Newspaper Page Text
6
Would Bar Cigarette
. 12 .
Users as Instructors
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What Does Your
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M Your Face Is Not Fy You Are N
Fair to Your Face Use Btuart’s
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Pimplies. ot
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L i an Exgquinite Joy © i k in My
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Waters Gave Ma Back My
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R N el of s 2hE
SRS - > o a 8 ' the
germ | he swen! glands ar
'\' “ eV - BALAT o~ » €
Mtuart's } Waler Ko “
ur w Eive that ting loe
A N to say-—for goodnens sake
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EPILEPTIC
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when the weak nerves that cause the
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in good condition by the use of '
s !
Dr Guertin's Nerve Syrupg |
It helns with the first Dose. | |
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if first bottle fails in any case of [ |
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Dizziness and Insomnia. 1
Large bottle, $1.090: 6 bottles, $5.008 |
Sold by !
JACOBRS' PHARMACIES
Atlanta, Ga.
Ask vour druggist to get it for
ou from his wholesale druggist !
Write the makers, Kalmus Chemical Q|
Co., Kalmus Building. Cincinnati, 0., for
their valuable illustrated medical book,
ERE E “EPILEPSY EXPLAINED"
wl ch is sent free to youll |
elsassane
Take Salts to Flush Kidneys if
Back Hurts or Bladder ~
Bothers.
If yvou must have your meatl every
day, eat it, but flush your kidneys
with salts occasionally, says a noted
authority, who teHs us that meat
forms uric acid, which almost para
\vzes the kidneys in their efforts to
gxpel it from the blood. Thev become
sluggish and weaken, then you suffer
with a dull misery in the kidney rve
gion, sharp pains in the back or sick
headache, dizziness; your stomach
sours, tongue is coated, and when the
weather is bad vou have rheumatic
{winges. The urine gets cloudy, full
) sediment: the channels often get
sore and irritated, obliging you to
seek relief two or three times during
the night,
To neutralize these irritating acids,
to cleanse the kidneys and flush oftf
the body's urinous waste, gat four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar
macy here; tuke a tablespoonful in a
glass of water before breakfast for a
few days, and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acid of grapes and lemon
juice, combined with lithia, and has
been used for generations to flush
and stimulate sluggish kidneys: also
to neutralize the acids in urine so it
w 0 longer irritates, thus ending blad
der weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive;, can not
injure, and makes a delightful effer
vescent lithia-water drink.—Adver
tigement.
ittt e S
Don’t Whip Children
¢ seéld wider persens who wet the bed or are un
ahis o control thelr water during the night =r day.
- 1t 4s mot a habit But a Dissase. If you haw
ai's Kicwey, Bladder or Tiringsy Weakness, writs
cay for 4 Fres Package of our Harmless Remedy.
l&h-u permanent'y relisved toll your friends about it
Bend 7o moley. Address
~ ZEMETO CO., Dept. 517, Milwaukee, Wis.
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| —— t
North Carolinan, in a Reply to]
Senator Weeks, the G. 0. P.|
; Spokesman, Defends Tariff|
and Business Legislation.|
:
!
. By JOMN TEMPLE GRAVES
WANHINGTO) Feb ’e Claude
h w 1 ew leader of hn:
[remmnocs ' ity in the House
. g Usiar \ derwood., by "-!
vole ’ arty . i It is '
pir f N -l pnocrats that M
;hnv - nuch. I notl mors
about the Arify « f han Oscar Ur
erw ol mee.
He s : a thinker and a
master Y Champ Clark says he
i the fAnest debater the House has |
known | Yyou s i
To-day he gave his views, in detail .
as follows l
™ rea big issue between the
artios in the ampaign of 1918 will be
the approva r disapproval of the|
Wilson administration and the Dem
ratic Congress
The tariff w be the maln issue- |
that is, the Underwood-Simmons &
will be the main point of attack by |
the Republicans a f defense by the !
Democrals
Tari#f as Revenue Aid.
