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Labor Organizations Appear To Be
Well Represented in Con- |
gress Personnel,
By VICTOR ELLIOTT,
International News Service Staff Cor.
4 respondent.
v+ WASBHINGTON, Feb, 16.—The lHous
';!hll session has the largest number of
anembers in il history who have wor
®d their way from the ranks of labor o
nniza&hms Seventeen men who still
WCRTTY heir unton cgrds form the nus
‘elens of the largest ‘lngh- organization
except parties, in Congress They call
themselves the Labor group.
Largely dropping their ;mnlw*r pro
’:am‘ they have devoted themselves to
vel, food and war taxation bills, Hooy
er and Garfleld have,gone into frequent
conferences with them
After-the-war legislation, such as un
employment insurance, increased Gov
ernment ald for the sick and similar
measures are being pressed,
The Nolan ti-a-diy minunum wage
for Government worksrs is sure of a
record roll and possibly success at ths
Present session. The Labor Group
8 to establish the practice and
m")]' rather than the rate
. Members of their former trades are:
borne of California, Sherwood of
so, Charles B. Smith of .No-‘?, York
arr of Penngylvania and Keating of
Colorado, printers; Cary of Wisgconsin
and Key of Ohio, telegrapners; Helver
ing of Kansas, street cargnan; Gariand
of Pennsylvanla, iron, tin and steel
worker; Cooprer of Ohio and Roberts of !
Nevada, rallroad men; Zihlman of
fl.ryinnd. giass worker; Van Dyke of
innesota, mail clerk; Maher of New!
York, hatter; London of New York,
clo(h‘nx trede and Nolan, Colifornia l
moulder. |
With them often meet Secretary of |
Labor Wilson, former coal miner and
chairman of th® House labor commit
tee; Miss Jeanette Rankin, of Montana,
and. Representatjve Campbell, of Penn
eylvania; Dill, of Washington: Huddles
ton, of Alabama; Kelly, of Pennsyl
vania; Knutson, of Minnegota; Lundeen,
of Minnesota, and ‘Tague, of Massachu
setts, :
: BOX OF COAL COSTS $5.80. |
s PITTSBURG, Feb. 16.—T0 relieve the
acute sufferings of his sister and her
children in Brooklyn, N. Y., a well
known local business man yesterday
gent a box of coal by express, paying
#4 express charges on a supply of an
thracite that cost him SI.BO.
To"ccq “ABIT Conquerit happlly
In 8 days, luprove
. your health &n long Ife, avoid stomach trouble, nery.
ousuess, foul breath heart disense. Regain manly vigor,
oalm nerven,clearoyes aod superiormentaistrength. W hether
F sot ekt fmarested, dews. G {nigvest.
- ). WOODS,WB 302,Station F, New York, NY.
‘Farmer Had Chance to Clean Up
Big Money, But Couldn't
: Work. Lots of People
: Just That Way Now.
18 YOUR STOMACH
i
i A "SLACKER" NOW?
:
4 How in the deuce can any man hold
down a job even in this day of labor
’lhortaze_ or a woman feei sweet tem
sbered and run a house when their
istomach is out on a strike and acting
,like a slacker?
. John Boyd solved the problem down
{ln Marvin, Va., last November when
.he took a friend's advice and bought
ia bottle of Acid Iron Mineral, the
{remarkable iron tonic now being made
‘from the ore of a strange medicinal
“lron deposit found down in Missis
~ sippt which builds people up like mag
ile, if the stories of countless users
sare to be believed. Mr. Boyd writes:
+*l was suffering from stomach trou
t'hlet(l.nd had been for several years
‘and everything 1 ate hurt me so 1
‘could hardly get around at all. 1 am
‘a farmer and have to work hard, but
1 got so weak last fall I could hardly
“walk. A burning sensation and a
. miserable feeling after eating bore
ime down and my appetite wasted
iaway to almost nn!nng. 1 would
! often vomit a whole meal right up an
‘hour afterwards and 1 was in de
‘ spair.
“I only took one bottle of Acid Tron
| Mineral, and when I wanted to get
.another 1 found that my local store
was out of it. Mr. Short, the pro
prietor, says he can hardly keep it
sin stock, as it is as staple as sugar
and coffee. It certainly is fine med
‘{cine and 1 gladly recommend it to
;nybody suffering with stomach trou
" ble.”
