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IE WEEK'S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEW8 OF 8TATE, NA*
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOuTlHE WORLD
A Condensed Record Of Happenings
Of interest From All Points
Of The World
Domestic
Judge Emory Speer of the United
States district court for the southern
district of Georgia, died December 13
at Macon, Ga. He was one of the
most spectacular figures in American
politics during the day* of reconstruc¬
tion, and was one of the literary ge¬
niuses of the bench. He was over sev¬
enty years of age, but took an active
part in all the Liberty loans.
All government regulations affecting
raw cotton ended with the dissolution
of the cotton distribution committee of
the war industries board.
The Southern Commercial Congress,
closing its general sessions in Balti¬
more, approved the Bankhead meas¬
ure for $500,000,000 in five annual fed¬
eral appropriations for highway and
post road facilities and a gigantic
crease of merchant marine, with equal
distribution, terminal betterment and
general economical trade
with the South as a meritorious
ficiary.
Five to five and a half billion
more of bonds will have to be
to finance the government. This
timate is based on an estimate
eighteen billion dollars in
tures, and members of the ways and
means committee of the house say
estimate is not too low.
It has not been decided what
tion of the voluminous documents
ding light on the activities of the
man propagandists in this country
make public.
Henry Youtsey, convicted in
of being a party to the murder
Governor Goebel, has been paroled
ter years in the pen.
Director General of Railroads
Adoo, in order to take the
out of politics, has asked that rail
trol be extended five years.
Silver chevrons will be given
soldiers kept at home toy order of
commander-in-chief of/the army
navy, Woodrow Wilso4.
die&l()»ilops, ply eight thou/sand h»||g
n|e ilitM&fc
Ia <jUlri > T .ew-rfike.
IrlJJwilbur J. Ham of
Ga., and Mrs. O. H. P. Wright of
ma, Ala., the aged mother of Mrs.
L. G. Hames of Cartersville, and
erine Hames, 10 years old, were in¬
stantly killed at a crossing two miles
north of Cartersville, Ga. Little Wil¬
bur Ham, a four-year-old child, whose
mother was killed, -was fatally injured
and died a few hours later.
Cotton ginned prior to December 1
was 9,563,124 running bales, including
134,150 round bales; 10,170 bales of
American Egyptian and 25,741 bales
of sea island.
Vice President Marshall presided “in¬
formally and impersonally, not under¬
taking to exercise any official duty or
function,” at the cabinet meeting on
December 10. President Wilson asked
the vice president to preside.
European
The British steamship Corinthian,
which stuck on Northwest ledge at the
mouth of the Bay of Fundy, a few
hours after she left that port for Glas¬
gow, with a valuable cargo, was re
pm*t,ed to be pounding to pieces in a
heavy sea, but that the crew was saved
to a man.
The German finance minister says
that if the war had ended in the ^te .11
the amount of money required from im¬
perial taxation would have reached
fourteen billion marks. These calcu¬
lations have been upset by recent
events.
David Lloyd-George says that Great
Britain’s navy must remain supreme,
no matter what the action of the peace
conference.
A voice interrupted the British pre¬
mier when he was speaking in Bristol
the other day aisent the superiority of
the British navy: “Then watch Wil¬
son!” “Well, I hope to meet him in a
fortnight. I will tell him what you
say,” instantly shouted the premier.
With the arrival of the Americans
at the Rhine, a company of engineers
prepared to throw a temporary bridge
across the stream. There were, how¬
ever, already four bridges spanning the
stream, two here and one in the north
and another to the south, over which
the American army was ordered to
corss December 13 in a thirty-mile
arc.
When the American forces reached
Coblenz, Germany, a local committee
was appointed to assist the Americans
in assuming control and officers of the
German army remained behind after
the last of their men had marched out
in order to deliver to the Americans
great stores of supplies.
The German army moved out of Co¬
blenz in an orderly fashion, with the
spirit of a holiday rather than that of
a defeated army. Almost every man
had a rosette or a sprig of green in
his cap. The spirit of Christmas was
in the atmosphere, and the broad smile
of the Germans was contagious.
■;.!■.. ’ • n
THE CLEVELAND < .CLEVELAND. GEORGIA.
Hugo Haase and Herr Barth, two of
the, three Independent Socialist mem¬
bers of the committee of six which
constituted the German government,
have resigned, according to reports re¬
ceived in Geneva.
