Newspaper Page Text
8
St. Louis Girl Weds Henry S.
Whitney, Chicago Manufacturer
of Infant Carriages. |
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CHICAGO, FPeb 21 -They weoe |
married just a few days ago, and they ;
own HOOO bady Ar ages muwwi
moeee !
They are I
He - Henry |. Whitne unior part
per in the Keed-Whitney Company
manufacturers of vehicles for infants
She-Mrs Henry L. Whithey, nee
Walie f St Louls a viwmcious
FOURE WOmMAL, quile unterrified by
the responsibilities of marriage, in
viuding elopement
They stole awa) rom the giri's
bome. No 5630 Theodosia avenue, Nt
fouis. were marrisd Just in Ume 0
ca a ira for Chicago, arrived
here and telephoned back to Bt Louls
for forgiveness - which they got
think swvery girl ought to slope
declared the bride at the Drexel Armp‘
Hotel “Chur weddings are (oo slow
This i« more exciting-—woops, my
dear
Y ] wif s righ soemn'y fe
chmred Whilney
They posed for piciures, and the
bride touk more interest in Whitney's
than in her ow
Laook your sWerion Whit wiie
il U send some of Lthe pictures
back to my old beaux In 81, Louls™
Know anybody that has a fiat to
rent ™ inquired the bridegroom glanc.
ing at his watcl
All Skin Eruption Gone, Doctors
Now Convinced Mrs. Vaughn
Is Entirely Well.
Mrs ¢ H Vaughn, Millville, Ark,
writes “There is nothing |1 ever couid
do but what | can do it now. There s
no sign of skin eruption. One of our
jocal doctors told me that my cure
was one of the grandest things that
ever happened-.not,only for me, but
for the whole community —to let them
know that there is a cure for pellagra.
“All the doctors that waited on me
are convinced that your remedy is a
real cure™
There's the true word from a cured
:::om If you have Pellagra, or
w of anyone who suffers from
Pellagrs, it is your duty to consuit the
resourcefu!l Baughn, who has fought
and conquered the dreadful malady
right in the heart of the Pellagra belt
in Alabama.
The symptoms-hands red like sun
burn, skin peeling off, sore mouth, the
Upe, throat and tongue a flaming red,
with much mucus and choking, indi
gestion and nausea, either diarrhea or
oonstipation
There is hope. Get Baughn's Big
Free Book on Pellagra and learn about
the remedy for Pellagra that has at
last been found. Address American
Compounding Company, Box 587-D,
Jusper, Ala., remembering money is
refunded in any case where the rem
edy fails to cure-—Advertisement.
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< | a‘ THIS IS ABSOLUTELY
i } o PURE |
s Straight North Caroline Corn
’ just like it comes from
, l Distillery Bonded Warehouse
»: 7 5 FULL
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R N .
(RS TSAL EA LYY >
pial Ex. Paid
BISTRAIGHT CORN This Offer is made in
\ \’V';‘;l‘;l'\‘EY order to get now custo
] """"“’[‘)"s":: mers and show our
4 l W
| it 100 Proof
4 Whiskey. Guaranteed to
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m cost you one cent.
. Order to-day a Trial Order.