. Doctors are wusing it, because,
_strange to say, it doesn’t hurt teeth
like most iron remedies are apt to do,
and the effect it has on the blood,
complexion, digestion and appetite is
hard to believe. It is stronger, cheap
‘er, better for you. Acid Iron Mineral
is sold by your local druggist, $1 for
' a large bottle. Jacobs' Pharmacy.—
! Advertisement.
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Cuticura Soap is ideal
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~ 8 Assisted by touches
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Soap Fe. Otati-tSMdffi\
Why Central Powers
as ‘“‘lnner Ring’’ Foe
Must Lose to Allies
Germany Long Ago Foresaw This by Building
a Strategie Railway System.
By LEWIS R. FREEMAN,
l The ml*mlnm- working in favor of
| the bellferent fighting on the *lfmer
xl'lnl»." and the disadvantages working
against the one fighting on the “outer
circle,” are so well recognized by mili
tary students as to be practical axloms
of strategy., It has taken the recent
Austro-German drive into Italy to bring
the truths home to the man in the
street,
The vital necesgity for Britain and
' France to rush assistance to their sore
])y beset wlly hl'()ugh( home to the most
casual reader of the news the ease with
which the Central powers can shunt
troop trains up behind their advaneing
battle line in comparison with the dif
ficulties which France and Britain have
to overcome in sending the men to help
stop them,
Many who have never stopped to
think why Gallipoli falled, wh Knlonlkl
has been a comparative dvndvlock. and
why it has taken two years to begin a
’rvullla!lun of the difficulties in mxfitlng
on these, as well as on other segments
of the “outer circle,” In trying to follow
the route of the troops which France
and Britain hurried to the ald of 'taly.
| Hemmed in by Enemies.
The power which 18 completely hermr
med in by enemies must, provided only
that the "rl\nf" is malntained intact,
be overcofne In the end. A weak or
poorly-organized power will be over
come at once, but in the case of a
strong and more or less gels-contained
empire, like that of Germany, defeat
may be long deferred. Moreover, that
defeat can only be imposed at the cost
of an Incomparably greater expenditure
of effort on the part of the .winning
than of the losing powers. The cost of
vietory in a alrufime of this character
{8 far greater than that of defeat (if
only money and material are reckoned)
and if anything less than the cause of
civilization were in the balance in the
present war the Allies mlqht weil hesi
tate in regard to paying It
The advantage, on the score of econ
omy of effort, enjoyed by the “inner
circle” of helllfierenln over those Df&the
“other circle’” is most readily illu.wul
ed by imagining a civele of, say, en
ty hoys trying to hold within some small
given area a group of ten. To maintain
the parallel, let us suppose thatnn%m
rules of the game make it impo le
for the twenty to rush in and ov«-rgow
er the ten by sheer woi?ht of numbers,
just as the Allies find It impracticable
to do in the case of the Central row«ara.
Second Ten as '‘Reserves.’
The ‘“outer” boys, after some discus
gion, agree to have ten of their number
join hands to form a ring around tne
ten “inner’’ boys, leaving a second ten
to act as “reserves” to back up any
point of the ring which appears to be
threatened by a rush ,{.rom the inside.
A few ditches and wall® to be crossed,
climbed over, or avoided by the reuerv?{
in going to back up a threatened pa
of the ring completes the parallel suffi
clently for our pur‘pouc of comparison, :
The way in which the ten ‘“‘inners'
kept twice their number busy is strik
ing enough in the stage of the gume
eorresponding to the ochlnx months of
lh(:wnr. in which the rushes were
=’ (i /° Gis.. R
o™ R h L(T O N Vi AL f%.’ >
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O) e e
3 ,/.,«‘r vw{ Adp o ¥ [
Horses and Mules Love Molasses [
The trick horse in the circus gets a lump of sugar l
as a reward for doing his difficult stunts. Your
horses love sugar as much as he does. : |
No animal has “a sweeter
tooth” than the horse has. You can
make a perfect devil of a horse eat
out of your hand if you give him
molasses and bread.
Molasses is a good feed for
horses. It supplies carbohydrates
in its most digestible form and is
more quickly converted into work
energy and staying power on the long
pull,
More than that, molasses
*“« tastes good. Itis arelish. It makes
feed more palatable. Itis the same
to feed that sugar is to coffee or salt
is to an egg. It helps make the per
fect feed.