The council of people’s commission¬
ers of Germany, according to a Berlin
telegram, has authorized the forma¬
tion of a volunteer national guard to
maintain public order and safety. The
organization is to be commissioners under the com¬
plete control of the and
will be pledged to support the Social¬
ist Democratic republic.
President Wilson of the United
States spent his first Sunday in Paris
by going twice to church, laying a
wreath on the tomb of Lafayette, and
having a brief conference with pre¬
mier Clemenceau and another with
Col. E. M. House.
The supreme military tribunal at
Vienna announces that 11,400 persons
were sentenced to death by the Aus¬
trian military tribunals during the war
and executed.
Italy, with a population of only 36,
000,000 and with 5,500,000 men called
to the colors, suffered approximately
1,500,000 casualties in the war.
The objectives of the American
army of occupation were reached De¬
cember 15 at various points. Generally
the army is being received cordially.
It is stated that Germany is spend¬
ing too much money on irrelevant de¬
tails of state administration. -
The British government has decided
spon the attitude it will adopt at the
peace conference regarding the free¬
dom of the seas. It is stated that the
British government is ready to con¬
cede to the United States the freest
of all free hands in naval develop¬
ment, and it welcomes the idea of the
extension of American sea power as
one of th,e best guarantees of the peace
of the world and of real freedom of the
seas.
Dr. W. S. Solf, German minister of
foreign affairs, because his relations
with the Independent Socialists had
reached the straining point, has quit
his job and gone home.
General Russki and Dimitrieff, of
the Russian army, have been shot by
order of the ulc local iuuu soviet at Prapra
gorsk. M. Rukhloff, former minister
of commerce and communications in
the Russian cabinet, was shot at the
same time.
General Russki, who was recently
shot by order of the Russian govern
ment, commanded the Russian troops
ingloriously routed by the i Germans
in the northern Polish campaign.
During the war twelve ispies were
shot in the tower of Lomjgn. Among
(he condemned were omen, but
they were reprieved se^fo^SShd
’y until a demand
m .mentis irtteb* ve made for the
disso ^ t0 Germtr oldiers’ and work¬
men’s 1 IS Carried out. The allies
may reserve the right to march into
Germany.
Washington
Dr. Sidonio Paes, president of
tugal, was shot and killed by an
sassin shortly before midnight
ber 15, while he in a railway
at Lisbon waiting for a traie to
to. Advices from Lisbon reporting the
assassination say that he was struck
by three bullets, and died within a few
minutes after he was shot. According
to a Havas dispatch the assassin was
lynched by the crowd.
The assassinated president of Portu¬
gal, Doctor Paes, was a professor of
mathematics in the University of Coin
bra when he entered the Portuguese
cabinet in 1911 as minister of public
work. At the outbreak of the war
he was Portuguese minister to Ber¬
lin and remained in Berlin until early
in 1916, when he returned to Lisbon.
One of his first acts after being pro¬
claimed president was to take active
steps for great participation in the
war by Portugal.
In a clash on November 28 between
the army navy guard of the American
steamship Monterey and Mexican cus¬
toms guards at Tampico, one Mexican,
said to have been captured, was killed;
a Mexican soldier mortally wounded,
and a chief gunner’s mate, named Ber¬
ry, in charge of the American guard,
less seriously hurt. This was learned
with the steamer’s arrival in New
York from Havana and Nassau, where
she touched after leaving Tampico. ___^
The “United States stands ready to
tender alone, or in conjunction with
other countries of Their hemisphere,
all possible assistance” to bring about
an equitable solution of the difficul¬
ties presented in the Chile-Peru sit¬
uation, says Acting Secretary of State
Polk.
All South American countries have
been asked by the United States to
join in the suggestion to Chile and
Peru that the interests of pan-Amer¬
ican unity demand an amicable settle¬
ment of their controversy over the
provinces of Tacna and Arica. Acting
Secretary Polk of the state depart¬
ment announced this, explaining that
it had been erroneously reported that
Argentine alone had been approached
on the subject.
Cablegrams announce that President
Wilson reached the harbor of Brest on
board the steamer George Washington
and stepped 05 shore—the first time
an American executive had ever trod¬
den European soil. The arrival was
the culmination of an imposing naval
spectacle which began as the presi¬
dential fleet rounded the outer capes,
then passed the entrance forts and
moved* majestically into the harbor,
where the George Washington anch
at the head of a long double column
of American dreadnaughts and de¬
and the units of a French crui¬
squadron.
