Newspaper Page Text
SIX
THE AUGUSTA HERALD
v AUGUSTA, GA.
Daily—Afternoon Sunday—Morning
Entered at the Augusta, Post
office as Mail Matter of the
Second Class.
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED
PRESS.
The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use of re-publication
of. all news dispatches credited to it
or not otherwise credited in this paper
and also the local news published
herein.
A THOUGHT
There it that makelh himtelf rich, yet hath noth
ing; there it that maketh himtelf poor, yet hath great
riehea.—Prov. 13:7.
The smailnes* of our desire* may contribute rea
sonably to our wealth.—Cobbett.
QUIPS: By Robert Quillen
Uaually a ballot 1* Ju*t the result of the normal
functioning of a prejudice.
Moat people who nre forever having their feeling*
hurt need even more of it.
Daughter aeema.to think the three ft'* aland for
rouge, ride and rent.
Ala*! If they h*ve been married a year the Daily
I>ozcn doesn't refer to klsse*.
Fable: He received urgent call* from great
churches, though he preached the simple gospel.
There'* always
something. H y t $o ’
the time you get r *
the girls married \ -v _
off you begin to l/'P
develop rheuma- j)
I / f *Jai f irre
tlsm. 1 ■
.lapnn will mobilize, also, Just for fun; hut no of
ficial word haa come from Haiti.
Drat It! One can't he a He-Man without herding
cattle, and nearly all the big herds are gone.
A free country Is one In which everybody feels
qualified to tell the C*hlrf Executive how lo do It.
The test of free speech is to listen while the other
fellow expresses views you don't like.
It Isn't the bride his sisters dislike. They merely
dislike giving up their Job of bossing bim.
Some little girls are normal and happy, and aome
nre frequently reminded of their finger nails.
Another dan- ffc"* 1 ,
gerous form of «J v *•-.
violent exer.lse
1. shop-lifting
And a great \j •, :
many people es- ___
pouse Modernism for the snma reason that a child
likes a new doll.
The next war may be fought In the air, but It will
he started, as ususl, In a moment of mullsbneas
One reason why boys stop at the fifth grade la be
cause their psrents no longer can work the problems.
Now they ssk what a woman Governor should be
culled. What e the mutter with "wife'*, the title we
have always used?
Correct this sentence ''Pain ’em all”, said he; "I
don't care what people think of me.”
Foolish Flings By Tom Sims
A new aeroplane la designed to travel 3»0 mile*
an iwtur, which is almosl as fast ns bills coma In.
• The sad thing about committing a murder Is
having so many people nrgue about your sanity.
In Ky., a boy was caught bootleg
15.ng. so we should have a law against minora boot
legging
Statistic* show the world used sfmo»t five billion
matches last year, but some politicians may demand
a recount.
**• Louis woman broke her husband s nose with a
billiard cue. so maybe he will keep It out of her bus
)nM« now.
Man In l.o* Angelr* tried to sell Ilia wife Instead
of j>aylng somebody to take her off his hands.
Now the Chicago murder case Is ever, supper won t
be so late.
O O
EDITORIAL COMMENT
COL. JOHN W. CLARK.
* (From the Savannah Press)
After all, 001. John ff, Clark of Augusta has been
nominated for Tension Commissioner of Georgia.
It will be remembered that he was appointed by
Governor Hardwick to this position In 1921. In the
primary of that year he was beatrn for re-election by
Major Chss E. McGregor, who got the Wateon sup
port. This year Col. Clark has "come hack." He car
ried a majority of the vote In the State, end evin tri
umphed In Warren county, the former home of Major
McGregor.
The Savannah Tics* has several times alluded to
availability of Col. Clark. In many reaper la he le an
ideal veteran. He enlisted with the Richmond Hus
•ara, which went to Virginia from Augusta In 18*1,
and was transferred to the staff of Gen. T. It. It
Cobb. He was present at the great battle of Fred
ericksburg. when Gen. Cobb was killed and was him
self commended for bra Very and promptness by Gen.
McLawe on Marye Heights At that time he was
nothing but a boy. After the war, when the Rich
mond Hussars were reorganised, he was made cap
tain, During Mr. Cleveland's second admlelstratloiv
when Hoke Smith wat Secretary of the Interior, Col
Clark waa appointed land agent In that department.