H. L. Sprinkle Dist. Co.
Jacksonville, Fla. Girard Ala. Pensacola, Fla
—TO NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY - 380
HAYNER_____.BOT"‘ED'IN'._._““‘\DWHISKEY FULL éB | QUART
Full Quart—Only 80 Cents—Express Paid q’k's:s S','y.\%
E want every man in America who has never tried e
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the full quart bottle of Hayner Private Stock Botiled-in- v wa
Bond sz’skeywill be sent in sealed case—express charges. g 4 1A
, It’sfine—a Bottled-in- Bond whiskey of the choicest 4 HAN
m—lfiled with the Government':d(;r:-en Stampoverthe &#F i '\ \
cork—your assurance it is fully aged, full 100% proof, full & @ & i WY
mzye_gs good and pure as can be produced. It's sure ;it et
to please you—sure to wir)l;\iourlféxtu(e tlmd;:. Youtakeno [ =z=rascce==
chances—we are responsible—been in business 43 years—
upit,a?‘S(:),OOo.oo fully paid. Don’t put this off —order flAY,fig\ER
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NOTE: Ordem rom Nl Tew 8106 toe ovs auarc- express paid, — 96-5 | SOTILED N BOND
(All future orders must be for FOUR quarts or more) o ss Sl
Address our nearest office ; e ::afif_(
THE HAYNER DIST lnwLLly -S CO;\. Penpt.MA; € ‘:6 o gy
' Lowis, Mo, Boston, ngton, . New . La, ¥BN
m‘f?-\:.' 'f:;{w:..h‘ Kansas City, 810. i&i‘ifll:"i-"il;fl-. [i‘ “‘; it
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Every Tunnel Meant Kisses
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Ex-Governor, Accused, Denies
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Richard D. Yates, of 111
. N 12
Complaint of Califc
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 27—Alleg
ing improper conduct on the part of
his wife with Richard D. Yates, cx-
Governor of Illinois, an June 30 and
July 1, 1918, Edward R. Freeman, a
ifiurcku photographer and art dealer,
has filed suit for divorce against Em-
Imu B.' Freeman. He has been sep
arated from her since the alleged mis
conduct.
A trip Mrs. Freeman took in com
pany with the ex-Governor by rail and
auto-stage from Eureka to San Fran
cisco, and which extended for over a
day and a night, is the basis of Free
| man’s complaint.
| On this trip, Freeman alleges, the
| following incidents took place:
| Yates and Mrs, Freeman embraced
‘i and kissed each other while in the
auto-stage in the presence of the
nois, Named in Divorce
rnia Photographer.
driver and two passengers.
The next morning they took the
train from Willits to San Francisoo,
and on the way Yates embraced and
kigssed Mrs. Freeman every time they
passed through a tunnel.
Began With Jest.
Freeman also alleges that prior to
Mrs. Freeman's meeting with the ex-
Giovernor she and one Richard M.
Seeley occupied rooms in a hotel
which were separated by portieres
only.
The allegations against Yates bhe
gan with a jest by the conductor of
the train which took Yates and Mrs
Freeman from Eureka to McCanns
Station. The conductor dropped a re
mark to Freeman that his wife and
Yates had eloped.
Subsequent investigation by Free
man resulted in his wiring his wife,
who had remained in San Francisco
for some days after the trip, that he
would start legal proceedings against
her.
The proceedings, however, were
stived by mutual agreement for one
vear while the couple divided their
property. Mrs, Freeman was given
the Freeman Art Shop, at H and Fifth
streets, Bureka, which she has sold.
Denies Improper Conduct.
The acquaintance of Mrs., Freeman
with the ex-Governor of Illinois, the
complaint recites, began in the latter
part of June, 1913, when Yates went
to BEureka to lecture. A friendship
quickly sprang up between the Free
man family and the ex-Governor.
On the morning ¢f June 30, the com.
plaint recites, Yates was to leave
Bureka. Mr. and Mrs, Freeman took
him to the depot. The ex-Governor
sugwested that Mrs. Freeman ride
with him to the end of the line, at
McCanns Station. Freeman agreed
and kissed his wife good-bye. .
~ When McCanns Station was reached
Yates, it is charged, induced Mrs,
Freeman to accompany him to San
IPrancisco.
. Neither Yates nor Mrs. Freeman de
nied taking the trip together, but pro
(ested against all allegations of im
| proper conduct.
When interviewed at his home, in
Spingfield, 11, former Governor Yates
radd:
JThe charges are ail untrue. Fur
ciher thaun that, 1 de not care to talk
about the subiect gt this time”
NMEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA. GA. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 28 1915
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Operator Carnahan Ponsuonod.i
Had Remarkable Record |
in the West. %
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LA CROSSBE WIE, Veb : qul,!
