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Take Salts to Flush Kidneys ts:
Back Hurts or Bladder j
Bothers. |
If yvou must have your meat every |
day, eat it, but flush your Kidneys |
wit salts occasionally SAVE A ~a.-:4-~|:
authority, who tells us that meat |
forms uric acid, which almost para
lvzes the Kidneys in their efforts to|
exXpe t from the blood. Thev become
sluggish and weaken, then you suffer |
with a dull misery in the Kidney re- |
gion, sharp pains in the back or sick |
headache dizziness yvour stomach |
sours, tongue Is coated, and when the |
weather is bad you have rheumatlie
winges The urine gets cloudy, full |
¢ sediment the channels often get|
sore and irritated liging vou to |
seek relief twi r ti mes during
he night |
To neutr se Lires rritating aclds
o cleanse the dne nd flush off
he bodyv's urinous wasle g-t four
yunces of Jad Salt from any phar
nacy here; take a tablespoonful in a
slass of water before breakfast for a
o (days nd your Kk nevs will ther
t fine This famou salts is made
rom the acid of grapes and Jlemon
iniee ombined with lithia nd ha
pey s for generation L flush
ind stimulate sluggish kidneyvs L 8
to neutralize the acids in urine =o it|
no longer irritates, thus ending ad - |
fer weakness |
Tud Salt s nexpensive ¢can no
injure and makes 2 delightfyl effer
Vs {lk t-water drink Adver
1 enye
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. -
v L lp i
i . - & Wbt A\ he e A 1
e Ye 4bl Sul s Dise.se. If wou haw
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e 12 Prckuge of eur Harmiess Remedy
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ZLMETO CO.. Dopi. 517, Milwaukee, Wis.
|
North Carolinan, in a Reply to
Senator Weeks, the G, 0. P.
Snokesman, Defends Tariff
and Business Legislation.
By JOMN TEMPLE GRAVES
VA INGTON Feb, 27.-Claude
. ¢ new leader of ihe
b n the House
' erwood 0 the
' t e It is the
i o moerats that My
ik it A wh, ilf not more
' han Oscar I'n
rw n
He ' ' hinker and a
nast ' ('hamp Clark says he
s th ehater the House has
know on
1 4 - RKAve s views, In detail
e . : sue betwéen the
sartie 1 ampaign of 1916 will be
£ bt ‘ r disapproval of the
W ' iy @ n and the Dem
; Congress *
Il arif \ we the main Issue
that is he nderwood -Simmons act
w } ma point of attack h'»‘l
the R« 1 of defense by Huvi
Democrats
Tariif as Revenue Aid, |
! lArg e by Nenator
Weeks and ) Heputdioan friends
|that the Underwood act Is a falhll'al
AR B ey e producer j
! There is no truth in this charge |
Fhe fact that that, from October 3, |
913, the date of It enactment, (o
AR s 814, the beginning of xhvl
BEuropean war. the Underwood act
jwith U NCOme ux and other in- |
ternal revenie roduced 38,000,000 |
| MOre revenue han the Payne act, |
with s rporation tax and other |
| internal revenue, for the same months |
of the preceding year under the l'uyms
lact —that the next to the last ymr'
tof the Payne act
| If no European war had occurred,. |
111‘ the same rate of collection prevall. |
inge up to Augnst 1, 1914, and the same |
'l4!-- wvase lin importations s
| was the annual avgrage increase dur. |
ling the | r vears as the Payne act |
| even If the reduced tariff of the Un- |
lull‘]“«nnl act had it added to the in-
CTeasd for the fiecal vear ending .lum-f
| 30, 1915, we would have collected, with
| the Underw | act. income tax and!
|other internal revenue, over $20.000, ’
L 000 more than for any year under the
' Payne act, or any year in the history
f the Government i
'he author O the I'vuhrv\u-ul’
L act, al it pasaa estimated that !nr!
he fiscal vear ending June 30, 1914,
with the three months—July, August
Mnd Septembe: 1918 -of he Pavne
gt t would » ld, In custom receipts,
£270.000,000. It notually yielded $292 ,I
UHO.OOO. It exceeded expectations by |
$22.000 000 |
E ffect on Exports. t
‘2. It Ilg charged that our tariff act|
has intured our export trade |
There 18 no truth in th harge ?