Subsequently he was elected sheriff of Richmond
county and by Woodrow Wilson was appointed post
master of Augusta.
CoL Clark has made a brilliant race and Is deserv
ing of the popularity and political strength he has
developed. He le a splendid representative of •‘the
thin gray line," now faet disappearing. Col. Clark
carried Chatham county by a large majority on Wed
nesday, and seems to have gotten about IPO counties
In the State. The Interest of the Confederate vet
crane In Georgia will be well taken care of
THE OLD BLUE BACK SPELLER
YOU must go away from home to get the news,
and In some unaccountable way this seems to
have slipped by unobserved. But the Birming
ham News was keeping tab on the situation and
found the old Webster blue-back spelling book
floundering In the mass of 111-considered stuff which
emanated from that source. Under the clouds of fly
ing chaff settles the golden grain, ifowever, this Is
the way that the News speaks of its find:
"The Georgia Legislature may have very scram
bled ideas about evolution, and *ome other things,
but it is certainly clear on one thing—that the old
fashioned 'blue-backed speller' complied by Mr. Web
ster is time-tried and well tested a* a producer of
person* who can spell the language they use. In
Georgia It i* now a law that thl* spelling book must
be used In every public school in the state.
“That Is good enough so far. but It I* largely in
the way It is used, that good spellers are produced.
If the teachers are allowed to teach according to the
“scanning” method In vogue Nn some states not
greatly distant from Georgia, the no* result will be
lhe annual crop of young who maltreat the
language fearfully when they attempt to aet It down
in black ami—'white Ask any business man who has
wrestled with Inefficient stenographers. Or clerks,
or office men —spelling seems almost a lost art.
"There Is a system which has been evolved out of
the altltudlnous realms of theory which now pays
very little attention to teaching spelling per se. It
rather teaches the young'uns to “scan" and learn Ihe
looks of a word. Somewhat upon the same line that
Mark Twain told of Adam and Kve naming the ani
mals In the Garden of Eden. Eve named a rhinoce
ros, and being asked why, she Informed Adam that
It looked like one. So, a youngster Is to know the
word Vat’ because It looks like cat. And so on and
so forth to the same extent otherwise.
"In the older days Individuals prided themselves
upon being good spellers. The schools Jiad spelling
matches, and to misspell words in correspondence
was considered quite a reflection. Socially it waive
handicap and likewise In business advancement. Now
there doea not appear to he (hat high regard for the
correct spelling of words, or the correct use of them.
"Maybe the Georgia Legislature is wading out In
to deep water. Those leglslntors may he humdingers
at spelling, and know Just exactly w*mt Is ailing the
present day youth and the present day methods of
teaching. But those same legislators have given the
Impression to the world Hist they nre not precisely
settled in tht-lr minds whether evolution Is a disease
or something to eat.
"And maybe, after all. this spelling business had
best ho left to the school authorities. Ktlll the em
ployer* of stenographers say that about 53 per cent
or the key pounders don’t know how to spell—and
that, ton. may lie considered by the school teachers,
who may be able to account for It."
THAT FABLED POT OF GOLD.
DID you notice the spectacular phenomenon, a
partial rainbow in the east, Just as the sun was
seeking Its gorgeous couch >n the west Sat
urday afternoon? To one who Is fond of watching
Ihe signs and portenta of the heavens there were
some unusual manifestations that wero captivating
to the fancy In connection with this particular phe
nomenon that were rather significant.
There was no bow of promise spanning the high
arched and vaulted heavens—perhaps the billowy
nature of the cloud settings of that hour precluded
a complete bow. There were beautiful gilded bas
tions and bank* of nimbuses of pyramidal shape,
with patches of clear blue sky In between; whereas
a dark background is needed for a rainbow forma
tlon.
A band of prismatic hues like a tall pillar with its
base on earth, extended straight up Into the sky
where It lost Itself in Impenetrable gloom. Fancy
seemed lo see Ite base reetlng on El Dorado, the pet
farm of the late Coloner Charles H. I’hlnlzy where
he had his famous herd of Jersey cattle, the finest In
Ihe South. El Dorado was devoted almost entirely
to dairying and was equipped with the finest kind
of barns. It was surrounded by n ten foot high
levee to protect It from the freshet waters of the Sa
vannah.
Ihe genius of this section Is not to grow cotton
that the purchasers can sell to suit their own notion.