M. Carnahan, one of the oldest opers -
tore in the service of the Western
Undon Telegraph Company, the oper
ator who for 21 hours without a resl
sent the official newspaper stories of
the Custer massacre, has been pens
sloned ard allowed to return to his
old home here, where he will raise
chickens for the rest of his days. Dur
ing the latter part of his career he has
been in Montana and Dakota
At the time he was sent to the of
fice at Bismarck. N. Dak, then the
westernmost station on the Northern |
Pacific Raiiroad, it was called the
worst town in the world. He objected,
but the company appealed to his loy
alty. All it asked was that he put the
Biamarck office 1o rights. If Carna
han would do that it would send him
relief in a few weeks and he might
return here. Carnahan yielded. He
went to Bismarck in 1875, The com
pany kept the promise after a fashlon,
It did send him reilef, but not until
1890,
For seventeen years CUsrnahan re
mained at the frontier station. When
he Jéft it was for Missoula, Mont,
where he remained 24 years. At the
beginning of the new year Carnahan,
after completing more than &0 years'
work as dn operator, retired
Biggest Story in Years.
' At Bismarck Carnabhan sent oul one
‘n! the biggest stories the world ever
knew-—the story of the Custer massa
jere on the Little Big Horn in July,
{1876, The Blsmarck garrison, inelud
ling many friends of Carnahan was in
Illu- Custer expedition The operator
{and the post surgeon rode out from
the post with the expedition when it
started in June, 1876, to punish the
Sioux. Théy went twelve miles with
the Seventh Cavalry Then they
turned back with the last dispatch
Custer ever sent -
On the night of July 5 Lthe steamer
Far West came down the river and
tied up at Bismarck, when most peo
ple were in bed. The Far West
brought the wounded of Reno’s com
mand and the official dispatches
which told of the complete annihila
tion of Custer's command
On the morning of July 8§ Carnahan
found on his desk in the telegraph
office a carpet bag filled with offcial
dispatches. He sized up his job,
“flashed” the news to the East and
then settled down to the transmission
of the official story to the Department
of War in Washington.
It was 8 o'clock in the morning of
July 6 that Carnahan started on his
tremendous task. Until 5 o'clock the
following morning—2l hours—he did
not leave the key, Coffes and a sand
wich were handed him now and then
during the long shift, and a towel was
wet and placed on his head at Inter
vals,
He roiled upon a bed whenb o'clock
registered on July 7. For three hours
he llogl the sleep of utter exhaustion.
Then he was aroused and returned to
the key. For twenty hours he sat at
his desk, and it was 4 o'clock the next
morning when he checked off the sig
nature of the last dispatch in the old
carpet bag.
Had Sent 80,000 Words.
Carnahan had sent 80,000 words in
the two shifts, and the receipts of his
office in those two days were $3,000.
But before he turned in Carnahan
gsent a news story to three papers in
the Bast. For two days the Eastern
papers had been clamoring for a story,
but there was no one to send it. Car
nahan could not leave his offieial
work and there was no other tele
graph operator within 200 miles. Nor
were there enough wires, To a New
York, Chicago and a St. Paul paper
he sent as much of a story as he had
strength to prepare. And that was
the way the news of the Custer battle
was sent out.
As fast as they could arrive special
correspondents hurried to Bismarck to
get the details of the great story. Car
nahan “sent” for twelve hours on one
story. When he had finished the cor
respondent, O'Kelley, handed him a
fifty-dollar bill. That was his per
sonal perquigite, the tolls on the spe
cial dispatch amounting to $1,320;
there were 2,000 words. This was the
longest of the news storles which
Carnahan sent. 1
Carnahan is the man who handled |
the official correspondence between |
President Grant and General Custer
at Bismarck which preceded the BIg;
Horn expedition, and which has al- |
ways been supposed to have caused |
the resentment which drove Custer to |
recklessness on that fatal ride. But
that is a story Carnahan has never
told.
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Operated Upon, Gets
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Appendix by Mail
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ALBANY ORBG., Feb. 27 To re
ceive his appendiz by mall was the
unigque experience of Glen Arehart.
Arehart was operated upon for appen
dicitie. Having recovered, he retulined
to his home in Lebanon. His appendix
had been kept in a bottle of preserva
tive fluid and when he left the hosnital
he forgot the Dbottle It was sent to
him by parcel post.