The fact i= wt, from October 8. |
1918, to August 1, 1914-—the life of the |
UUnderwood act up to the beginning of |
the European war (when at once the |
lump in our export trade began) l
wir export trade was larger hy over|
§SO 000 000 than., with one exception, |
in any yea in the hlstory of our,
country It was $193,000,000 larger |
than for the same month under the!
Payne act for the year ending Au-|
gust 1, 1912, and $465,000,000 larger |
than for the same months of the firat |
yvear of the Payne act |
“There was on the first day of|
the first August under the Wilson ad- |
ministration and Underwood act an|
excess over the first August under |
the Taft administration and the |
Pavne act, of $66,385,.000
The working balances in rlu-‘
Tryeasury offices on August 1, 1910, |
firsy vear of the Taft administration
and Yavne act, were $29.56061,471, while
on August 1, 1914, first vear of the
Wilson administration and Under
wood act, they were $73947,051-—two
and a ha!f 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
“On August 1, 1911, $112,780,235
“On August 1, 1910, $78,421,388
“But on August 1, 1914, under the
Wilson administration and Under
wood act, the gold balance was $130,-
551,354
“It will be noted that, while there
was an excess of the Wilson admin
istratlon and Underwood act over
each of the Taft administration and
Payne act vears, the excess of the
first year of the Wilson administra
tion and Underwood act over the first
vear of the Taft administration and}
Payune act was $52,129,871
Denies Extravagance.
“8 It is charged by Senator Weeks
and his party that the Wilson admin
{stration and the Democratic Congress
have been extravagant in appropria
tions or the pnblic money and m.nlf-'
larger appropriations than the Tnfxi
administration |
“There is no truth in this charge |
The fact is that. exclusive of the
postoffice appropriation act for
which Senator Weeks and every Re
publican in the Senate and House
voted. we appropriated, for the cur
rent fiscal yvear. ending June 30, 1915,
being the first and only vear's ;u.;w.nl
priation under the Wilson administra.
tion, $17,258,000 less than the last :m-'
nual appropriation undey the Taft ad- |
ministration |
“RBut suppose. for argument’'s sake,
we had been extravagant-—suppose wal
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VermWnsCo. Inc., Dept 87 2000 (41« {
ngsons“ to flead §tat§ J Seqate
Burwell to Remain Speaker
Political Forecasters Agree
W H. BURWELL, who
o will get another tern
as Speaker in the Georgia As
sembly, and below, Ogden
Persons, expeeted 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, was
made against a single dollar appro
priated! The Republicans all, in Sen
ate and House, voted for every one of
the appropriation acts. The charge,
now, of Democratic extravagance ls
one of pure ignoraince or hypocrisy.
“And vyet 1 suppose the Republican
stand-patters and croaking politi
cians, 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 it
causes defleits in the Treasury; that
it empties the Treasury of lts 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, aftér 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.
“Wea 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 fields of legitimate
business activities, big and little.
“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 received the vote of every
Republican in the House, and only five
Republican votes in the Senate were
recorded sgainst it. Neither the Sen.
ator nor his collague, Senator Lodage.
voted against it!
“Ax for the Clayton anti-trust act,
the chief ohjection 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
strive the big interests and big busi
ness hard enough; that it was o
gentle with them,”
HEARST'S SUNDAY A‘_g_rg(yg_a{_@l;@l/\_o;\.. SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 28 1915
3‘00“(”“ for Georgia Legislative
'\ Officers Are Rapidly Tak
: ing Shape.
3 e cocm— ’
; The rext President of the Senate of
} | Georgin will be Ogden Persons, of
Forsyth, Monroe County, Senator
dlect from the Twenly-second District,
The next Bpeaker of the Georgla
House of Representatives will be W,
H. Burwell, of Hancock Coun.
ty. who will -mmmnlr in that
office.