Ws can grow anything that anybody else (ran grow
and grow It cheaper and better. Why not make
dairying one of our chief money-producing agricul
tural pursuits? Dairying hs* made Wisconsin, Illi
nois. lowa and that tier of states rich, populous and
Independent. Georgia and South Carolina can make
all the dairy products cheaper and to greater perfec
tion than those slates
Mi* Edith Vanderbilt, of Asheville, N. C, has a fine
dairy herd of 200 cow# and she will now' devote her
self to farming in general end dairying in particu
lar. She Is known a* the "Lady Bountiful" of the old
North Stain, and ehe haa made choice In thue de
voting herself to this work 1n order that she may set
a good exnmplo for guidance of her people.
A HOUSE IN THE AIR.
A HOME an wheele was built by Will A. Harris,
Texas educator. He constructed It on a motor
truck. Tainted gray, this tvnvellng house of
two rooms Is IS feet long.
In eight weeks Harris sod bis wife and young
daughter traveled almost 4000 miles this summer.
You've seen such homes on wheel*. They are vivid
Illustrations of how the auto has In less than a gen
eration virtually placed the entire United States at
the door of the car owner.
Distance, which was like Jail bars, has been con
quered by the auto. A man of very moderate means
ran get Into hi* flivver and take a vacation trip such
a* was available only to the extremely rich not so
many years ago
The auto has given us a new form of liberty—re
leasing us from helng confined to a very small sec*
tlon of the earth’s surfaca.
W ith the Invention of the auto, Americans have
become a nation of rovers Nearly every ons can
gratify the wanderlust Instinct that lurks In all hu
man blood.
Back In Spanish-American War days, a man who
took a trip of a few thousand mile* was the talk of
the town for year* Now he cornea back; few have
noticed hie absence; they merely lift their eyebrows
politely when he recount* the marvels of his trip.
Travel used to he almost exclusively available only
to the rich. Now every on# can travel, "see the
country."
The next step In human liberation will be popu
larisation of the flying machine. Wandering air
plane houses will come, Just as surely as we now
have traveling homes on motor trucks.
It may seem a wild dream, but that's merely be
cause people are afraid to ride In plane*. This fear
will disappear when flying become* primarily a use
ful business Instead of a sport—when the aviator’s
craze for speed and long distance give* way to con
centration on how to make planes safe, fool-proof
and cheap.
Flying home* would solve the rent problem—ls
government provided free parking space. You may
live to see the day when giant corporations will be
fighting for a monopoly on desirable airplane park
ing ground*
THE AUGUSTA HERALD, AUGUSTA, GA.
Harvey Sees Klan Major
Issue In the Campaign
By HARRY B. HUNT.
WASHINGTON George Harvey,
astute political analyst, who
after helping put Woodrow
Wilson Into national politics
and gettin* him elected President,
switched over to the G, O. P. and got
appointed ambassador to Great Bri
tain, believes the Ku Klux Elan may
yet become one of the major issues
in the presidential campaign this
year.
According to Harvey's study of
the situation, all the utterances to
date about the klan have been
"piffle.”
Mention of the klan by Demo
cratic Candidate Davis, In his New
Jersey speech, George says, was only
decided on after Davis had arrived In
Jersey and conferred with Governor
Sllzer and Frank Hague, state boa*.
To him It looks as though somebody
had sa Id:
"The klan Is strongest In the
south and you’ll win there anyhow.
Go ahead, name the klan and put
Coolldge In a hole.”
Anyway, according to George, no
principle was involved In what Davis
said about the klan. There was no
amplification of what already had
been said, no denunciation of the klan
for anything It has done. Put he
named the klan. which aeemed to be
the Important thing, hy saying:
"Whenever any organization, \ no
matter what It chooses to he called,
whether Ku Klux Klari cr hy any
other name, raises the standard of ra
cial and religions belief as a test of
fitness for public office, It does vio
lence to the spirit of American In
stitutions,” etc , etc.
z z w TOTK'E that ‘whenever.’ cati
|\| ttons Harvey. It isn't said
if that the klan does these
thing*. Simply that If or
whenever any organization did do
them, then they snould he con
demned.
"It wa* like a prosecuting attorney
declaring. ‘lf or whenever a man he
he called John Smith or What Not.
commits a crime, he I* a criminal’,"
Harvey declare*.