So far as he knows. this is the first
time the parcel post has been used to
transport & portion of l.lw human
bhody.
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Sour Orange Angers
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Elephant; Giver Hur
PORTERVILLE, CAL., Feb. 2T \
trick elephant was standing in an alley
in the rear of a theater here when
Johy, Wallace, a boxmaker, came along
peeling an orange. The orange was sour,
s 0 he passed it on to the elephant.
With a snort the elephant promptly
wound Its trunk about Wallace and
hurled him headlong into a pile of pack
ing cases, 20 feet away.
Wallace was unconscious when he was
dug from the wreckage, and two sur
geons worked over him for nearly, three
hours repairing cuts and contusions
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PATENT,
for frae Hi Book Patents 4
St o Ut oy ket Steriien
] Bllniretured Tiil2l RO |
MERICAN " Fomat: Skiliful Servica.” i
! MUNN & 000, Patdnt Altorneys !
y 625 * Rireet. Washington, P. €. i
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Course in Scrubbing
Chicage Expert Wants Pupiis Taught
in Regular Fiat, Not in
Classroom.
CHICAGO, Peb, 7 MHousessepirg
a 8 el al 2 boleh M & schoot s
goosd housekeoping and infinjtely bet
fer than niroe bt househee 1§
taught In 3 regular fat s sver o
muel better, for two principal rea
pODS Miss Adela Barrett told the
school management! gognmitiee of the
Board of Education
The schoo! work does not teach the
girl pupdl that it is dignified and “all
right™ for her to scrab. That's one of
Miss Harrett's reasons The school
work is not under actual home condi
tions That's her other
Miss Barrett i» president of the As
sociation of _ Practical Housekeeping
Centers, in which school children dur
ing the day and working giris in the
evening learn all abou! housekeep
ing
Windy City Model
P { . Reti
CHICAGO, Feb ¥ Chiongo's mod
el policeman has resigned He s E -
ward Ullmacher and has been & mem
ber of the Police Department for twen
ty-five years For seven years he has
been oconnected with Deputy Schuet
ter's office. He held the rank of senlor
detective sergeant. Here are some of
1 Ilgam‘! er's characteristios
Never drank Intoxicating liguors
Never accepiad a bribe
Never reprimanded by his superiorns
Kept two quart bottles of whisky un
der his bed for twenty-five years and
never openei them
Never mixed In petty politics
Captured some of the most notarious
eriminals n the countr)
‘Model Boy' Is Les
el Boy' Is Left
Fortune of $200,000
108 ANGELES, Feh 27.~When
Bruce Cuartwright Basford was only 3
years old he was taught to be respect
ful to his elders T'u youngster Jdid
pnot see any particular reason why he
shoul! be polite, but he saw no reason
why he should not obey his mother and
father. And his direct reward is an in
heritance of S2OO 000 from the estate of
Attorney Roger Johnson, who died re
cently in San Fraucisco
Young Basford is a student at the
University of California. It was in Los
Angeies that Attorney Johnson first met
him, and it was here that the young
ster's manners attracted the attention
of the wealthy lawyer Johnson WwWas
formerly attorney for his mother ‘
A - |
Spree Forgiven Man
Who Sacrificed Blood
WASHINGTON, Feb 2. Johr ¥
Manslev, a mechanic, was .ru‘;?nm in
the pollce court on & charge being
drunk He told Judge Pugh he ‘;ol
drunk because he was nervous after
having had his blood transfused to a
woman patient at & hospital who was
sald to be dying
“The loss of the blood made me weak
and nervous.' be sald, “so 1 went out
and got a drink. | suppose I took too
much.’
The hospital authorities confirmed
Manley's jag excuse, adding he had
given up 4 ounces of blood, and the
woman patient had died. The judge re
leased him
Their Two Child
DETROIT, MICH, Feb. 21 ‘For
Sale—Two American chiidren, because
their father is an American ‘and can
not get a job to protect them.”
This sign in big black letters was
found naileq to a fence near the As
sociated Charitles Building.
“Yes, we will sell Emma, 18 months
old, and Jennie, 3 years oid, for SI,OOO
each,” said Mrs. Andrew Yuhasz, moth
er of the children.