£ Write for Booklet No.l
‘\m-}j. This book is full of vital facts
' v /\ about feed. It’s worth money to you
SOR TRNG) oo mecdie ivy sk
& J rite today. e wl
7 %‘A—"‘v ™ a list of ouz members. . I
Uy m;L (:11 “ r‘
‘! ~ Sweet Feed Manufacturers
//“"'\ik W T Association .
: (>N S
'/‘ &0 “‘ Memphis | enn.
RAR TR ITTh e (il
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN
made alternately against various points
of the circle. It was nothing, however,
to the advantages which accrued to
them if we suppose that the game is
modified to parallel, roughly, the war as
It had to be fought after the entry of
I'urkey and Bulgaria on the side of the
Central powers.
Up to that time the latter had simply
been able to enjoy the advantages of
their inner line; from then on the Al
lies began to suffer in increasing de
gree the handicap of the outer line, If
we imagine the ‘‘inners” to be in
creased to fifteen by the entrance of
Turkey and Bulgaria, and the ‘‘outers’
to lhlrtg' by that of Italy and Rouma
nia, and the ringed-in ground to have
doubled in size and changed to an area
several times as long as it is broad,
the parallel will be sulficiently approxi
mate,
Natural Impediments.
There would algo be a great multipli
cation of the walls and ditches to be
negotiated by the “outers” in going to
each other's assistance. These obsta
cles were not so serlous In the first
stage of the game, when the several
groups of ‘‘outers’’ were hnldlmf their
own arcs of the ring; but in this new
stage (which largely consists of a bol
stering up of the weaker by the stronger
‘boys’) they Sm(romz at times an almost
prohibitive handicap.
Moving on thelr shorter lines, the
Central powers ,direct their rushes
against such parts of the ring as will
compel thelr strongest opponents to
make the longest and most diffieult
moves+ to stiffen them. The various
“outers’’ moving to prevent a ‘‘break
through'' in the Balkan are, travel from
ten to forty times the distance (ex
gendlnx effort In prop-rtion), covered
y the much smaller amber of “in
ners’’ necessary to “draw’ tae former
to this point.
Still more difficult becomes the task
of the stronger of the “outers’’—France
and Britain-—-as the demands for help
are made by this or that ‘‘comrade”
who wearies under the strain of the
rushes from the better placed “inners.”’
Very much longer and very much slow
er Is the j2urney made by our men
and material .o the various threatened
points than is the enemy’s journey to
the same points. In brief, it is ten
times easier for him to produce the
pressure than for us to meg it. :
Looked at in this way, te wonder is‘
not that the ‘“inners” have been }blm
to hold it something more than .v»n‘
(on the score of ground gained) with
half the numbers, but rather that, with
all their advantages of position, they
have not accomplished twice as much
hefore—LbLetween exhaustion and the
gathering weight of their opponents—
they are forced to give it u‘p for good.
What Germany Realized.
After the conclusion of the Franco-
Prussian war, Germany realized that
her n:}t great struggle would pmbg‘l\'
be agafnst both France and Russia, d
all her pre{:amuons of the last forty
years have been directed to making the
most of the “interior iines” which wouta
be hers ih such a contingency.
By long odds the most important part
A crushed grain ration, sweet
ened with molasses, is the best feed
for horses and mules. You’ll get
better results from 12 to 14 Ibs. than
than from 16 to 20 Ibs. of whole grain.
This association in united effort
has brought the sweet, crushed grain
balanced feeds to their highest per
fection. These feeds are identified
by the Pilot Wheel emblem —a co
operative trade mark.
Any member who lowers the
standard of excellence adopted by
the association will forfeit tge rlgll;t
to use the Pilot Wheel mark. Be
sure the Pilot Wheel is on every bag
of feed you buy.
A Newspapsr for People Who Think —
’vf these preparations Ponsigted in the
construction of the most gompiete sys
[tem of strategic rullwuw‘evrr known |
| Not only were her industrial centers
well served with rallways, as In France |
Pritain, and America, but thousands of |
miles of line. which ha’ no possible ex- |
cuse for existence sav. as troop car- |
riers In the event of war, were-also |
bullt, |
I It was these latter lines which were
regponsible for the great nodal cénters
in. out-of-the-way points of Germany |
which were so constant a source of sur. |
prise to foreign travelers who did net
understand wzs\t the Kaiser had In|
mind. Great as the Industrial ex{mn
sion of Germany was, rust accumulated
on the outer rails of gome of the great
eight-track trunks which stretched fmtl
to and beyond the Rhine and toward the
French ftrontier, ’
Nor did Germany confine her efforts to |
providing a system of railways which
would enable her simply to mhb"ll"t
troops on her frontiers in record time.