Political observers throughout the
State have set these predictions down
as final
Senator Persons already has far
more than a suflicient number of Sene
ators pledged, to elect, and Mr. Bur
well, who is without announced oppo
sition, has more l’”n two-thirds of
the membership of 'the new House
n‘ulupnh-nly favorable to his re-elec
tion.
The race for the Secretaryship of
the Senate to succeed the late Charles
8 Northen i= between D F. Me-
Clatehey, of Fulton County; Jesse G,
Perry, of Mitchell, !pd M. . Tarver,
of Whitfield.
Mr. McClatchey's friends ciaim he
has this race won beyon? o tunbt, and
show a list of 39-odd Neow ors pledged
to him.
Tarver Bcom Kept Dark.
The fri % of Mr. Porry do not
concede Ms. McClatchey's election, but
they do cinim to have a sufficient
number of Senators pledged to Mr.
Yerry to elsct. Mr. Tarver's boom
nas been kept am*:hn under cover,
and no claims yet ve been made in
his behalf. .8
Senator 8. C. Dobbs, of Cobb Coun
ty, seems the best bet for President
Pro Tem of the Senate. No other can.
’id.(o has announced for this posi
tion. 3
An ecarly settlement of these nrl-l
ous contests seems Lo make sure that
the Legislature will be organized in
June without friction or undue ex
|rnelaam. which is rather a remarka
| ble ¥xception 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
}semutlve 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 essentially 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 Conrt of
Forsyth.
Speaker Burwell has served in the
' Legislature continuously, with the ex
ception of one term, for twenty years,
On the floor of the House and Senate
he has been a leader of marked eof
fectiveness.
Mr. Burwell was eleeted 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 parliamen
tartan, quick and ready in his ruling,
and is one of the few members who
may be unders ood distinctly when
speaking in the¢ hall of the House of
Representative:. Mr. Burwell is a
lawyer,
Uses Thief as Club
To Beat Companion
L.OS ANGELES, Feb. 27 -Two masked
men reckoned witnout their host when
they entered the room of N. H. Hobbs,
South San Pedro street, and attempted
Im hold him ug at the point of a revolv
er. Mt Hobbs was awakeved by the
men entering nis room. As he jumped
from the bed_one of them grabbed him
and told him ¥t he moved he was a dead
man,
Then things commenced to havpen.
Mr. Hobbs who moves planos for a liv
ling. took the fdrst intrader firmly by
hoth feet and used him as a club to sub
due the other man.
Neigithors awakened by the cries for
fmerc_\' by he near-bandits, sent In =
call for the police. Mr. Hobbs, however.
thought the mnen had been sufficiently
punished and allowed them to go,
\
ot
Wealthy Mrs. Harold F. McCor
i
mick Member of,Class Study
| ing Housework.
’ -
i CHICAGO, Feb, 27 --Mrs Harold ¥
| MeCorm daughter of Jjohn D
:’:'! kefeller as altended a novel wi
'l-f school in Zurich, Switzeriand !
{is one of mestie arts and science
in which veeping, dusting, washing
nd leaning te taught naot to
servant bt y Thelr misiresses
’ A Chicago friend who has just re
| turned from sit in Zurich, told of
f!znutngf e soclety leader an patron
"-\\ of art ar mus on her kKnees
z-!:‘lnu\g o he race bheneath =&
couch
Wher he frien expressed sur
| Prise, Mrs. MetCormick laughingly in
formed her the labor she wag doing
was Hght compared 1o that necessary
in some of the courses taught at the
» hool
Mrs MeCormick has carned to
'-u«.qn carpets with her own hands, to
| dust portiers ind curthins, to bgnt
lrugs and to clean hou mntil not
leven a lonely speck of dust remains
hidden in a corner
! With the thoroughness of the Swiss
"hu instructors insist on proficieney
In every branch before they set the
seal of approval on their puplls
' When Mrs. MeCormick finishe the
course she will be able to do cvery
branch of housework more efficiently
than any of the many servants the
Mce(Cormicks employ 1
. The school was starled on'the prin
ciple 'that it is a waste of time to |
teach servants how to perform house
holdo duties © unless © the - employers
know whether they are properly done.