6E0RGIAHS WILL
GET DISCHARGES
ALL MEN WITHIN 350-MILE ZD I
OF THE CAMP MAY SPEND |1
CHRI8TMA8 AT HOMES
STATE NEWS BF W
Brief News Items Of Importance Gal
•red From All Part*
Of The State
Atlanta.—That all soldiers now S’
tioned in the replacement or casudi
regiments at Camp Gofton wl
homes are within the 350-mile
recently prescribed for the demobili¬
zation activities of the Georgia cah
tonment, will be discharged from the
army and sent back to their homes bp.
Christmas Day, was the opinion of
military authorities here when ques¬
tioned in compliance with telegrams
sent from here to Washington, request¬
ing that reports to this effect
cleared up.‘ This means that
some change is made in the present
plans of demobilization by the war,
department, or unless some unexpect¬
ed delay occurs in carrying out t!
program, practically every G<
in class A of the army at Camp
for "
don will be at home Ch:
and also that every man in this stal
in classes B and C at Camp Gordo:
will also be discharged by Christm;
unless they can not pass the physical
examination for discharge. Hundreds
of men from Alabama, Florida
Tennessee living within the confines
1 of the 350-mile zone will also be dis
: charged by Christmas.
l
Seven Senators Elected January
Atlanta.—A special election for sen
ators from the newly created districts
has been called by Gov. Hugh Dorsey
for Tuesday, January 7, in accordance
the opinion given him by At
torney General Clifford Walker to the
effect that it was his duty to name a
time for the selection of representa
i fives from the seven new senatorial of the 1
districts, leaving the matter
gal seating of those already electr
to the senate itself. In the
which Attorney General Wal
^ ' sentedtp the* he
eJBrtors governor sayj
the th<y[orty-four were selecting disi sej
repre%nt diSPtBBNij'were
'districts. WheirYfTde’*
consolidWted affd the governoi
his proclamation declaring the'
ment in fact ratified, ofreated. seven The new district] sul
act
this amendment also required the gi
ernor, upfcn the issuanceeof said pi
lamation J to caU special elections in
each of foe seven new senatorial dis¬
tricts ab created for the election of
senatoij districts. to represent This proclamation each of said new
been ^luly having
issued, it is clearly your
duty t p call the election so provided.’
aJi Sheep Raising In Georgia
lanta.—In view of the record that
for 'twenty years or more the world’s
supbly of sheep has diminished while
the j demand for wool and mutton has
inefeased, present efforts to introduce
sheep raising in Georgia on an exten¬
sive scale appear most timely and
profi able. Experts of the State Col¬
lege of Agriculture who recently have
been experimenting to this end in some
of the southern counties are much en¬
couraged. It is altogether an errone¬
ous idea, they say, that sheep will not
thrive in a warm climate. The two
essentials, they point out, are an abun¬
dance of grazing and an absence of
vagrant dogs.
Spend $500,000 On Ft. McPherson
Ft. McPherson.—Approximately five
hundred thousand dollars will be ex¬
pended by the government in the near
future in the construction of new build¬
ings and the completion of the heat¬
ing system at the general hospital at
Fort McPherson, according to an of¬
ficial announcement received at the
fort. This will be done in accord
ance with a plan to make this hospital
m °d ern an< l complete as w r as announc
e< *. * ,0 tlle Colonel war department Bratton in an in
<l u r y as to just
what was needed to place the hospi¬
tal on this basis.
Big Land Deal In Lowndes County
Valdosta.—The sale of five thousand
acres of Lowndes county land to F. C.
Doss and Tl J. Davis of Atlanta by
Judge J. F. McCrackin of Valdosta
has been announced here. The land is
in one body lying northeast of Val¬
dosta, and it is understood will be
converted into a great cattle ranch.
Detective Bullard Pneumonia Victim
Atlanta.—Chief,of Detectives George
C. Bullard of the Atlanta police force
died at the Georgia Baptist hospital,
a victim of Spanish influenza.
Dr. John Mell Heads Baptists
Macon.—Dr. John Mell of Athens
was re-elected president of the Geor¬
gia Baptist convention at the session
of the. convention held at the First
Baptist church here. W. W. Gaines
Qf Atlanta, Rev. G. J. Davis of Hart¬
B. H. Hardy of Barnesville and
J. H. Foster, president of Bessie
college, were elected as the four
presidents. Dr. B. D. Ragsdale
Macon was re-elected secretary for
twenty-fourth year. He appointed
W. T. Grenade of Eatonton’as his
To Build Refinery At Brunswick
Brunswick.—Representatives of the
Atlantic Refining company, who have
been in the city for the past few days,
have made the announcement that all
plans are now being made to begin
active work on the big plant early in
January.