She aleo built lateral lines irrenp‘-(-nval
of whether or not they were needed
commercially, designed for rapid move
ment of forces back and forth behind
those frontiers, so that hurried concen
trations could be made for either of
fensive or defensive purposes. This
system wans extended in Belgium and
northern France just as quickly as pos
sible after their occupation,
A Gigantic Cobweb.
One frequently hears this strategic
rallway system of Germany's compared
with the spokes of several wheels ra
diating from her great industrial cen
ters as hubs.
This comparison is good as far as It
goes, but does not take account-of the
network of lateral lines to which 1 have
referred. it seems to me rather mors
|llkn a gigantie cobweb, in which the
radiating strands are joined up all the
way around by more or less cencentric
strands, thus giving the predatory mon
ster at the center absolute freedom of
movement in every direction,
France was the only one of all of
them which had given any special at
tention to the rallways running to her
frontiers, and even she had stopped
halfway in the development of an ade
{quate systemi. France has only one
railway center—Parig—from wghich lines
radiate to every part of the country-—-
that is to say. her railway map was 1
“wagon wheel” but not a “cobweb.”
She was lacking in those lateral lines
which not cnly made it possible for
Germany to move troops swiftly back
and forth along the frontiers)/ but also
to get them across the country from
one frontier to another in something
like a direct line.
France was strone in lines running
out to her German frontier. hut rather
weak in lines of that of Belgium, across
which latter country she had. raturall
not rcc\(;lm »d upon being attacked. No!
along any of her frontier was there
anything in the way of lateral which
could be emyployed in the speedy distri-|
bution of mecn and material.
Russia's Railways Weak Pz’lfit.
All of Russia’s great western fort
resses were served by raflways, but as
these were something less than adequate
for peace time demands, they were woe.
fully lacking under the stress of war
Indeed, the failure of Russia’s railways
was one of the forerunning causes of the
failure of Russia herself.
Even the almost complete’'y double
tracked Trans-Siberian line was never
equal to the extra task of transporting
all the munitions d other material
that were Lrought to Vladivostok from
Japan and the Pacifiec Coast of America
The Central Powers are paying, in
another x’av. a heavy price for the ad
vantage fighting on the ‘‘inner lines,"
and the fact that adjuration to *hold
out” has uppeared so often in their
nress during the last vear indicates that
being “hemmed in'" reacts mentally as
well as physically on the nerves as wel
as on ’;e body; and if it does finally
come t¥ a question of holding out, it
will undoubtecly be better t 6 be “on the
outside looking in” than “on the inside
looking out.” :
Prince Sets Aside $7,000,000
for Education and Moral
.~ Uplift of Women,
LLONDON, Feb., 16,~0ne of the
greatest ('hurltulty- gifte in the his
tory of India has just been announced
at Delhi. The Maharaj Kumar of
Tikari, one of the wealthy native
Princes, has executed a deed-of trust
devoting his entire personal estate to
founding an institution for the edu
cation of Indian, women. , The prop
erty concerned is valued at about
$7,000,000. In view of the much
greater purchasing power of money in
Irdia, it is believed that the gift will
accomplish as much proportionately
as a gift of nearly ten times the size
in England or America.
Dependent members of the Maha
raj's family have already been pro
vided for by separate funds, and als
liabilities of the estate are duly se
cured. The scheme is for a strictly
“purdah” residential institution,
where the girls will be trained and
educated on the best modern princi
ples from the age of five to eighteen.
There will be no question of caste or
creed.
Inspired by Wife.
The- gift owed its inspiration
largely to the Maharaj's wife, who.
has been one of the foremost native
Indian women in the crusade for im
provement of the lot of Indian
women. The Maharaj himself was
You’ll Be Surprised at the Very Reasonable
Prices on Fine Furniture at Zaban’s
¢ » Hundreds of Atlantans came to see our new store last
¢, week and many of them expressed their surprise at our
4 &‘— —p=———————————y reasonable prices. We have three
o \h.v large floors stocked with fresh new
A TR ! home furnishings, priced lower
|gs% . . . .