“We paid $2,000 down on a home and
we owe SBBOO, which we wish to pay
off, and my husband has been without
work for four months, and he said we
should sell the children and pay our
bills.""
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B
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Yk A
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‘I. £
From Piles
no matter how long or how bad--go to
{gnr dru‘fght to-dl( and get a HO-cent
x of Pyramid Plle Remedy. It will
give quick reilef, and a single box often
cures. A trial package malled free in
rhu\ wrapper if you send us coupon be
oW .
P%RAMID DRUG COMPANY,
18 Pyramid Bldg., Marshail, Miech.
Kindly send me a Free sample of
pyramid Pile Remedy, in pialn wWrap
per.
NEBITE. . cvetrsesssssssassnessnsossens
Sreot. .. ..ociviresesssssasscastsaness
MOTHER! IT°3 CRUEL TO FORGE OIL
OR CALOMEL INTO A SICK GHILD
i“California Syrup of Figs’ Can’t
Harm Tender Stomach,
Liver, Bowels.
ook back at your childhood days.
Remember the “physi~” that mother
insisted on—castor oil, calomel, ca
thartics. How you hated them, how
vou fought against taking them.
With our children it's different.
Mothers who cling to the old form of
physic simply don’t realize whut they
do. The children's rvevelt is well
founded. Their tender little “insides”
are injured by them. / -
It yvour child's stomach, iiver and
howels need cleansing, give “Califor
i
;
qulthy Mrs. Harold F. McCor
mick Member of Class Study
| ing Housework.
{ ——
| CHICAGO, Feb. 27 -"Mrs. Harold P
| MeCormick, daughter of John D
| Rockefollor. has attended a novel sort
i..r school in Zurich, Switzserland. It
| is one of domestic arts and sclences,
{in which sweeping, dusting. washing
jand cleaning are taught, not to
| servanta, but (o their mistresses
| A Chicago friend who has jJust re
| turned from a visit in Zurich, told of
| Anding the society leader and patron
less of art and music on her knees
cleaning out the space beneath a
;oouch
| When the friend axpressed sur
| prise, Mrs. McCormick laughingly in
;furm“ her the labor she was doing
| was Nght compared 1o thal necessary
{in some of the courses taughi at the
school
Mrs. McCormick has learned to
clean carpets with her own hands, to
dust portieres and curtains, to beat
rugs and to clean house until not
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
senl of approval on thelr puplis
I\\'hm Mrs. McCormick finishes the
| course she will be able to do every
‘ln‘m:h of housework more efficlently
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 efployers
| know whether they are properly done.
+ln order to know this the promoters
of the schoo! argue, it is necessary
for the head of the household to know
how to do the tasks herself
Uses Thief as Club
To Beat Companion
1A ANGELES, Feb, 27 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 up at the point of a revoly
er. Mr. Hobbs was awakened by the
men -nurln* 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 who moves planos for a liv
lu*. took the firs! intruder Armiy by
both feet and used him as & club to sub
due the other man,
Neighbors, lwakaned‘;y the cries for
mercy by the near-bandits, sent in a
call for thé police. Mr. Hobbs, however,
thought the men had been sufficiently
‘punuhod and allowed them to go.
'U. 8. Colli
'U. 8. Collier to Take
Food to Palestine
WABHINGTON, Feb. 27.—The Navy
Dernrtmem has advised the Jewish Re
llef 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
irfed to Paestine to alleviate the suf
| ferings of the Jews. Permission to do
this has been requested of the Otto
|man Government. The Vulcan will
make this trip primarily to carry coal
and provisions to the Tennessee and
North Carolina, which are stationed in
the Turkish. waters, but it is =aid that
'nmplo xsm-e will be avallable to cdrry
food and medical supplies to the Jew
illh population of Palestine.