1. in mrged by Senator |
Weeks and e Republican friends
that the U'nderwood act is a fallure |
A% A revenue produces
There is no truth in this charge
The fact that that, from October 4, |
" the date of its enactment, (o)
Ausust 1. 1914, the beginning of the
European War the 1 'nderwood 4”‘,&
wit t¢ Income tax and other In !
ternal revenues. groduced $8.000,000 |
pore revenue than the Payne act, |
with its corporation tax and other |
internal revenue, for the same m--mhnf
of the preceding year under the Payne |
act -that the next to the last year |
aof the Mayne act !
1t no BEuropean war had cecurred
at the same rate of collection prevall
ng up to August 1, 1814, and the same |
rate of Wmcreasze In importations os |
wax the annual average Increase dur ?
ing the four years of the Payne act !
even If the reduced tariff of the Un-1|
derwood adt hiad not added to the 'n»‘
crease—for the fiscal year ending June |
36 1915 we would have collected, with |
the Underwood act, income tax and!
other interpal revenue, over 320,000 ‘
660 more than for any year under the |
Payne act, or ar year in the history ‘
of the Government
| 'he authors of the Underwond |
act, at its passage, estimated that, !nr‘
e fiscal year ending June 30, 1914,
with the three months—July, August
and September, 1915 -of he Mayne
act It would vield, in custom receipts,
£270.000.000. It actually yielded $292,.
000000 It exceeded expectations by
222 000,000 i
Effect on Exports. t
2. It is charged that our tariff act
has injured our export trade ‘
“T'here 18 no truth in the charge i
The fact is that, from October 3|
1913, to August 1, 1914-—the life of the |
Underwood act up to the beginning of |
the European war (when at once !nni
slump in our export trade began)-- |
wy export trade was larger by over|
£80,000,000 than, with one exception, |
in® any vear in the history of our|
ountry It was $153.000,000 larg o |
than for the same month under (hv:
Payne act for the year ending Au-!
gust 1, 1912, and $465,000,000 larger
than for the same months of the firat .
year of the Payne act i
. “There wus, on the first day of|
the first August under the Wilson ad
’m'nis!m’.:w ind Underwood act an
excess over the first August under
l""“ Taft administration and |h~-’
' Pavne act, of $66,3%5,000
| “The working balances in rlu-i
y"'!‘o-n.-nr\ offices on August ! 1910}
first year of the Taft administration
i and Payne act, were $29,551,471, while
lon August 1, 1914, first year of the
Wilson administration and Under
wood act, they were 373047051 -two
and a half times as much--an excess
in favor of the Wilsen administration
and Underwood act of $44,395580,
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
“On August 1, 1911, $112,780,235.
“On August 1, 1810, $78,421,383
“But on August 1, 1214, under the
Wilson administration and Under
wood act, the gold balance was SIBO,-
551,354, v
“It will be noted that, while there
was an excess of the Wilson admin
istration and Underwood act over
each of the Taft administration and
Payne act years, the excess of the
first vear of the Wilson administra
tion and Underwood act over the first
vear of the Taft administration and
Payne sct was $52,129,971,
Denies Extravagarnce.
“3 It is charged by Senator Weeks
and his party that the Wilson admin
istration and the Democratic Congroess
have been extravagant in appropria
tions of the public money and made
larger appropriations than the Taft
administration,
“There ig no truth in this charge
| “The fact is that, exclusive of the
postofiice appropriation aci, for
which Senator Weeks and every Re
publican in the Senate and House
voted, we appropriated, for the cur
rent fiscal year, ending June 30, 1916,
being the first and only year's appro
priation under the Wilson administra
tion, $17,258,000 less than the last an
nual appropriation under the Taft ad
ixmnlstrminn.
“But suppose, for argument’s sake,
‘\n'e had been extravagant-—suppose we
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! R ¥ FREE""“"I new book.
%‘ entitied “For Your
G JBA Doms sake It's just off the
' T nress. WWrite for YOUR capy.
YVermilaxCo. Inc., Dept 67 220 W . 424 st NV
Persons to Head State Senate
Burwell so Remain Speaker
Political Forecasters Agree
W H. BURWELL, who
« 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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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 Appropriation Committee of
House and Senate the Republicans
have the requisite membership. Not
a minority report, not a protest from
a single Republican member of a sin
gle Appropriation Committee, wnsl
made against a single dollar appro
priated! The Republicans all, in Sen- l
ate and House, voted for every one of
the appropriation acts. The charge,
now, of Democratic extravagance lis
one of pure ignorance or hypocrisy.