Y 5 ] ! than you will believe it possible to
WD o a 4 show during these days of advanc
.' i} ing prices. '
{ Come in Monday
.." - ;;' and see our beau-
L \ — - tiful new store and
B ‘ o T = see the hundreds of
tfii Special 4“::;“52535::: m“ “real bargains” we
‘53 9 ~ T g
: € TSR el BT -
J s —awkw iy offer.
BED DIVANS—Choice of mahogany, fumed oak or A
olden oak. A Big Special Value. 2 AT rriin
g L |IR S
o : AR A"y TSR
LR o li \4 1y
B S st GO (LN
BN :l- ;‘@@‘ <k o ‘?ij‘j I 1 :
RS [0 k R Dbt 0 =
e~ et (0T Tbt
SR T s g T
(- s i 3
AT A A
R Nt Y
- - \
Free! Free! vaniTy DRESSERS
We offer a special value this
Cong(fle“m R“fls With every purchase of week in these beautiful Vanity
Size 4%x4% Feet. $lO or more Monday we Dressers. Your choice of finish-
Odd pieces of .various pat- v ; & es, ivory or mahogany. '
terns. “SBamples.” 49 will give FREE one of
Extraordinary values. C these 7-Cup Aluminum Sale $59
S ller sizes left at ; 2
290f)m° sraller sizes leit a Percolators, worth $2.00. Pr] ce
et S U ey
4-Piece Jacobean Oak L. .22
Dining Room Suite Wy 5= =L P
A beautiful, well-built suite that will ap- “;‘?i ‘ L-EELIW’H‘ d_f Ifi
peal to those who admire good furniture. “ @%.! L
This is one of dozens of beautiful suites we M L v L}‘«"'Tm“u._'
have on display. Worth $125. i . 'li i. "’ /
Special $79_50 4 14 = R -,
Sale Price - ¥y 9 ’
¥. F f
T L AT
I )‘!J $ D X - I—-’-’ =’: ',‘
’ o & | & b f‘\’\" L iIB
e, D ! 3 AREA UN ) | ,
Em o H m'l e:‘ ‘IQ N P
A W = L =] luo 2l T *]]
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ÜBERAL fgp 8 > A hEY | üBERAL
CREDIT "B &Py ' ) e B B ™ CREDIT
LN FINE FURN[TURE TERMS.
119 WHITEHALL STREET—A Few Doors From Mitchell Street
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY }7, 1918
i”"‘ of the first native Princes to fight
{ln France, and has spent over two
|years on the battlefields. He was
| brought up by English ‘tutors in
|lndla and has been a great traveler,
' The Maharaj's wife, in a letter de
'seribing the gift, says:
! “The education of women is l‘prob
lem demanding the attention of all
governments in every country of the
world. In India the issue is more
vital even thar in other countries,
A young man leaves his home In
India to be educated; he comes, per
haps home to marry an Ipdian girl of
his own social position, During his
college days the young man has as
'suciutcd with cultivated Europeans,
yhas learned many of their ways, has
become used to clever, well-informed
conversation and companionship.
What about his Indian bride? If
she has been brought up in the tra
ditional Indian way she Q’IH be quite
‘uneducated, according to Western
standards, and will know little of life
n|nside€er immediate surroundings.
All her flays she will have been kept
in seclusion, for the ultimate purpose
of marriage at the age of 13 or 14,
Prevents Early Marriages.
“It is because I feel the position of
the Indian girls so keenly, because |
realize the greve dangers which their
general inability to be real helpers
entails, that I am so enthusiastic and
s 0 anxious to do all I can to help.
“My husband has executed a deed
of trust of his whole estate for the
founding of an institution to educate
Indian and Cingalese girls, and has
made it an essential point that creed
and caste shall be no bar. We hope
to introduce into the school a thor
ough knowledge of English. A col
lege will be built, and wlil ianclude
residential quarters where the stu
dents will live. A girl, can stay until
the age of 18, and this I think very
important, for the 'prevailing early
marrying age ‘n India at present
lean not but prove detrimental to the
physical well-being of our women.,”
A site for the college has been giv
en by Sir Ali'lmam, one of the lead
ing native lawyers.
“Shoot Traitors Like
Shoot Traitors Like |
" Says Pastor,
Dogs,” Says Pastor,
—— |
SALT LAKE CITY, F&l'v. 16.—" And 1|
say to you today that ery mam and
woman on these shores, wgo recoivoul
our advantages and enjoys our privi-|
leges, and who refuses to give whole- |
hearted allegiance to this land that has
given him more than he would ever|
have known but for us, is a traitor amd |
ought, when apprehended, to be stood !
against the wall and shot like a dog."