Paris Finds Tourists
From Middle Classes
BY MILTON BRONNER
I .ON DON, —.Somehow these Eu
ropeans who look forward to our
coming and separating us from our
money, can't help emititng a little
sneer out of their system every
iivvv nnd then.
Vhe other day a Parisian news
paper spoke of the thousands of
American* who were spending part
of their summer holidays in Pari*.
Then It added this gracious and
pretty thought:
"Many of our guests belong to
the middle classes who formerly
did not furnish many tourists in
Europe. But the cheapness of
French francs compared to Ameri
can dollars ha* changed all that.”
Every time they look at the
map of the United State*. Brit
ish theatrical managers nre filled
with apprehension nnd Britsh ac
tors nnd actresses with .anticipation
and hope.
There is a renson for this thus
ness. Fa lories for Thespians have
never been a* high In Britain as
they nre in America. And with dull
business in the towns, the theaters
have been having a corresponding
ly hard time over here. This Is in
contrast with the success of ninny
good shQW* over in the United
States.
And golden tale* have filtered
back here about Ihe fnt pnv envel
Pretty Names of British Inns
“Don’t Mean Anything”
BY MILTON BRONNER.
LONDON. —The American visitor
to London, riding around on
the buses, Is often much Im
pressed by the pretty names of
Home of the stops.
"Tito Bell—Hendon,"’ calls out the
bus conductor.
Or "The Rose and Crown —HaOk-
eny Wick."
But much of the charm for the
Yankee visitor* when he learn*
FARMERS ATTENTION
801 l weevils do not feed on anything except
. squares, young bolls, blooms and tender leaves and
buds of green growing cotton, and in warm weather
they cannot live more than two or three weeks with
out food. Kill all the growing stalks three weeks
before frost and most of the weevils that would in
fest the fields next spring will be dead.
OUT OUR WAY
\M-N MCTfaEPS GET GrC’AV-
L A L>GrM~T LUMCM ■ •Lerm&*. tm. b» VF.A Vnv. Irx.t
i Then the Davis "denunciation"
concluded by an Invitation to Presi
dent Coolldge to “join me by some
explicit declaration in entirely remov
ing this topic from the field of po
litical debate.” /
WHILE Coolldge ha* so far re
mained silent, his running
mate, General Dawes, seemed
to take up the challenge. In
a subsequent speech he also "named"
the klan
"Our constitution stands for religi
ous tolerance.” he declared. "To in
ject religious and racial Issue* Into
politic* I* contrary to the welfare of
all the people.”
"That.” say* Harvey Is comment
ing on the Dawes reply, "was all ac
cording to Hoyle. Everybody has
said It In one form or nnother. But
the general did not stop here.
" 'The Ku Klux Klan In many lo
calities and among many people,’ he
went on, 'represents only an Instinc
tive groping for leadership, moving
In the Interest, o' law enforcement,
which they do not find In many cow
ardly politicians and officeholders.”
z /
* • I the fact,” says Harvey, "that
these remarks convey the im
pression that, to his mind,
there may be valid excuse for such
performances." This was unfortunate,
to say the least.
"Mr. Coolldge, after refraining from
discussion with Mr. Dawes, conferred
with Mr. Slemp at some length and
then went to church—probably to
pray."
AS HARVEY see* It—and he
knows how to read the English
language and detect the evas
ion* of politician*:
“Neither of the major parties has
declared either for or against the
klan. Nor ha* anybody authorized
to speak fgr either of those parties
assumed a definite attitude concern
ing It, contrary to the understanding
of thousands, who have been misled."
opes drawn in New York by Nelson
Keys, Beatrice Lilley, Gertrude
Lawrence. Lupino Lane and other
London stage favorites.
The result Is that every time a
New York producer hits this burg,
Ills table is filled with note*, letters
and cards seeking an appointment
to talk business.
Many of the very best and clever
est men and women on the British
stage nre elbowing each other In
their eagerness to come over where
the hlg audience and the big Salar
ies are.
"Tell me your name and I will
tell you your age.'-
A French journalist announced
this not long ago to Parisian wo
men and sent a scare Into the
hearts of many of them. But it
wasn't as serious as it sounded.
He had simply doped out that
every generation has its favorites In
the Christian nafnes it gives girl
babies. Hence you can usually ap
proximately tell a woman's age.