“And yet 1 suppose the Republican
stand-patters and croaking politi
clans, including’ Senators and Mem
bers of the House, will continue to
charge that the Underwood act is a
fallure as a revenue producer; that it |
destroys our export rade: that 1t
causes deficits in the Treasury; that
it empties the Treasury of Its gold:
that the Democrats are extravagant, et
cetera,
“Senator Weeks says, ‘The maln
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 issue with the
Wilson administration on this act.
“We understood-—the country un
derstood and the business 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 flelds of legitimate
business activities, big and lttle.
“But how can the Senator or his
party make an issue with the Wilson
administration and the Democratic
party on the Trades Commission act
when it recelved 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 Lodage,
voted against it!
“As for the Clayton anti-trust aot,
the chief objection to it, in the House,
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 busi
ness hard enough; that it was oo
gentle with them.” 2
HEAKS] B SUNDAY AMEniCAN. AVILANTA, GA. SUNDAY. FESRUARY 38, 1915
Contests for Georgia Legislative
Officers Are Rapidly Tak
ing Shape. ’
The next President of the Senale of
Georgia will be Ogden Persons, of
Forsyth, Mbaree County, Senator
elect from the Twenty-second Distriet,
The next Speaker of the Georgia
House of Representatives will be w.
. Burwell, of Sparta, Hancock Coun.
ty, who will succeed himself in that
office,
Folitical observers throughout the
State have set these predictions down
as final
SBenator Persons already has far
more than a sufficient number of Sene
ators pledged to elect, and Mr. Byr
well, who is without announced oppo
sition, has more than two-thinds of
the membership of the new House
o:noubukmly favorable to his re-elec
tion.
The race for the Secretaryship of
the Senate to succeed the late Charles
8 Northen is between D. F. Me-
Clatchey, of Fulton County; .‘:’ G,
Perry, of Mitchell, and M. C. rver,
of Whitfleld.
Mr. McClatebey's friends claim he
has this race won beyond a doubt, and
“bo:l & list of 30-odq, Senators pledged
to him
Tarver Boom Kept Dark.
The friends of Mr. Perry do not
concede Mr. MeClatchey's election, but
they do not claim to have a sufficient
number of Senators pledged to Mr.
Perry to elect. Mr. Tarver's boom
has been kept somewhat under cover,
and no claims yet have been made In
his 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 settiement of these vari-
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ous 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 efliciency. One of his nota
ble achievements was the passage of
the convict parole law, which later
‘was essentially adopted as the stand
ard of the National Government.
Friend of Farmers.
He has also been prominent in leg
jelation tovching public schools and
ggricultural interests. He served one
term as judge of the City Court of
Forsyth.
Speaker Burwell has served in the
l!.azislmnrw cantinuously, with the ex
(\epuon of one term, for twenty years.
n the floor of the House and Senate
he has been a leader of marked of
| fectiveness,
| Mr. Burwell was elected Speaker of
the present House without opposition,
and is generally conceded to be one of
the best presiding officers the House
ever had. He is an expert parllamen
tarian, 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, by
Uses Thief as Club
.
To Beat Companion
LOS ANGELES, Feb, 237—Two masked
men reckoned without their host when
they entered the room of N. H. Hobbs,
South’ San Pedro street, and attempted
to hold him ug at the point of a revolv
er. Mr. Hobbs was awakened by the
men entering his room. As he jumped
from the bed one of them grabbed him
and told him if he moved he was a dead
man.
Then things commenced to happen.
Mr. Hobbs wsho moves pitnos for & liv
ing. took the first intruder firmly by
both feet and used him as a club to sub
due the other man.
Neighbors, awakened by the cries for
mercy by the near-bandits, sent in a
call for the police. Mr. Hobbs, however,
thought the men had been sufficiently
punfshed and allowed them to go.
ROCKEFELLER'S
DAUGHTER GIVEN
CCRUB LESSONS
Wealthy Mrs. Harold F. McCor
mick Member of Class Study
ing Housework.