First R. F. D. Mail Carrier Dead
Quitman.—J. E. Fonder, aged 58,
first rural mail carrier in the United
States, under the R. F. D. system,
died here.
350 Soldiers Take Oath Of Allegiance
Atlanta.—Three hundred and fifty
foreign-bom soldiers, stationed at
Camps Gordon and Jesup and Fort Mc¬
Pherson, were made American citi¬
zens, when they took the oath of al¬
legiance before Judge William T. New¬
man in the federal court. Miss Marie
Martha Freuh, a nurse of Switzerland,
now on duty at Fort McPherson, took
the oath along with the soldiers. Sev¬
enty-one countries were represented,
and one Austrian and no Germans
were included in the naturalized group.
Georgia 8chool Fund $3,500,000
Atlanta.—The largest appropriation
BChdols ever made by the state,
3 , 600 , 000 , ias just been apportioned
the coming year by the state
rd of education and the figures
■en out by M. L. Brittain, secre
of the board, based on the 1918
census, and including as school chil¬
dren all those from 6 to 18, the state
fund allows $4.13 toward the educa¬
te of every i child in Georgia dur
• i$i$. Certain towns, including At
___ita, receive a designated amount di¬
rect from the state, and hence are not
provided with funds from the coun¬
ty’s allotment. For instance, the al¬
lowance for Fulton county is only
$28,377.23, which is little more than
that givep to Dooly county. But At¬
lanta receives ' $1^1,499.20, College
ark $3,465.07 and East Point $5,-
6 Outside of Fulton county the
. which
largest-amount goes to Chatham
receives $82,$79.62 with no additional
apportionment to Savannah. Bibb
comes next with $79,415.77 with no
towns specified. The county which
receives $82,079.62 with no additional
is Echols with $4,732.98. Towns giv¬ _is
next to the lowest, having been
j; en $4,935.35. Appling county is omit
*ed, its allotment together with that
of Baxley, one of its towns, not hav¬
been decided upon. The figures
given for Berrien include Cook county
and funds for Atkinson county are giv¬
en in with those for Clinch and Cof
Emanuel and Montgomery appor¬
tionments both include part of Treut¬
len county.
Farms And Homes Planned For Men
Atlanta.—At the conclusion of the
cssion of the Georgia Land Settle
ment committee of the state council
3 * defense, appointed by ove
Dorsey, which met in the state capi
ol definite plans have beemformu
> citi
by which soldiers and other
zeas hecon^ e home home and farm
__e demobilization of
__......
thearmy, it is the desire of the fed
’
i era j and state officials that every sol
<j ier wll0 g0 de sires may become the
owner G f a f ar m or a homeland that
i?j ^ America w m be a home "owning” na
on steps will be taken to allow' the
pm-chasey, leng terms in which to pay
j t or , : property and at the amount same of time in*
iKyei *-«y oniy a reasonable
st. This offer will jvtt onby- be
e to the soldier, hi ft (is ttv^ civilian
wants to live in owt) home.
Inheritance Tt*e ■Collecte]
giants.— ties retmed
Wrig -ltarcb^ esF-te' r ' r , 4 & % '
on the of $191*
the estatte o f David^H^.jsei. s
bell returned |Bl SBL wCamp
hapi c Hunty, in its Nov* re'™ns, a i’hat
®t. *pade the largest with
aggregate amount of $4,982.26. This
ffiturn was made after the deduc
on of $539.25, attorney’s fees, and
98.35, tax collector’s commission.
The amount was assessed on the es¬
tates of Annie G. Walker, George
Blake, W. W. Ownes, B. F. Bullard
and Bertha M. Pickney.
Only Three Deaths At Souther Field
Americus—The first death from
disease to be recorded at Souther
here, Figld, occurred the aviation when Private training Lawrence station
G. Smith succumbed to an attack of
pneumonia. Souther Field has "an en¬
viable reputation, both as to acci¬
dents and health conditions, only
three deaths having occurred in the
personnel of officers and men station¬
ed there since the camp was estab¬
lished last April. Two of these deaths
resulted from accidents; one soldier
being killed while diving into a swim¬
ming pool at Myrtle Springs shortly
after the camp was established, and
another dying-as a result of an air¬
plane being wrecked near Dawson
two months ago.