In order to know this’ the promoters
of the school argue, /it s’ necessary |
for the head of the household to know
how to do the tasks herself
. ]
U. 8. Collier to Take
Food to Palestine
is 5 |
WASHINGTON, Feb 20 The. Navy |
Department has advised the Jewish ’...-~l
Hes Committee that when, the collier |
Vulean leaves for the Mediterranean on |
March 4. space will be allowed®to the |
committee for relief.supplies to be car- |
ried to Paestine to alleviate the suf- |
ferings of the Jews Permission to do
this has .been requested of the Otto
man Government The Vulear will
make this trip primarily to carry ecoal |
and provisions to the Tennessee ' and |
North Carolina, which are stationed in |
the Turkish wafers, butit is =aid that |
ample space will be awvailable to carry
food and medical supplies to the Jew
ish population of Palestine l
SEMI-ANNUAL STATEMENT
For the six months ending December 31, 1914, of the condition of the
Atlantic Life Insurance Company
OF RICHMOND, VA,
Organized uncor the laws of the State of Virginia, made to the Governor
of the State of Georgla in pursuance to the laws of said State.
Prineipal Office—Seventh and Franklin Sts, Richmond, Va.
i. CAPITAL STOCK.
1. Amount of capital StoOCK .... «.ovee o 0 a 0 a 0 o .$300,000.00
2. Amount of enpital stock paid up in cash.. .. .. 300,000.00— $300,000.00
11. ASSETS.
1. Market value of real estate owned by the company .. .. $2,750.00
2 Loans on bonds and mortgage (first liens) on
AT GREREE L. e e e iwbivs e Bive g ...351,712,003.01
Loans on bonds and mortgage (second liens)