CHICAGO, Peb, 27 Mrs. Haroid P
MeCormick, daughter of John D
Rockefeller. has atiended a novel sort
of school in Zurich, Switseriand. It
is one of domestic aris and sclences,
in which sweeping, dusting. washing
and cleaning are taught, nat to
servants, but o thelr mistresses.
A Chicagoe friend who has just re
turned from a visit in Zurich, teld of
finding the society leader and patron
ess of art and music on her Knees
cleaning out the space beneath a
couch
When the friend expressed sur
prise, Mrs. MotUormick lsughingly in
formed her the labor she was doing
was light compared to that necessary
in some of the courses taught at the
»chool. q
Mrs. MeCormick has learned to
clemn carpets with her own hands, to
dust portieres and curtains, to beat
rugs and to clean house, until M‘
even a lonely speck of dust remains
hidden in a corner,
With the thoroughness of the Swiss,
the instructors insist on proficiency
in every branch before they set the
seal of approval on their puplis
Mrs. McCormick finishes the
course she will be able to do every
branch of housework more efficiently
than any of the many servants the
MeCormicks employ.
The school was started on the prin
ciple that it is a waste of time to
teach servants how to perform house
hold duties unless the employers
know whether they are properly done,
In order to know this, the Jromciers
of the school argue, it s n-cessary
for the head of the household t., know
how to do the taske herself
.
U. 8. Collier to Take
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11.—-The Navy
tlor‘nmul has advised the Jewish Ke
lief Committee that when the collier
Vulean leaves for the Mediterranean on
March 4, :r‘n will be allowed to the
committee for relief supplies to be our
ried to Paestine to .fimm the suf
hfln? of the Jews., Permission to do
this has been requested of the Ulte
man Government. The Vulcan will
make this trip primarily to carry coal
and provisions to the Tennesses &
North Carolina. which are stationed in
the Turkish waters, but it is sald that
ample space will be avallable to carry
ifood and medical supplies to the Jew
ish population of Palestine.
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT
For the six fonths ending December 31, 1914, of the condition of the
Atlantic Life Insurance Company
OF RICHMOND, VA,
Organized under the laws of the State of Virginia, made Lo the Governor
of the State of Georgia in pursuance to the laws of said State.
Principal Office—Seventh and Franklin Sts., Richmond, Va
1. CAPITAL STOCK.
1. Amount of capital stock .... c.0.c0 oo o 0 eo .$300,000.00
2. Amount of capital stock paid up in cash.. .. .. 300,000.00— $300,000.00
1. ASSETS.
1. Market value of real estate owned by the company .. .. $2.750.00
2 Loans on bonds and mortgage (first liens) on
PORE GEEBLE i oo s~e wss sevely we 0b ...$1,712,008.91
Loans on bonds and mortgage (second liens)
on TBl OEIBRE ... .s. .t seee os an sdas 11,000.00
—_——— $1,723,003.01
3. Loans secured by pledge of bonds, stocks or other mar
ketable COIIRLOIRIB ... oo cossves son soc loswas ae- 14,750.00
4. Loans made in cash to policyholders on this company’s
policies assigned as SO ..o col hnaiiver NARTine 368,067.82
5. Premium ‘notes, loans or liens on policies in PONOD vavss 51,494.08
§ Bonds and stocks owned absolutely: Par value, $210,000;
market value (carried out), $237,648.26 .. .. .. ...... 237,848.26
| 7. Cagh In company’s OffiCe ... .ccoec oo ccn trs oo oo 3,601.94
8. Cash deposited in bank to credit of company ... ... .- 166,565.71
10. Interest due or acgrued and B.bsk s N 38,143.21
14, Net amount of uncollected and deferred premiums (de
duction 27 per cent for average joading from gross
RS 7T LTI LAY BN i e wAR Re s TRy 43,2566.34
$2,639,280.37
Less credit balances due agents. .. ... ... sus sre oo 64.75
SEEE SOBONE is s e ssiar i e ol bl g $2,639,215.62
11. LIABILITIES.
1. Net preaer}t value of all the outstanding poli
olad T TOIOe .. i iielvas ednheT ws 0s ..$2,044,796.00
Deduct net value of risks in this company,
reinsured in other solvent companies .. .. 49,274.00
Net, premium TFeServe ... ... seosce seo osr sby concge $1,995,522.00
3. Death losses and matured endowments in proc
ess of adjustment, or adjusted and not due. $14,014.00 .