Thus, he says, most women named
Martha, Helene, Marguerite, or
Lucie are In their thirties. Those
named Simone, Colette, Denise are
now finishing thir school studies.
While in the primary schools and
the kindergartens there are the
women of day after tomorrow—
named Monique. Nicole, Jacqueline.
that these stop* have been so named
because the bus pull* up in front of
a "pub" or ealoop which has thua
been designated.
And It he Investigate* a bit far
ther he will find name* of pubs
which are not quite so pleasing.
lY>r instance there is one yvhleh
calls Itself bluntly "The Hamp
shire Hog."
It has never been explained
yvhether this a* a dainty reference
to what some patrons make of
themselves by overmuch eating and 1
drinking or whether its oner is a I
former farmer.
EVERY so-often In newspapers*
In the Latin countries one
reads pieces which tell how the j
land.i of southern Europe are to be 1
freed from the clutches of the cruel
American cotton growers.
The latest of these yarns Is that
a great Spanish financier has found,
by actual trial, thaht the warmer
parts of the Argentine republic are
admirably fitted for cotton growing.
In fact, thaht the product of El
Chaco Is the finest in the world.
Hence proposes to Interest
Spanish and Italian financiers and
cotton manufacturers. His vision Is
one of Immense plantations In the
Argentine cultivated by Italian and
Spanish workers and growing all
the cotton that the mills of Spain
and Italy may ever need.
Thus they will be independent of
the prices and the crops of Dixie
land. Probably a pipe ciream, but
a rosy one.
A SERBIAN locksmith was bad
ly bitten by mosquitoes and
j*, Immediately had a vision,
tie planned an apparatus that
would give him revenge upon the
pests and at the same time be of
great service to his beloved Bel
grade, which has been overrun by
the malaria spreading pests. And
It almost got him In bad.
»The capital city has a little park
named Kalmegdan which overlooks
the town and also the confluence of
the rivers Save and Danube. The
other night the police glanced up
from the town and saw pewerful
searchlights playing about the
heights. This looked serious.
The army knew nothing about It.
There were visions of Germans or
Bulgars getting ready to do, dirty
work on the cross-roads. Police and
soldiers were rushed up. But there
Whs no enemy. There was only the
locksmith.
The powerlpl lights were to at
tract the mosquitoes which were
then sucked Into a trap hy means
of a powerful fan. But the govern
ment decided the thing was too ex
pensive and will go on kerosening
the ponds.
ANY Frenchman desiring soli
tude where he can be abso
lutely away from his kind
will soon have the opportunity.
The French government has ask
ed authorization from parliament
to sell 40 little islands TTff the va
rious sea-coasts of France.
In former times these were
grabbed by the army and navy as
supposedly strategic points in
case of war.
But the airplane and the sub
marine have so changed things
that these tiny dots of land are no
longer of defensive or offensive
value.
SPAIN has a fertile soil and a
kindly sun. But she is back
ward. She offers her children
few chances of advancement and
education. Hence in Spain the emi
gration question is a keen one.
Every year she loses some of her
sturdiest citizens, the peasant class,
which is an asset to any European
country, because It Is usually In
dustrious, thrifty, sober, religious
and law-abiding.
The Spanish government an
nounces that last year it only lost
1*3,246 by emigration. But American
countries seem to indicate that an
other 40.000 were lost to Spain by
clandestine emigration.
So strong is the urge for the new
countries of South America that
long ago Spain had to pass laws
forbidding the emgratlon ns o
whole.
St. George’s Hal], Liverpool, re
garded as the finest example of
Greek architecture in England was
designed by a young architect of
23.
Aunt Het
"I ain't much scared o’ dy
in' now that that widow yvb
man Pa took a shine to has
got married again.”
(Copyright, 1924, Associated
Editors, Inc.)
By Williams
FABLES ON HEALTH
BEWARE OF BAD AIR
"Did you ever stop to consider the
stages man has passed through fn
order to reach the state of a house
dweller?” the physical director ask
ed Mr. Mqnn.
"Most people take for granted
that houses always were, and so
they stick to them and dodge the
much need outdoors.
“Now, as a matter of fact, man
is bilologiclly an outdoor animal.
Invention of houses made is possi
ble for him to live in all climates,
yet this indoor life has been at the
root of much disease.
