Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 17, 1915, Page 16

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NS G w2 16 Bringin U-I; GG - MRS PIFELE HAS A BOEM suE HAS WRITTENM AND | WANT You TO NEAR 17 - DODGERS TRIUNPH; RECRUIT ON MOD ‘Brooklyn Turms Tables on Giaats, Taking Last Gume of Series by | Five to Three Soore. i 'PERITT ADAMANT TILL NINTH MPW YORK, April ¥~ Brookiyn turned [ the tablew on the New York Nationals, | \ ! held New York to six hits. pitched well for McOraws the ninth ianing, when, with i the store tiad, Wheat hit a home rum. Two other runs followed on a pass, & ‘double and two BROOKLYN. YORK - $934% :III 413120 ». L] 430123 w410 40340 =l\u 40800 il RE R ,::7‘11 313130 S KRl : Totale.... M 47 - a for ~lecee out, hit by batted ball ;: aringer in ninth. Griner in ninti 5. . 3. by Oriner, & Um- Eason. rock A BONUS TO HAGEMAN . CINOINNATI, April 16.—The Chicago 'Wwere today ordered by the Na Base Ball commission to pay to Hageman 3240, the bonus comtract, player & contract for same bonus clause s5x | 4 D FEARING 4. R Fearing of tomorvow In the final round of tournament for the nationsl 3 3| taine summariea of 140 meetings In| g, which trotting and pacing horses com- | Comatoc | | | | | | | sl 1 =3 |lving horses with records that have ! 10 Inet receipts were M, and also | Father WONT THAT ( BE NICE . IN THE WHALES TRIM PITTSBURGH | Good Work in Ninth Gives Chicago Deciding Tally and the Game. FIELDING ON BOTH SIDES FAST CHICAGO, April ¥.—A timely single n! the ninth by Hanford, pineh hitting for Prendergast gave Chicago the deciding tally and & 4 to I victory over Piltaburgh toduy after the visitors, on Konetchy's | single and Yerkes' triple had tied the | acore in their half of the inning. Both | Rogge and Prendergast were in good form ' and the fielding of both sides was fast 4eapite the cold weather. Beore: RH.E Pittsburgh 0011010073 7 Chicago 0003000014 8 0 _Batteries: Pittsburgh, and Berry: Chicago, Prond-r..'t m»« Horse Racing Was Prosperous in 1914 A copy of the new winrace and eligibflity book of the National Trotting ' assoclation issued for the season of 1913, | v has been recelved by The Bee. It con- peted during 1914 and the names of all raced since 1911 togather with the classes to which they are eligible under the sliding scale rule now in operation. Harness racing had one of the most | a prosperous vears in its history In 1914 and was almost the only sport which dld not suffer on account of depressed in- duatrial conditions, For today and Sunday Matty Mclntyre will bring his lLinks to Omaha for = couple of combats with the Rourke tribe, The two teams split at Lincolu in & two- game series there Both games will be called at § o'clock. Lineup: ATHLETIC NOTES FROM PERU STATE NORMAL SCHOOQL PERU, Neb, April 16.-(Special)-The athletio grounds st the State, Normy school have been drained and a five- foot tunnel i to be placed on one side 1o oarry off the flood waters. Stone seats are to be provided to seat 1,000 Coach Johnson announces the follow- ing sohedule for base ball: R & ps A B i Nebraska Tndiane at Peru, May 1] Wesleyan at Peru, June 1 Porit at Crete May 12 Paru at Cotner, May 12 Peru at Wesleyan, May 4 | Accoptancis wre being received for the Invitation meet to be held at Peru May 7. @old, siiver and bronze medals will |be miven for places in cach event ready a number of contestants ha | nified thelr intention of competing. COLUMBUS BASE BALL s FAIR IS SUCCESSFUL COLTMBUR, Neb., April 16.~(8pecial.)~ The base ball falr which was held last week resulted in & financial success. The 5. The women of | Columbus alded greatly In making this In accordance with these conditions the | has® THE BEE Capyright, (86, News Barvice. fEg: i) WHEN You | HEAR 1T YOU WILL WiSH YOU WERE i - COUNTRY ) MACKS AND HOSE BATTLE T0 DRAY Hitting of Oldring and McInnis| Features Long-Drawn-Out Six- to-8ix Game. ! | BOOT FOR FIVE OF RED 80X PHILADBLPHIA, April 16.~The hitting | of Oldring and McInnis featured a long- drawn-out game here today between | Philadelphia and Boston. Play was | stopped owing to darkness at the end of | the ninth inning. In addition to tying | the score with a home run In the #venth inning, Oldring made a double and a single, while McInnis made three singles | and drove in two runs. Umpire Connolly OMAHA, SATURDAY, International APR THERE CoMes TOMY WiNDOW - EACH morming IN SPRING - A PRETTY LITTLE SPARROCW - THERE FOR YO DiING- |_Standing of Teams || NAT' I, LEAGUE. | AMER. LEAGUE. W.l.Pet.