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|Use Grandma's Sage Tea and
| Sulphur Recipe and Nobody
| Will Knot.
|l The use of Sage and Sulphur for
restoring faded, gray hair to its nat
lural color dates back to grandmoth
jer's time, She used it to keep her
!hair beautifully dark, glossy and
abundant. Whenever her hair fell out
lnr took on that dull, faded or streaked
| appesarance, this simple mixture was
lapplied with wonderful effect,
I RBut brewing at home is mussy and
out of date. Nowadays, by asking at
tany drug store for a 50-cent bottle of
| “Wyeth's Sage and Suiphur Com
i pound,” you will get this famous old
recipe which can be depended upon
to restore natural color and beauty U
the hair and is splendid for dandrufi
dry, feverish, itchy scalp and talling
hair,
A well-known downtown druggis:
says it darkens the hair so naturally
and evenly that nobody can tell it has
been applied. You simply dampen
sponge or soft brush with it and drawv
this through your hair, taking one
strand at a time. By morning (i
gray hair disappears, and after an
other application or two it becomes
heautifully dark, glossy and abun
- Jdant.—Advertisement.
nia Syrup of Figs.” Its aciion is pos
itive, but gentle. Millions of mothers
keep this harmless “fruit laxative”
handy; they know children love to
take it; that it never fails to clean the
liver and bowels and sweeten the
stomach, and that a teaspoonful given
to-day saves a sick child to-morrow.
It should be the first remedy given, as
it always does good, never any harm,
Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot
tle of ‘“‘California Syrup of Figs"
which has ful] directions for babies,
children of all ages and for grown-ups
plainly on each bottle. Beware of
counterfeits sold here. See that it is
made by “California Fig Syrup Com
pany.” Refuse any other Kind with
contampt. — Advertisament.
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‘Stud Patrol
‘Students on Patrol,
Protect Fair Coeds
— i
TOPEKA. KANE, Feb 27— Wash- |
bure students, headed by Berrard A‘v‘
kew. of the Alpha Delta Praternity. - §
trol the College Il district at night In
an offort 1o capture prowlers who have |
been annoying the co.ada The p(nli
w
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Good-b ia |
-bye, Dyspepsia |
.
' No More Gurgly Brash, “Lump of ’
i " . - :
| Lead, Bad Digestion, Heart- |
l burn or Stomach Troubles.
Quick Relisf. Costs Nothing te Try.!
! The man who can't help making |
faces 2t his stomach, the man or wom- |
{ an with a grouchy digestion, or with |
downright dyspepsia, need fret RO
Imf»n over stomach troubles
{ The heaviemt, richest dinners the
“m.m‘ unspeakable quick lunches, al!
; oan be taken care of without Impos
ing on the stomach. A selentific ai
‘l”H\r can do the digesting where
{the stomach either 4id not do 1t be
fore or did it very imperfectly
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Beauty and Good Dagmon Go Hand n
Hand, Stuart's yapepsia Tab
tets Insure Both
When you take one of Sltuart's Dys
pepsia Tablets after a meal the food
is digested by the tablet even better
than vour own stomach can do it v
This is why the use of .-"\..\r(nl
Dyspepsia Tablets has become S 0 m\l-’
versal among those who suiler from
!-ll\\ kind of stommuch troubles
! Take one of Stuart's Dyspepsia
Tabiets after your next meal, and Isl
“uu are given to belching, sour ris
| ings. fermentation, heavy, lumps [P'l»i
{ing in the stoma indigestion, dys
pepsia, loss of appetite or any other |
!uln!mn‘t derangement, you will find |
{at once a remarkable improvement |
Stuart’'s Dyspepsia Tablets are the|
most wonderful tablets on earth for|
| any kind of stomach troubie
| They enrich the gastric juices, and
| give the stomach the rest it needs be
|fore it can again be healthy .rml
strong !
Try one after your next meal, IID;
matter what you eat. You'il find your
lnm«alnn return for the meal after, and '
{ you will feel fine after eating {
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablels are for
sale at all druggists at 500 a box
Send coupon below to-day, and v
will at once send you b ymall a sam
1;:& free |
| Free Trial Coupon|
: F. A. Stuart Co,:201 Stuart ||
| Building, Marshall, Mich.: Send
{1 me at once by return mail a (ree j|
t | trial package of Stuart's Dyspep
! sia Tablets
| | Name ..
|
| | Street .o . "
{1 City Siate i
GRS! GAS! INDIGES
CICK STOMAGH-
Here's Relief! In Five Minutes
Your Upset Stgmach
Feels Fine.
