circulation to
destroy disease-breeding germs
Upon entering the blood 8. 8§ B s
arried mmughuu!“lmr body In about
three minutes. A in a brief time it
has any biood trouble so under control
that it no longer can multiply. Gredu
ally new flesh is formed in all broken
down tissues and the skin takes on the
ruddy glow of health, He sure and get
a bottle of 8§ B, 8 to-day of any drug
gist. but avold all substitutes
Around the bottle is an illustrated eir.
cular that tells you how to obtain spe
clal free advice iln quickly overcoming
serious blood disorders. 5. 8. 5. is pre
pared only by The Bwift Specific Co., 8
Swift Bidg., Atlanta, Ga.
HEROES IN THE TRENCHES
PARIS, Feb. 27.-—~These men in the
trenches must keep lincessant vigi
lance against sudden attacks by the
enemy The men who serve the ar
tillery fire day and night oftentimes
at an enemy that is never seen
Medieal sclence will save more lives
this year than war will take, no mat
ter how terrifically murderous that
war may be. Then, too, the food sup
ply is very carefully looked after by
the commissariat. The food supply of
the soldlers must be wholesome, Liv
ing In the open air, the men are able
to digest hard-tack with great relish
Napoleon sald, “An army fights on its
stomach” A man with a weak stom
ach is pretty sure to be a poor fighter
It is difficult—almost impossible—for
anyone, man or woman, if digestion i»
poor, to succeed in business or social
ly--or to enjoy life. In tablet or liquid
form Dr. Plerce's Golden Medical Dis
covery helps weak stomachs to strong,
healthy action—helps them to digest
the food that makes the good, rich,
red blood which nourishes the en
tire body
This vegetable remedy, to a great
extent. puts the liver into activity-—
olls the machinery of the human sys
tem so that those who spend their
working hours at the desk, behind the
counter, or In the home are rejuve
nated Into vigorous health
It has brought relief to many thou
sands every year for nearly AAfty
vears. It can relieve you and doubt
less restore your former health and
strength. At least you owe it to your
self to give it a trial. Sold by medi
cine dealers or send 50 cents for box
of tahlets—Dr. Plerce's Invallds' Ho
tel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo,
N Y
You can have Dr. Plerce’'s Com
mon Sense Medical Adviser of 1108
pages in cloth binding, fully illustrat
ed with colored plates, for 3 dimes or
30 cents.
Read all about yourself, your sys
tem, the physlology of life, sex prob
lems, marriage relations, anatomy,
hygiene exercise, diseas and its pre
vention, simple home ctles, ete.—Ad
vertisement,
eeee—
Ay Lady May Do It At Home-
Costs Nothing To Try.
i
eßy Yoo gSB
Roatd Ll kg
iR P, V 3 735 3
o e
% ‘}fl»"f X
i B
o Y e
. & IO LY A
ik Ll Vi S
Every Woman In the World May Save
Some Drunkard.
At last, drunk no more, no more. A
treatment that is tasteless and odor
less, safe, absolutely so; heartily In
dorsed by temperarnce workers; can be
given secretly by any lady in tea, cof
fee or food; effective in its sllent work
the craving for liquor relieved in
thousands of cases without the drink
er's knowledge, and against his will
Will you try such a remedy if you can
prove its effect, free to you? Then
send the coupon below for a free trial
pvackage to-day.
Dr. J. W. Haines Company, \
6445 Glenn Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. ‘(
Please send me, absolutely free, by
return mail, in plain wrapper, so%
) that no one can know what it con
tains, a trial package of Golden (
Remedy, to prove that what ynu(
claim for it is true in every respect. )
NAMEG ..cosessvosceachssessscesscssnce }
Street ...ciciieriiriiiiiiiiiiiiitines ¢
" o
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e
/ Ko - k
R
L} B g
Dr. Delaney's 1.-l
eresting new book: g
entitled “For Your J
Dog’s Bake.” It's just off thoi
press. Write for YOUR copy, &
YermilaxCo. Inc., Dept 67220W.424 st,, 5.7