| Wa.Pet New York..2 1 .087 Chicago .....2 1 .667 8% Cleveland ..2 1 . Clneinnati .2 1 O icago ....2 1 .64 Washington.2 1 .6 Boston 1 1 .00 Phila. . 11 50 | Phtia. .01 1 5000 Boston 11 .50 St Lovis...1 3 338 Detroft .....1 3 .33 Brookiyn ..1 2 .38 New York...l 2 .23 Fittabiirgh .1 2 888t Louis....] 2 .33 FED. LBAGUE. AMER. ASS'N. W.L.Pet.| W.L.Pct Chicago ..3 1 .7%0(Loulsville ...3 0 1.000 4 1 008t Paul.....1 1 .50 3 3 0Indianapolisl 1 1309 42 Milwaukee. .1 1 .50 ki Cleveland ..1 1 .50 33 Minneapolis.1 1 .50 2 4 .0®|Kan. City..1 1 .30 Baltimore .2 4 .33 Columbus ..0 2 .00 Yenterday’s Resa NATIONAL LBAGUE. Philadelphia-Boston, rain. Brooklyn, 6; New York, 3. Pitteburgh, 2; Cincinnati, 4. put tive of the visiting team off the field | St Louls, 2; Chicago, 4. for yelling from the bench. Score H Mql‘mucAN bl:Aqun A R GAs | Clevetand. '0; Datrolts 6 OMurphy, 353 0 0 8 1| New York, 2; Washington, 3 wi 1218 | Boston, 6; Philadelphia, 8. 'Called; dark- oo, H TR RE] o FEDERAL LEAGUB. ¥ | 5| Brookiyn-Buffalo, wet grounds. i Sheavor, ¢ 2 83 1 51 Plitaburgh, 3 Chicago, & o 31400 Baltimore, §; Newark, 2. 28881 AMERICAN ASBOCIATION ’ 0 Tooie 4; Cleveland, . 00 10600 (x\.u..mb(u‘\:& o0 Kansas C i% 2 :;“ || Milwaukee, 4. - Bl Totals...28 65N 0 Games Today. rriga League-—Chicago at St. Louls, “Batied for Cometock n minth Cisyeiang at Detrolt, Boston at Wash: *Batted for McAvoy In fifth Ington, New York at Philadelphis. *Batted for !h‘wloy in_ninth National League—Brooklyn at n‘#un‘ 0014000 ‘)_‘I"hllld.lphll ut New York, Pittsbu a PR wais 1 99 % =8| Cincinnath, St Louls at Chicago. FRDWOUIN, Jozs: o0 0 9 1. Fedeoral 'Le Brookiyn at Buffalo, Two-base hits: Wagner, Ruth, Old-|cpnitags at St Louls, Kansas City ring, Barry. Home run: Oldring. Stolen | Bistshurgh, Baitimore at Newark. Speaker, Hoblitzell. Earned run e O . otr MBra. 1: I, § in six and two-thirds innings: on balle: Ort Rutni & ofr Miys, 1: off Bt 15 ome abd ome N Ta: Bl ot Ky, onie out i the |nings. Struck out: By Riussell, 3; by Gith; off Comatock, 3'in four tnnings; off | Loudermitk, 9. Umpires: Dineen T e S L. 3 1 Hit by pitched maler, § in five Innings. 4 1 ) Ruth, 3 ok out: i'(‘“ I’.’ V“‘lr‘l‘h“’:’l: by Shawkey, i. Wild' pitchea: Bressier, Ruth. Umpires: Connolly and Chill, Senators Win Final. WASHINGTON, April 16.—Wi Mn‘llon won the final game of the series from New York today, 4 to 2, making the most of Brown's wildness in the box for th visitors. He allowed nine bases on balls, which forced in one run in the first in- ning and produced another in the sixth when coupled with a sacrifice and a hit. A -lalo and triple In succession in the secol made another tally. Gallia held New York down in all but the second in- ning, when a hit, error, a fielder's choice and a double ] by Cook and the visitors’ two runs. | Bweeney brought in Boore: 'A-HI‘NDTON Yaisel, ¥ § SMostier, st 37273°¢ 0 OMilan, ef.. 5 0 3 8 3 2 OWilllames, 163 113 1 e L Iinampin, 3 8 33 ¢ e h wileae . 3 P04l Tmu [ Wash v | Two-base hit: Brown. Earned run: Washington, 1. Three-base hita: Fost: Cree, Shanks. Stolen bases: Pipp, Cook, Sweeney, Willlams, Alnemith. Hases on lw: ff Brown, 6 Base on ercor: 5‘.‘- York, Struck out. By unn; 3 l:' Brown, Umpires: Evans and Mul- ney. Indians Take Weird O DETROIT, April 16.~In te Ijttle over the freezing point | eated Detroit today, 9 to 6, In & game that dragged through nearly two and a | half hours of almost every known kind of base ball In the seventh Inning four singles. a double, a pass an fly netted the visitors s une and ga {them a lead the Tigers could not over- come. Hoore: 5 ND. DETROI AVRLA o5 Laibold, of w10 ‘wrner, b, : : a1 .82 1.3 013 ovitt, 3b 51 41 3 00 0 Ladbetter. 0 1 *Jacotwon *Batted for H *Hatted for Boland in the eighth |Cleveland 000110861 68 | Detroit 01003001 14 | vet, Vitt, Shields. Two-base hits Chapman. Stolen bases |fair succesrful and worked unceasingly B e (for this purpose. Manager Justus is busy Cieveland, #: Detrolt, 1L | Pract Base on error: Cleveland. 