Judge Hart Killed On Hunting Trip
Atlanta.—Judge John C. Hart, state
tax commissioner, and one of the most
prominent jurists in Georgia, was al¬
most instantly killed when the gun
he was carrying was discharged while
he was on a hunting trip near Union
Point. In the party with Judge Hart
was Stanley Matthewson, his nephew.
According to messages that were re¬
ceived in Atlanta Judge Hart was
crossmg a small stream, when, in
some manner, he stumbled, causing
the weapon to discharge, wounding
him in the throat just below the left
ear. He was dead, it is said, within
ten minutes.
TO-VISIT
THE IL S. TROOPS
WILL SPEND CHRISTMAS WITH
THE BOYS WHO CARRY
RIFLES
HONORED BY THE FRENCH
President Will Join Troops Near
Coblenz Qn German Soil—Will Go
TO Italy Late In January
Paris.—President Wilson will leave
Christmas EYe and go to Amer¬
general headquarters. From head¬
he will proceed to the Amer¬
front. He will have Christmas
with the American troops, and
with the American commander-in
or other officers. It is said that
president will visit the troops on
soil/in the neighborhood of
President Wilson will visit the prin¬
cipal points along the .old fighting
front, notably the battlefield of the
Marne.
The American president will not be
present at the fetes in honor of King
Victor Emmanuel of Italy, according
to the Echo de Paris, but it is prob¬
able that he and the king will ex¬
change calls.
It now is apparent that the presi¬
dent’s visit to Italy will he postponed
until the middle Or the latter part of
January, as his time meanwhile will
be fully occupied in meeting the po¬
litical leaders coming from various
points, in attending the opening ses¬
sions of the inter-allied conference
and the peace conference, in visits to
the. American front and the French
and Belgian devastated regions, and
probably a visit to Brussels and King
Albert of Belgium.
Gifts Presented President And Wife
Paris.—President Wilson, at the
conclusion of his address at the city
hall in reply to the' greetings of Adri¬
en Mithouard, the president of the
municipal council of Paris, was pre¬
sented with the great gold medal of
the city of Paris. Mrs. Wilson was
presented a diamond brooch adorned
with an enamel dove.
BOLSHEVIKI IS SEEKING
AN ARMY OF MILLIONS
New Yorjtan army of three r>‘... ry '
lAn-si rio put the conservative element
| in ists, Russia, Capt. whom Platon they Oustinoff, term imperial¬
formerly
of the Second Life Hussars, and who
left Petrograd, October 30, declared on
his arrival on the Stockholm. A vet¬
eran of the Russian invasion of East
Prussia early in the war, when he was
wounded three times, and son of the
Russian consul general at New York,
Captain Oustinoff said that the govern¬
ment had forbidden citizens to leave
the country, and he was able to de¬
part only because he was classed as
an invalid. Executions by the Bol
sheviki were a daily occurrence, he
stated, and thousands of conservatives
were held by the radicals as hostages,
so as to provide victims of revenge in
case officials were killed. At the re¬
cent slaying of a minister of the in¬
terior, he asserted, the “reds” shot 512
officers of the former imperial ,re¬
gime.
Food is so scarce, the captain said,
that horse flesh sells for 10 rubles ($5)
a pound, and black bread for 12 ru¬
bles a loaf, when it can be obtained
at all.
Four Church Congresses To Be Held
Atlantic City, N. J.—As a result of
a conference of the national service
commissions of the Presbyterian
church in the U. S. A., the Southern
Presbyterian Church, just concluded in
this city, four great American Church
Congresses are projected to be held
in important centers of the United
States for the purpose of unifying a
program for the projected united ac¬
tion of the churches in a war recon¬
struction campaign. One of these con¬
gresses will be held in a Southern city,
possibly Atlanta; two in Northern cit¬
ies. possibly Philadelphia and Chicago;
and one in Canada, probably Toronto.
Each congress is to last three or four
days.
40.440 Casualties Not Yet Reported
Washington.—In a report to the war
department General Pershing said that
the number of unreported casualties in
process of verification at the central
records office of the expeditionary
force on December 14 was forty thou¬
sand four hundred and forty. They
were divided as follows: Killed in
action, 390; died ofVvounds, 275; died
of disease, 353; accidentally killed,
51; severely wounded in action 39,-
731. These include all “suspense
cases under investigation,” the gen¬
eral reports.