"Nobody will ever be able to fig
ure how much woe this indoor liv
ing has fvorked for him. It has
been gradual and subtle, for he went
from the outdoors into caves and
then hurriedly built lean-tos, tents,
cliffs, huts with a hole to ventilate
cabins and houses.
“And reaching a supposed civil
ized state in houses, he stood for
such things as tenements.
"The result Is all the train of
evils that come from bad air and
indoor life.
“About the only way we can in
any measure overcome the evil is
to sleep out of doors, when possi
ble, and keep the houses well ven
tilated, get more out-of-doors out
ings and practice deep breathing.”
Hi
‘lnterest paid on total farm in
debtedness consumed all capital
earnings in the crop years 1920-21
and 1921-22, In the next two years
there was a return of 3.1 (three and
a tenth) per cent, on the total capi
tal invested in agriculture, includ
ing rewards of management.”
So runs the government report.
My, wouldn't we have a low cost
of living if all other industries got
• jgxm-
OFFICE HOURS — 9 a. m. to 7 p. m.—Sundays 10 a. m. to 1 p. m.
DR. V. M. HAYGOOD, Specialist
S4B’i Broad St., over Schweigert’s Jew Store, Augusta, Ga. Phone 2137.
GABRIEL.
SNUBBERS
MORE COMFORTABLE RIDING AND
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From the viewpoint of comfort alone, Gabriel Snubbers are de
cidedly worth while to any car owner.
BEARINGS & PARTS SERVICE
PHONE 384. 657 BROAD STREET f„
AUGUSTA, GA.
I City life and
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S iin the business world—the woman or
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* Pluto Water is the physic for you to take I
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I griping
| Time counts. Neglected constipation is posi- I
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WATER S ||
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 17
only 3 per cent,* profit, like the
farm! However, industry —is —em-
barking on a years-long voyage of
big sales but low rates of profit
compared with the past The chief
effect of sharp competition is low
profits. That's why businesses so
readily consolidate into semi
monopolies.
A Michigan farmer pretended to be
insane, so he could join his wife who
already had been committed to the
asylum. He'd have woo his wish if
the judge had not noticed a gleam of
joy in his eyes when the farmer's
commitment papers had been made
out.
Lovi in extreme cases resembles
the law of gravity or the force that
pulls a needle to a magnet. It is one*
of the very few p.yThic or spiritual
forces that exists i« all people
Maybe some heartless scientist of
the future will learn how to neu
tralize love—enable its victims to
forget its lure—as we now can be
magnetize metal.
%
The Michigan farmer who feigned
insanity to join his beloved wife in
the asylum acted quite as sensibly as
a good many other people when
they're in love.
Cupid has a wonderful sense of
humor. You observe this when a
dignified man’s love letters are read
in some breach of promise cases.
Unhappily, the victims get the
laughs and blame that properly be
long to the emotion that temporarily
wrests control from No one
is entirely sane when in love.
London Bridge is really falling
down—too heavy a trafff: strain. One
of the piers is sinking. It’ll be re
paired.
This famous bridge was originally
built 748 years ago. Can you imag
ine any modern bridge lasting that
long? It's the same with roads.
Highways, paved hy the Romans
2.000 years ago, today have stretches
as good as new. Our generation
builds for the moment. In the Good
Roads movement, why not more at
tention to endurance and less on
mileage?
Swiss watchmakers are using
I’psycho-technical tests" —ln other
words, intelligence and efficiency' tests
—to learn what kind jof work an em
ploye is best fitted for.
We’re gradually nearing the day
when all children will he examined
scientifically to learn yvhether their
ambition is on the road that leads
to failure. Success is not so very
difficult—if a man gets into the job
lie's best fitted for. Dangerous for
parents to urge a child to follow a
career he doesn’t Instinctively like.
PAY FOR CURES ONLY
are you SICK, DISEASED, nervous run.
DOWN? Have you Blood Poison, Kidney, Bladder
and Nervous Trouble? IF SO, CONSULT ME FREE.
I cure to stay cured. Nerve, Blood and Skin Di
seases. Obstructions. Discharges, Varicose Veins, Kid
ney, Bladder and Rectal Diseases and all Chronic and
Special Diseases of Men and Women.
Piles and Fistula successfully treated. No knife, no
pain, no detention from business, no chloroforming.
Immediate relief. Write for references and pamph
lets ts testimonials.