SR TOo] BRI .. .ii alh Shes en se sawe 11,000.00
——e $1,723,003.01
3. Loans secured by pledge of bonds, stocks or other mar
ketable coOllaterals ... ... ccccvee asv wod 200 sbe soe 14,750.00
4 Loans made in cash to policyholders on this company’s
policies® assigned as collateral .... ... ... ... ... .. 368,067.82
5. Premium notes, loans or liens on policies in force ... .. 51,494.08
6 Bonds and stocks owned absolutely: Par value, $210,000;
market value (carried out), $237,648.26 .. .. .. ..eeen 237,648.268
7. Cash in company’'s office .@ ...... ... .0 es cee oo 3601.94
8. Cash deposited in bank to credit of company ... ... «e- 156,565.71
10. Interest due or accrued and unpaid ... ... ... ... oo 38,143.21
14. Net amount of uncollected and deferred premiums (de
duction 27 per cent for average loading from gross
BEEBURRY o i ek The AW Athew see R aeN] di e e 42,256.24
$2,639,280.37
Less credit balances due agents... ... «cc oos soe oo 64.75
Ot RBEOtE . Uiy tea sßk W e eßbes ke $2.639,215.62
1. LIABILITIES.
1. Net present value of all the outstanding poli
olnlh T 10RO ... .. iaf e S oy ..$2,044,796.00
Deduct net value of risks in this company,
reinsured in other solvent compa,nie:s b 49,274.00
Net premium FeServe ... ... «cco: 2oe Ses seq, snesns $1,995,522.00
3. Death losses and matured endowments in proc
ess of adjustment, or adjusted and not due. $14,014.00
\ Total policy clalms ... ... .c.oiv cer o aee cee een 14,014.00
6. Guaranteed dividends on deposit... ... ... ... ..o ..o 83,753.74
7. Dividends declared and due and remaining unpaid .. .... 1,000.00
8. Dividends declared, put not yet BN e e e 48,881.47
10. Amount of all other claims against the COMPANY ..o vvs oo 67,879.60
35 CHh ORDIBRY i hi v R Ak NERERG sty e 300,000.00
12. Surplus over all liabilities ... ..evov wes wee wen 0 128,164.81
Watal HaBilERaE. 0.0 Liohivm van v idvs demiaa (e ey S?.-.639.215,62
IV. INCOME DURING THE LAST SIX MONTHS OF THE YEAR 1914,
1. Amount of cash premiums received ... ... ... ... ... $340,349.64
5 Amount of notes received for premiums ... ... ... ... 69,275.86
3 Tnterest recelved ... ..: ... cevanie cesisae veseee aes 74,827.61
¢ Amount of income from all other sources ... ... ... .. 13,596:.40
IR THOORRE .S R e N e LGt ey s e 5498.049‘;
V. DISBURSEMENTS DURING THE LAST SIX MONTHS OF THE
YEAR 1914,
$ o Laknen DEIR -cv i s TN SN R i ..$67,224.00
ML L 0 ev s s TN ER e b A ..85'.',‘_‘24,60
3. Deduct amount received from other companies
for losses or claims of policies of this company
POIMEUPER. 5 o kAR sE ek AN e e wy 808600
Total amount actually paid for losses and matured en-
SOWNEORLE ' it S e Al See e s 6 ey $50,599.00
I ERARIEEEIR .. o vos nanin il SRastv Sar it nen el ee ; 2,250.060
5. Surrender POUCIes ... ... sve wasssas crs esh o des bae e 45,150.21
§. Dividends paid to policyholders or others ... ... ... .. 30,532.34
7. Expenses paid, including commissions to agents and offi-
COrS BRIRMIOE s e Gn AR e Y T Tl (e 122.720.94
£ Pawes BRIG o L 0 R i e e e R 6,822.89
9. All other payments and expenditures . ... ..o ses o 0 oo 1,602.98
Total ‘disburSements ... ... ccvres 100 ses aen tgs tosas sc.!"‘)STRSb
Greatest amount insured in any one ri5k.........N0 limit
Total amount of insurance outstanding .. .. ..$25,373,071.00
A copy of the Act of Incorporation, duly certified, is in the office of the
Insurance (ommissioner.
STATE OF VIRGINIA—City of Richmond.
Personally appeared before the undersigned Roy M. Jones. who, being
duly sworn. deposes gnd. savs that he is the Secretary of the Atlantic Life
Insurance Coampany, and that the foregoing statement is ecorrect and true.
; o ROY M. JONES.
Sworn to and subseribed before me this 26th day of 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.--An took
a long stride forward when Thomas
Nash, an artist of Redondo, was foupd
to have perfected the hitherto chi
{ merical idea of painting by note
i Nash hax carried his color-note plan
| to &' point where one artist has been
!n’nu te depict faithfully in color a
| scene he has never gazed upon Now
| comes the delall stage, says Nash, o
causing color notes to corre pond in
such & manner with musical notes
'v‘-cn an artist will be anle to paint a
picture with n sthing to gulde him but
'u planoforte composition
“In & few weeks 1 will be in a posi
"N-n to offer to faithfully paint from &
plece of music a landscape | have
never seen.” says Naszh
Nash's plan, in simple terms L
follows He takes for his keynote the
zenith of the sky at the time when the !
picture is chosen for painting. From
this kevnote, which Is usuaily blue ‘
Nash runs up and down the scale ni}
his 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 lhnl
keynote, while sunlight glinting over
the mount¥ins may be many nnlr‘{
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 of his lands« 'qu-l
and then, upon his chart, which corye
'~;-~||"! somewhat to the musical scale,
he will make his color notes
A day, a week or a year later he can
finish the pictifre. * From the chart he
will get the actual color values which
| existed at the time he saw the scene
to becportrayed.
| 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, send
both to Monk, in Los Angeles, and the
latter. withino further gulde has
painted the scene not only true to na
ture. but in‘exact duplication of lhrl
same scene as executed by Nash
By making his color chart into ju
siral form, however, Nash expects lul
popularize the idea of painting by |
note ]
JOIN THE CLUB.
1, Save m'pfl cent on films and fin
ishing. 2. ree developing, rolls and
gach. 3. Eight-hour service. 4. Dou- |
le weight, wide margin prints, distilled
water. 5. Locate the difference. 'l’ryl
the “Co-Op" Lab. and Studio, 119 Peach l
tree fstreet.