Thirty-Six Governors In Convention
Annapolis, Md.—Thirty-six gover¬
nors or governors-elect in annual con¬
ference held here were told by Secre¬
tary Baker that war had proven the
indispensability of strong state gov¬
ernments in peace as well as war
times as the principal agencies for
mobilizing and demobilizing armies,
finding work for returning soldiers
and developing better methods of
physical training for young men. At
the same time he pleaded that state
authorities give cities more freedom
to work out their local problem.
Spanish Influenza can
be prevented easier than
it can be cured.
At the first sign of a
shiver or sneeze, take
7
CASCARA Quinine
Standard cold remedy for 20 yeara—to tablet
form—mfe, sure, noopiatesT-breaka up a cold
in 24 hours—relieves grip in 3 days. Money
back if itfails. The genuine box has a Red top
vrith Mr. Hill'S rfeture. At All Draw Stores.
Dipping in a solution of alum wilt,
paper candle or lamp shades.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
Infants and children, and see that it
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
It might be well to remember that
fast men are usually'slow pay.
RHEUMATISM PAINS
Are quickly relieved by applying.
Vacher-Balm. Try a 25c jar or tube.
If you cannot get it locally write to
E. W. Vac'her, Inc., New Orleans, La.
Adv.
Being a good fellow is all right
Its way, hut pay the grocer first.
ening,Invigorating Schlng the blood. ''Von Mffect. can Price soon 60c. feel
New York has 53,333 September reg¬
enemy aliens.
Good health depends upon good safeguard digestion.
Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills
your digestion and your health. Tonic &»
well as purgative. Adv.
A truthful enemy is better than »
lying friend.
___
Women all over the world rd
more and more that their work at liftme
helped,the men at the Front. It\ in¬
volved i^eat sacrifices, hard work and
Uliu*.***o Physical strength. Womdo at
home should study nursing for- the
home. A good way to learn is to
Ssk your druggist for a copy or
send 50c to publishers of the “Med¬
ical Adviser,” 663 Main St., Buffalo,
N. Y., and get a copy of their 1,000 page
book bound in cloth, with chapters on
First Aid, Taking Care of the Sick or
Wounded, Physiology, Hygiene, Anato¬
my, Sex Problems, Mother and Babe.
Nobody, man or woman, can do good
work when health is impaired. If a
woman is nervous or has dizzy speljs,
suffers from awful pains at regular or
irregular intervals she should turn to a
tonic made up of herbs, and without alcohol,
which makes weak women strong and sick
women well. It is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription. Send Dr, Pierce, Buffalo,
N. Y., 10 cents for trial package
Federal Point , Fla .—“I can highly recommend
Dr. Pierce’B medicines and it is a pleasure for me
to do so. I only used five boxes of the ‘Favorite
Prescription’ Tablets’ but and the certainly ’Golden helped Medical Discovery Before
that I suffered they with pain in my side, me. but after I
took these medicines I haven’t had any mor&
pains. Today I am once days more of health a healthy that woman. I
Am since enjoying I nave the been best married, and I have great have
faith that there is nothing equal to Dr. Pierce's
Favorite Prescription. I will endeavor to en¬
courage others to take it. Dr. Pierce has my most
heartfelt thanks for the great benefit I have
derived from the ub© of these remedies, also for
the kind letters of advice which I received.”
— Mrs. Mabel Johnson.
THE BATTLE OF
ARMAGEDDON
When?— Why?
Foretold present world-wide events in
the light of prophecy. Explains proposed
social, financial and political remedies.
When and how universal peace will be
established. 1500 Bible referen- /jA
ces; 720 pages, cloth, postpaid, OUC
F. FEKL, ASSOCIATE DISTRIBUTOR
HAMILTON, MD.
Sail far 50 Tam. F0* MALARIA, CHIUS AMD FEVER.
Alia a
FROST PROOF
Early Cabbage Jer^y Plants
and Charleston Waltefleld, Sue
cession and Flat Dutch. By KLOOO^ndl^tS express 500 SI 25*
1,000,^.00; 5,000 B y at Parcel *1.75; Post, prepaid, 100, 35c:
$1.50; 1,000, $2.50. Wholesale and retail.
D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S.
Kill Dandruff
With Ci
All druggi ;lsts: J
. X'free 25 and 50, . Ontif Talo .
of ‘ n
Old Folk’s.
will be relieved pr
throat tickle; reliy
tested by more j