It you feel bloated after sating and
vou believe it is the food which fills
you; If what little you ‘eat lies like a
lump of lead on your stomach; it
there is difficulty in breathing after
eating, eructations of sour, undigested
food and acid, heartburn, brash or a
belching of gas, you need Pape’s Dia
pepsin to stop food fermentation and
indigestion.
It neutralizes excessive acid, stom
ach poison:; absorbs that misery
‘making gas and stops fermentation
which sours your entire meal and
causes Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Bil
iousness, Constipation, Griping, etc.
T IIIIIIIRENR SIS/
Require the prompt placing of orders for engraved
invitations. Our samples represent the very latest
shapes and forms that have been accepted by re
fined and fashionable society.
WE LEAD in originating artistic effects with fine
material. Our prices are the lowest. Send for sam
ples, which will be supplied free of charge.
J. P. STEVENS ENGRAVING CO., Wedding Sta
tionery Engravers, 47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
M 2-Minutes AR 00 79 G
'mm?fir"},@ oy -V -4 =o ] ;
A Laxative Uintment & CONSTIPATION N
in a Col!lapsible Tube
o of a laxativa ointment that |
in 2 MINUTES empties the
lower bowel, and makes
you feel fresh and vifur—
ous. No waiting all night
for relief—no disturbing of the stomach and intestines
no uncertainty as to just when your bowels are going
14 act. They act when you wish them to.
. For Sale at
- JACOBS’ PHARMACIES
And All Firsi-Class Druggists
Or by mail upon receipt of 26c. Large Tube (containz five times the
wnt of the 25c tube), Hoe.
TU-uv vuitPANY, Phliaddphh.
s wrgnnised nto squads of from !-e
ol ¥ o sntll 13 o'cionk ey
ihe stresis of the rooming house
e Scals tading sevyeral ru&l"
whent an alla -.3-.- made on & gt et
——————————————————————————————————————
.
25-Cent Bottle of ‘‘Danderine
. Keeps Hair Thick, Strong,
Beautiful.
Girls! Try This! Doubles Beauty
of Your Hair in Few
Moments.
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Within ten minutes after an applt
catior * Danderine you can not find
. single trace of dandruff or falling
air and vour scalp will not itch, but
wha please you most will be aft
er v weeks se, when you see naw
hair. fine and downy at first—yes—but
re new hair—growing all over the
scalp
A Danderine immediately dou~
bles the be ty of your hatr, No 4if.
| ference how dul faded, britte and
serazey. just moisten & cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw M
th: gh v hair. taking one small
stwand o 4 time. The effect s aMASs
ne " ir will be light, flufly
and wavy, and have an wppearance ol
ot All Ce L 1 nparable lusten
tness & xuriance
(et a 2 ent bottle of Knowltors
Danderine from any drug store or tob
et counter and prove that your halr
& AS ett ! ft as any—that 4
h ezlected or injured by care~
lees treatment —that's all-——you surely
a ave b tifud hair and lots of 18
f vi just tr little Danderina
TION, SOURNES,
-PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN
’Your real and only trouble is thet
iwhich you eat does not digest, but
quickly ferments and sours, producing
almost any unhealthy condition.
A case of Pape's Diapepsin will cost
fifty cents at any pharmacy here and
'will convince any stomach sufferer in
|five minutes that Fermentation and
Sour Stomach is causing the misery
iof Indigestion.
i No matter If you call your trouble
|Catarrix of the Stomach, Nervousness
lor Gastritis, or by any other name—
lalways remember that relief is wait
ing at any drug store the moment you
decide to begin its use.
| Pape's Diapepsin wlll regulate any
'out-uf~order stomach within fivemin
iutes, and digest promptly, without any
fuss or discomfort, all of any kind of
Ifood you eat.—Advertisement.
Don't Take Pille
Don’t use
Suppositories
Don’t ruin yowr
Stomach with
Purgatives