That was but one of the many out
standing remarks of Rev. Elmer 1. Go
shen, #‘mn(nr of the Fjrst Congregational
Church, in a-patriotic address the other |
night. He towk as his subject ‘‘The
Message of Lafayette to the Youth of
Today."
s . liesstapiiiies
MONUMENT FOR IRISH. i
LONDON, Feb. %—A movement is on
foot to make an imperishable memorial
of those of the Irish regiments who
have foux‘nt and died,
An influential committee has been
formed, of which the Duke of Connaught
is president and General Sir Bryan Ma
hon and the Lord Mayor are vice presi
dents, to obtain funds for the erection
and adornment in Westminster Cethed
ral of a chapel expressive of grateful
recogition of the services and sacrifices
of the gallant Irishmen-—both Roman
Catholics ond -~ Portestants—who laid
down their L.'ves for the empire.
Cured HisRUPTURE
I was badly ruptursed while lifting a
trunk several years ago. Doctors said
my only hope of cure was an opera
tion. Trusses did me no good. Finally
I got hold of something that quickly
and completely cured me. Years have
passed and the rupture has never re
turned. although I am doing hard work
as a carpenter. There was no opera
tion, no lost time, no trouble. 1 have
nothine to sell, but will give full in
formation about how you may find a
compiete cure without operation, if you
write to me, Eugene M. Pullen, Car
penter, 94-D Marcellus Avenue, Manas
quan, N. J. Better cut aat this notice
and show it to any others who are rup
tured—you may save a life or at least
stop the misery of rupture and the
worry and danger of an operation.
High School Boys
Publish a Magazin
WHITEHALL, ITLL., Feb, 16.—Two
grade schoolboys her( are publishers
of a successful monthly mufn:lne. It is
The Boys Herald, Russell A, Jones
aged 14, Is editor in_chlef, ange®Charlcs
H. Birdsell, aged 15, assistant edito
They perform all the work, from writ
ing editorials to setting type and run.
ning the press, That the magazine |«
n regular one Is vouchsafed by the fact
1t has its serial stories, its sense an|
nonsense, and its classified advertise
ments. Although the present circuia
tion is small, It has one subscriber in
Hilo, Hawall,
REJECTED SIX TIMES, PASSES,
HAZLETON, PA.,, Feb., 16.-—Rejected
six timies by Federal sufigmns when he
tried ic enlist in the National Guarq,
‘army and navy, John Hertz passed the
tests of the local medical board and was
accepted today for the next dvaft con
tingent to Camp Meade.
e e—— e —————————
~ Miller’'s Antiseptic Oil, Known as
| o k-2
\
Wlll Positively Relieve Pain In Thres
Minutes.
Try it right now for' -Rheumatism
Neuralgia, Lumbago, ®sore, stiff ard
swollen joints, pains in the head, bac)
and limbs, corns, bunions, ete. Afte
one application pain disappears as i
by magic.
A new remedy used internally and ex
ternally for Coughs, Colds, Croup, Sor
Throat, Diphtheria and Tonsillitis.
This oil is conceded to be the most
penetrating remedy known. Its prompt
and immediate effect in relieving pain is
due to the fact that it penetrates to the
affected parts at once. As an illustra
tion, pour ten. drops on the thickest
piece of sole leather and it will pene
trate this substance through and
through in three minutes.
Accept no substitute. This great oil
is golden red color only. Every bottle
guaranteed; 30c, 60c a%l $1 a bottle or
money refunded at Jacobs' Pharmacy, 11
stores, Atlanta.—Advertisement,
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Extra Size
Footstools
12%x14%
Well built throughout, strong
and durable. Made of fumed
oak. Upholstered ih good grade
of imitation Spanish Jeather.
Worth sl. Sent postpaid for 89¢.
Special
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Beautiful Rugs
See our rug display’on Second Floor
and note our prices as compared with
what other stores ask. We can save
you mouey on rugs.
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77 Pt ||it | b
ALY 7
B
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(Queen Anne
Periodßedroom
Suite, 4 Pieces
A beautiful, new sufte.
Mahogany finish only. To
appreciate this great value
you must come and see it
Some stores would ask
$l6O for it.
Special
Sale 1
Price