1 ases on Skuing uh Me Sapaes oo work will | TaRe On 8 Cavet, 2. off Boland. 1: off | start April 3. an Indian team playing PRI QT SUVCE SRl M i Orr | here on April 24 and % The regular |¢ t, 10 in seven Innings: off Boland. 1| {season will open at Columbus Tuesday, May 8 ERNEST WOLFF ON TRAIL i OF COUPLE OF PITCHERS | Ernest Woltf, manager of the Byrne | Hammers and Mickel's Victrolas., would ers. We want Douglas M6 during the day. or Webater T 'n the evening. Const League Games. At Tow An % YR BRI - e oo orsan: oo = L] Battories: San Francisco, Smith, Bar- bam. Killllely and Scrmidt; Los Angeles, Hurns and Boles | At Ban Francisce- RH® | Balt Lake Uity He2 O 18 i akland o t Lake City, J. William court tenmis champions:ip 1-.!..“:“.‘.:’.,.',,8."‘.-... L M“.,.‘.' vietory over --..: Venice 1 87 inning; off Ledbetter, 1 In one u.-| Hagerman, 7 in five in- 1in four innings. Struck | rman. 1; by | Min and Hilde- | ®) | Browns Beat Chicage. LOUIS, April 16— Loudermilk pitched & masterly game this afternoon and should have wcored a shutout over Chicago l.»m-fl we. ¢ 3 s f Ission and o ‘L-m".fi’?or the visitors' runs. The home team counted on hits and good base run- Brrors 0.A AR ‘ [t 3 11 . o H 30 ' H 11 10 H 20 H - o4 il ;—f."-c' M oudarmmily, | BACK mfm_e QUARAN Stock Growers Decide Action to Guard Against Foot and Mouth Disease Proper. SOUTH OMAHANS TO CASPER DOUGLAE, Wyo., Aprll 16.—(Special Telegram.)—The closing seasion of the Wyoming Stock Growers’ association was held this afternoon. The old offl- cers were re-elected and Thermopolis was chosen for the next meeting. The quarantine established by Governor Kendrick was endorsed, and it was rec- | ommended that the regulations be strictly enforced and no special privileges granted while there was a possible chance for the disease to be brought into the state. The stockmen today listende to ad- dresses by Gemeral Freight Agent Miller of the Northwestern, State Veterinarian Davis and former Governor Carey. To- night at the Hotel Lubonte they were tendered a banquest by the citizens of Douglas, and th, te trains carried most of them away. The Omaha delegation left this after- noon for Casper, with the exception of Secretary Stryker, who spoke at the ban- quet tonight for South: Omaha. The Omaha men are pleased with their trip the attendance of stockmen has e and the entertainment offered American Associati At Columbus— RH.B Louisville .. . il 4B Columbus . 043 Batterles: Lou! lle, Middleton and Clemons; Columbus, Schuneiberg, Turner and Robertson. At Cleveland— RHEHE Indianapolis .- .4 80 Cley . 581 ndlanapolis, Burke and d, Carter and Bassler. - RH.E St Paul..... 418 4 KKansas City. $11 1 atteries 8t Paul, Roardman and Johnson; Alllson and Getbel Karger, North, Kansas City, t Milwaukes— RH.B Minne s w9113 Milwaukee . RN Batteries: Minneapolis, Ingersell and Gharrity, Sullivan: Miiwaukes; Youny, Shakelford and Hugh Steel Subsidiary to Reduce Workers' Pay PITTSBURGH, April 16—Reductions in wages in the hot mill departments of all the works of the American Sheet and Tin Plate company, an fmportant subsid- fary of the United States Steel corpors- tion, was announced today. ‘PEA KING” HELD INSANE FOR THREAT TO KiLL NOGALES Arts. April 6—Jose Retan- ocourt, “pea King'' of the west coast of Mexico and said to be a member of a rich CubAn family. was committed to the county Jall here today om an insanity s, Brennan. IL 17, 1915, HE SiNgGs AnND SINGS THE W AWAN-AND WHEN HE 1S THIRSTY - ' GIVE HiM SOME HAY - TOWN OF WOODRUFF Dam Down Valley Breaks After the Streets Were Flooded to Depth of Three Feet. NO FURTHER LO0SS OF LIFE | tlood which swept away the reservoir | dams at Lyman and Hunt and sub- | merged parts of St. Johns yesterday had inundated today the town of Woodruff, twelve miles southeast of here. Water, diverted from the overflowed Little Colorado river, sub- merged part of the streets to a depth of three feet before the Woodruff dam burst and relieved the pressure. Flee to High Oround. Meantime ail the people of the town had reached high ground and there were no fatalities to add to the lst of eight lives lost by the breaking of the Lyman dam Wednesday night. The Little Colorado was out of its banks at this point early today and ris- { ing