Total polioy clalms ... ... Geeoes ser wre sue aen sae 14,014.00
6. Guaranteed dividends on deposit... ... ... ... ... e 83,763.74
7. Dividends declared and due and remaining unpaid .. .... 1,000.00
8 Dividends declared, put not yet due ... ... ... ... voe oo 48,881.47
10. Amount of all other claims against the company ... ... .. 67,879.60
A O o R 300,000.00
12. Surplus over all Habilities ... ...... o 0 car een e e 128,164.81
SO NI Y i e s D RE ERRR
V. INCOME DURING THE LAST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1914,
1.-Amount of cash premiums received ... ... ... ... ... $340,349.64.
9. Amount of notes received for premiums ... ... ... ... 69,275.86
o R e i R 74,827.61
4. Amount of income from all GUNOP DONPCRR .. e s 13,596.40
bt TR TLeUL Rb L e e e $498,049.61
V. DISBURSEMENTS DURING THE LAST SIX MONTHS OF THE
YEAR 1914, .
1 LONERE DRIG .= v e e e vl e e s .. $67,22¢4,00
B s
MR 7 R R RTR s ey Tl ..$57,224.00
3. Deduct amount received from other companies
for losses or claims of policies of this company
i SEMNGERE (.0 L e e sy T Tea ooiy s 6,625.00
| Total amount actually paid for losses and matured en-
TRN L ePN e P e $50,599.90
4 ARRGISENER NLL R e sl v s eee e e 2,250.00
5. Surrender policies ... ... <co cese canere cne wag eae e 45,150.21
6. Dividends paid to policyholders or others ... ... ... .. 30,532.34
7. Expenses paid, including commissions to agents and offi- -
g U T R L R e T 122,720.94
8. TAReR PRIA 0. 1L (U 0 sit e Wan veer er L duy bl 6,822.89
9. All other payments and expenditures . ... ... ... ... .. 1,502.98
Total disbursements ... ... coveev vrt oss aes oot wseas $259,578.36
Greatest amount insured in any one ri5k.........N0 limit
Total amount of insurance ontstanding .. .. . .$25,373,071.00
A copy of the Act of Tncorporation, duly certified, is in the office of the
Insurance Commissioner. ”
STATE OF VIRGINIA—City of Richmond.
Personally appeared before the undersigned Roy M. Jones, who, being
duly sworn, deposes and says that he is the Secretary of the Atlantic Lisle
Insurance Company. and that the foregoing statement is correct and true.
; ; : ROY M. JONES.
I Sworn to and subscribed before me this 26th dayv es February, 1915,
. WALTER CHRISTIAN,
Clerk of the Hustings Court of the City of Richmond, Va..
!
| '
Californian Has Already Perfected
| Scale by Which He Can Trans
! mit Landscape.
{ LOS ANGELES, Feb 27 —Ar ook
a long stride forward when Thomas
Nash. an artist of Redondo, Was found
ito have perfected the hitherto <hi
| merical idea of palnting by note
| Nash has carried hia color-note pan
to a point where one artist has been
gnh:o 1o depict faithtully In color &
seene he has never gased upon Now
lrnmo. 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 a
pleture with pothing to guide him but
a planoforte composttion
“In & few woeks | will be in a posi
tion to offer to falthfully paint from &
plece of music & andscape 1 have
rever seen” says Nash
Nash's plan, in simple terms, % as
follows: He takes for his keynote the
senith 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
|hn chart. making further notes of the
| various colors of his landscapes. Thus,
for instance, a tree in the foreground
will be many notes lower than the
kevnote, while suniight glinting over
the mountains may be many notes
higher —or lighter
The artist, following out this plan
| therefore, can do as its deviser has
| often done already .namely, he can
draw a pencll sketch o his landscape
and then, upon his chart, which corre
sponds somew hat to the musical scale,
he will make his color notes
A day, & week Or a Year later he can
i!nlnh the picture. From the chart he
will get the actual color values which
existed at the time he saw the scene
to be portrayed.