N i ettt et e
Parents Offer to Sell
. .
Their Two Children
DETROIT, MICH! Feb 27 "For
Sale— Twe American children, because
their father is an ‘American and can
not get & Job to proteect them."
Thisz sign in big black letters was
REGULATE YOUR BOWELS AND 3TOP
COLDS, HEADACHES. SOUR STOMACH
Turn the mascals out—the head
ache, billousness, indigestion, consti
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 sweeton
your stomach: remove the sour, undl
gested and fermenting food und uml
misery-making gas: take the excess
CANDY CATHARTIC
74 g 10 C BOXES ~ANY DRUG STORE
wo L ALSO 25 8. 50 CENT aoxz T
RK WHILENOU SUEE
CALOMIEL WHEN BILIOUS? NO! STOP!
16TS LIKE DYANITE ON LIER
Stop using calomel! It makes you
sick. Dop't lose a day's work, If you
feel lazy: sluggish, bilious or consti
pated,-listen to me! .
Calomel = i\ercury or quicksilver,
which cavseés npecrosis' of the bones:
Calomel, when' it.comes into contact
with sour bile, crashes into it break
ing it up. (This is"when you feel.that
awful nmausea and crampingo If you
are “all’knotked ont,*df your liver is
torpid and bowels constipated or you
haveo headache, ~dizziness, coated
tm;(iue; if breatheis “bad or stomach
sour, just try a’spoonful of harmless
Dodson’s Liver Tone. . .
Here's my guarantee—Go to any
drug store and ¥t:c»;so-cent bottle of
Dodson’s Liver Tone. - Take a spoon
ful to-night and if 1t doesn't straight
Soring Time—Remember
1.4 TI
[s Blood Cleaning Time
. - — " —
-
Entire System is Clogged—E&reat Herdes of
Germs Congest the Blood to Gause
- L]
Pimples, Boi's, Carbuncles, Eczema
and Other Skin Diseases.
(7" ssy W R
- A ,;;‘ W 7 N
2et e i N WA WY
At hreé Aap ESH SN &5
ov Y R eNG
A Y K Yad S, :
B N 3 S¥R R RS %
N W, ST S R A\
1«;’.?;‘21.::_‘“ S «3?(';“:_‘ 2 . & \\\
Y -Nt PGPS A
] //"Q \ 1 7 .g:’\:* ol & ;;_gj.
A L/ ‘-.;:(‘ ‘.‘,n. Y" : | a 4 R y _//
TR\ A7N )/ w 0 al
Wt TN
¥ ‘lx “‘*n "33:\‘\ \ \;;/' '“2;: <IN}/ f'fi A ,'.
- 'u‘, !‘\“ ' \ Y..'H_»,‘ ! /y/ ¥ [y
i UL AN i 3 .
. 8. 8. S. Gives You Backbone, Nerve Strength with Pure,
Invigorated Blood.
17 you feel thick-headed, lags a weary,
tire easily and feel ulterly used up
your blood needs a bath
It is asetonishing how quickly you
brace up after using 8. S. 8. After the
long nights of wmter have slowed you
down, made your blood sluggish, and
filed your system with the cramps,
aches and scids of thick, stagnant bloed
you actually require the Influence of
8.8 8
Fczema, rash, pimples, tetter, bolils,
and all impurities in the blocd are
gquickly washed out by the remarkable
aetion of 8. §. §. It Is In the nature of
a bath fer your blood. It is not a
“‘dope,” met a “physic,” there is not a
drop of harmful mineral drugs. It is a
far ~hetter freend te your nerves than
any ‘“‘nervine’ you can use because it is
just as pure as the gruel you would
feed 80 an mwvelild. The bloed takes
kindly to 8. S. 8., it doesn’t bother your
stomach but it doea give you strength.
Rheumatism, ocatarrh, malaria, brom
chitis, typhoid and all such painful or
dangerous maladies cannot remain in a
system washed and cleansed by the re
markable action eof S. 8 8.