More than this: Nash has been col
laborating with Charles Monk, a Los
Angeles artist, with such success that
Nash has been able to make a drawing
|and color chart of some scene, mend
| both to Monk, In Los Angeles, and the
| latter, with no further guide, has
painted the scene not only true to na
ture. but In exact duplication of the
same scene as executed by Nash,
By making his color chart into mu
ln“nl form. however, Nash expects to
| popularize the idea of painting by
| note
| JOIN THE CLUB.
i 1, Save flrr cent on films and fin
| ishing. 2. ree developing, rolls and
[:nlu. 3. Eight-hour service. 4. Dou
| ble weight, wide marglnrmu. distilled
water. 5. Locate the difference. Try
the “Co-Op" Lab. and Studio, 119 Peach
tree street.
Parents Offer to Sell
Their Two Children
DETROIT. MICH., Peb 3T~"Feor
sale—Two Amerioan children, DecAuUse
their father I 8 an American and oan
pot #et & job to proteet them.™
This sign In big black kllutw was
REGULATE YOUR BOWELS AND aflF
(OL, HEADAGHES SOUR STOMAH
| Tarn the rascals out-—the head
ache, biliousness, indigestion, const!-
pation, the sick, sour stomach and bad
colds—turn them out to-night with
Cascarets.
Don't put in another day of distress.
Let Cascarets cleanse and sweetin
your stomach; remove the sour, undl
gested and fermenting food and that
misery-making gas: take the excess
@ty
\CTS LIKE DYNAMITE ON LIVEY
Stop using calomel! It makes you
sick. Don't lose a day's work. If you
feel lazy, sluggish, billous or consti
pated, listen to me!
~ Calomel is mercury or quicksilver,
which causes necrosis of the bones,
Calomel, when it comes into contact
with sour bile, crashes Into it, break
ing it up. This s when you feel that
awful nausea and cramping. If yom
are “all knocked out,” If your liver is
torpid and bowels constipated or you
have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue; If breath is bad or stoma«h
sour. just try a spoonful of harmless
Dodson’s Liver Tone. .
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store and get a 50-cent bottle of
mzon’o Liver TOI;:‘ Take a spoon
ful to-night « if 1t doesn’t straight
Em;mm’——r—-—a_r__“__,__iv
Spring Time—Remember -
Is Blood Gleaning Ti
s Blood Cleaning Time
Entire System is Clogged—Great lHordes of
Germs Congest the Blood te Gause
- -
Pimples, Boils, Carbuncles, Eczema
- -
and Other Skin Diseases.
2 . ;‘;; /’;3:-‘:";::“'-,- "rf,'.,/ ~ SL 8 -
ie~ "f?{% i
SR AW oS L RSEN TR o
Y _ B RN\ 5 e
e ’/\ *&;“‘s “"- 'f,,§ & }-’ ;
“\\ 2 ""‘ ‘,gi?;}fi" ¥ :,,-':; /«4}'.
(e ) R LY r;-.*;{j;-“_ AR
b ‘,;-'3:’/ SW4
AT \B ‘\ ]y" s ’y//’/
Go\ \ € "-{-" AN y
\ . >3
8. S. S. Gives You Backbone, Nerve Strength with Pure,
Invigorated Blood.
If you feel thick headed, legs a-weary,
tire easily and feel wutterly used up
your blood needs a bath
1t is astonishing how quickly yecu
prace up after using 8. 8. 8. After the
long nights of winter have slowed you
down, made your %icod siugsish, and
filed youwr system with the Cramps,
aches and scids of thick, stagnant bloed
veu actwally require the influence of
S 8. B
Fczema, rash, pimples, tetter, bolls,
and all impurities M the blood are
quiekly washed out by the remarkable
action of 8. §. 8. It &In the nature of
a bath fer your blood. It is not a
“dope,” @mot a ‘‘physic,” fthere is not a
drop of harmful mineral druzs. It is &
tar better frtend to vour nerves than
any ‘‘nervine’’ you can use because it is
fnst as pure as the gruel you would
feed %o an invalid. The blood takes
kindly to 8. 8. 8.,k 4 ‘'t bother your
stomach but i does myou strength.
Rheumatieq, catarrh, malaria, broa
ohitis, typhofd amd ail such painful or
dangerous maladles eannot remain in'a
systern washed and cleansed by the re
markable action of S. S. 8.
There is scarcely a drug store or gen
eral store anywhere but what lkeeps
8. 8. 8. In stock. It is prepared in one
of the world’s best and largest labora
tories and has maintained the health of
a host of people who use it every spring
and fall because it gives them a feeling
of renewed strength, puts the loek of
heaith in the eye and pinks the flesh
with the ruddy.gov of health.
The human bedy, like the habitatien
of man, s closed all winter and becomes
clogged with stagnant Impurities. Tn
the spring nature ettempts to overbaul
the bleod and thuws we sae pimples, bolls,
carbuncles and various skin afflictionds
breaiking out to relleve the congestion
within.
The remarkable mannar in which 8.
8. 8., the famous bloed purifier, clewrs
T
M“btmwmhtfl‘
soctated Charities Bullding. !
“You, we will sell Emma. 18 monihs
old, and Jennie. 3 years old, for 11,000
ench,” sald Mrs. Andrew Yubass, meoih.
or of the children,
“We pald 13,000 down on & home And
zmn,.n.muv\fl pay
.n:'-ku:.:onéw‘
work hw% he we
M”nflm and pay our
bide from your llver and carry off (he
decomposed waste matter .n&enu\-
pation poison from the bhowe
A Cascuret to-night will straightem
:ou out by Ml:::r:llnr-—. 10-cont box
eops your ear. atomach sweet,
liver and bowels regular and you
feel bully for months. Don't forgeg
the children—thelr little Insides need
1a good, gentle cleansing, too..
en you right up and make you feel
fine and vigorous by morning I wang
you to go back to the store and get ;
your money., Dodson's Liver Tone is
destroying the sale of calomel because
it i= real llver medicine; entirely veg
etable; therefore, it can not sallvate
or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson’'s Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that sour bile and consii
pated waste which is clogging your
system and making you feel miser
able. I guarantee that a bottle of Dod.
son's Liver TOI\; will keep your entire
tamily feeling fine for months. Give
it to your children. It is harmless;
doesn't gripe and they like its pleas
ant taste —Advertisement.
the system is a most interesting stud
It eweeps lits way into the bla%
stream; fluehes every artery, vein an
capillary; awakens functional activity
and causes & wonderful animeation
throughout.
There is one ingredient in 8. 8 8.
which serves the aotive purpose of
stimulating the mymad of cefls to the
healthy ar# judicious selection of their
cwn essential nutriment. And if, from
the presence of seme disturbing polscn
a condition of eruptive disease is set uyp,
#. 8. 8. soo directs the aotion of the local
oells that the poison is rejected and
eiminated from their presence.
Thus, when the oe'ls break dowm te
cause the formation of oerbuncies
£. 8. 8. so stimulates ceMular aetivitp
that mew and healthy materials are ran.
idly supplied and eruptions cease. . Tha
same 18 true of muooys mflammatiens,
of acid accretions -nz all those influ
ences which cause rhoumatiem, catarrh,
eczama, lupus, psoriesis, tetter, otc. Tha
action of 8. B. S. in c‘mt is lke giving
the entire blood suppiy a good bath.
The medicinal preperties of 8. 8 8.
are relatively just as vital and essentiul
to well balanced health ss the food com
ponents of the grains, meats, fats and
Sugars.
And of otz thing you may be oertain
there is not an artom of mercury, calo
mel, blue mass, iodide of potash or
arsenic; nor dees 5. 3. §. centaln any
other mineral
It is a pure vegetable medicine and
wonderfully acceptable to even a very
weak stomach.
Get a boitie of 8. 8. 8. from any drug
gist and note heow quickly it puts your
blood in fine comdition. { is Just whes
you need, a fime, bracing, purifying meal
cine that }s sure to do you a world of
good. And if you are troubled with
some stubborm form of blood digencs,
write {0 the medical department of Tha
Swift Specific Co., 188 Swift T.abhoratory,
Atlanta, Ga., fer free private advice,