There is searcely a drug store or gen
eral! stome anywhere but what keeps
S 8 B. fn 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 tham a feeling
of renewed strength, puts the loek of
heakh in the eye and pinks the flash
with the ruddyogov of health.
The human b , like the habitation
of man, is olosed all winter and becomes
clogzed with stagnant impurities. In
the spring nature attempts to overhaul
the bleod and thus we see pimples, boils,
carbuncles and various skin afflictions
breaking out to relieve the congestion
within, ‘
The remarkabie manner in which 8.
S. 8., the famous blood purifier, clears
found nalled voahmwmo“
sociated Charities Bullding.
“Yes. we will sell Emma, 18 months
| old, and Jennle. 3 years old, for §IOOO
| ench,” sald Mrs. Andrew Yuhass, moth.
ier of the children
| “We pald 12,000 down on & home and
lwe owe 51,800, which we wish to pay
[ off. ane! my husband has been without
| work for four months, and he sald we
‘;’t‘.?um sell the children and pay our
"
bile from your liver and carry off the
decomposed waste majter and consti.
tpa!lon polson from the bowels.
A Cascaret to-night will .whton
~\ou out hy morning-—a 10. box
keeps your head clear, stomach swee!,
Qiver and bowels regular and yon
feel bully for months Don't forget
‘U\o children —their little insides need
a good, gentle cleansing, too.
en you right up and make you feel
fine and vigorous by morning I want
you to go back to the store and get
your money. Dodson’s Liver Tone is
dgstrflylnx the ulq] of calomel because
it'is real liver medicine; entirely veg
etable; theréore. it fan not salivate
or make you sick.
Ik guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's - Liver Tone will put_ your
sluggisholiver to. work and clean your
bowels_of that sour bile and ‘consti
piated waste owhich. is clogging your
system and making you feel. miser
ablel ] guarantee that a bgttlo of Dod.
son’s Liver Tone will keep your entire
family feeling fine for months. Give
it to-your. ¢hildren., It" is"harmless;
doesi't* gripe and they_like. its. pleas
ant taste-—Advertisement.
(the system is a most interesting study,
It sweeps its way into the blood
stream; flushea every artery, vein and
capillary; awakens functional activity
'and causes a wenderful animation
! throughout.
There is one ingredient in 8. 8. 8.
!whioh serves the active purpose of
' stimulating the mymad of cells to the
f}wxnhy ar? judicious selection of their
| ¢\'n esseptial nutriment. And if, from
the presence of seme disturbing poison
a condition of eruptive diceass is set up,
£ 8. 8 so directs the aeotion of the lecal
cells that the pelsen s rejected and
e!iminated from their presence.
Thus, when the celis break down teo
cause the formnmatien of ocarbuncies
£. 8. S. so stimulates ceMular aotlvily
' that new and healthy materials are rap.
’MX)’ supplied and eruptions cease. The
same is true of muoous inflammaticnus,
'of 2cid accretions and aN those Inf -
' ences whieh cause rheumatism, caterrh,
!oczema, lupus, psoriasis, tetter, eto. The
‘action of 8. B. 8. In offect is Thce giving
the entire bioed supply a geod bath.
The medicinal properties of & § 3.
are relatively just as vital and essentizl
to well baianced health as the faed som
ponents of the grains, meats, fats and
sSugars.
And of one thing you may be oertiin
there is not an atom of mercury, cilo
mel, blue mass, iodide of potash op
argenic; nor does S. S. S. contain 2y
other minera'.
It 18 a pure vegetable medicine 5.4
wonderfully zcceptable to even a veory
weak stomach.
Get & bottle of 8. 8. §. from aay drnz
gist and note hew quickly it puts y ¢
blood in fime comdition. Tt is just w' ¢
you need, a fine, bracing, purifying m~ i
cine that §8 sure ts do you a worlc f
good. And if you are troubled v A
some stubborn form of hiced disa - -,
write 10 the medical department of . 2
Swift Speeific Co., 138 Swift Labhomt
Atlanta, Ga.. for free privaie 2 .~ #h