steadily. Every precaution had been taken, however, and no material damage waa expected. Believe Plot Exists to Blow Up K. C. and Omaha Cudahy Plants KANSAS CITY, April 16—A man who officers said was carrying four sticks of dynamite wrapped in a package, and sev- eral feet of fuse with a dynamite cap attached, was arrested tonight by detect- ives in Kansas City, Kan., as he was en- tering the grounds of the Cudahy Packing company, a portion of whose plant was wrecked by mysterious explosions last Sunday night. The man gave the name of John Mulvahill. Two companion ar- rested with him gave names of Max N. Barren and R. E. Conl.y. All deny that they had any intention of setting an explosion or that they knew anything of the expiosion last Saturday night. According to the police, Mulva- hill, who was en employe of the packing company, has been under survelllance since last Monday. Chief of Detectives Flemming declared in a statement that he had learned today | the engineer room of the Cudahy plant was to be wrecked tonight. Mulvahill was questioned for several hours tonight. | A. L. Berger, an attorney for the Cudahy company, in a statement issued later, sald the company officials believed a plot existed to destroy the Kansas City and the South Omaha plants and to kill some of the officlals. “We expect other ar- Tests to follow™” he said. German Children Slain by Air Shells | AMSTERDAM (via London), April 16.— Dispatohes received from Freiburg in d a sacrifice |and declare this the best convention they Brelsgau, grand duchy of Baden, an- ever attended. The weather has been ideal nounce that a hostile alrman dropped |bornbs there at noon yesterday, killing #1x persons and injuring a large number, | {most of them school children. Five bombs, the dispatch says, were dropped In the Stuehlingen quarter. Two {of them fell without @oing harm, but the others killed two men and four chil- dren and seriously wounded two men and eight children. A number of other chil- dren were slightly hurt. |SOUTH OMAHA TEACHERS PAY A VISIT TO OMAHA Pifteen teachers of the South Omaha Eigh school yesterduy visited Omaha and went to Fontenelle park and enjoyed a “welner roast,” cooking their repast on the park authorities. Dick Burnell, supervisor of the play- grounds, found some wood for the teach- ers and helped them make a fire, which pleased the pedagogues Fontenelle park is already a popula place for the kiddies and even the olde people. Both base ball dtamonds ‘are being patrontzed and the mew play apparatus is appreciated by hundreds of boys and airls. Library Bufl@ing for Broken Bow. BROKEN BOW, Neb, April 16 —(Spe- eial)—~THe Hbrary board of this city has |aefinitely dectded that the new §10.00 {Carnegie lbrary building shall be bufit |of witrous brick, costing $34.40, and Pates- {ville stone Contractor Fider has com- pleted the preliminary arrangements and. weather permitting, will break ground for !the mew structure the first of next week. | The board decided that the hest was none HOLBROOK, Ariz., April 16.—The | took a fleeting glance of the city. They the public roaster which is provided by | Drawn for The Bee hy George McManus Jourt ¢')l Appeals Holds Kellogg Con- | tracts Violate Sherman Act and Common Law. PATENT DOES NOT PROTECT PLAN | | DETROIT. Aoril 16.—Tn denying a mo- tion filed by the Kellogg Todsted Corn | Flakes company against the government's petition for an injunction to restrain the company from fixing the resale price of |its product. the United States circuit court of appealssin a decision filed yes- terday in the district court, ruled that the owners of a patented cartoon cannot |dictate the selling price of the goods | which the cartoon contains. The govern- ment's petition filed in December, 1912, lattacked the selling ptan of the de- fendant company, stating that it speci- fled e which the joBbers, the the retafler should charge for its produet. In ity motion to dismiss the govern- ment’s petition, the Kellogg company contended that its ownership of a patent |on the cartoon in which its product was marketed gave it the right to fix the price of the product. In its decision the | court of appeals says: ' “The manufacturer sells at uniform {price of $2.30 per case, exacting from the (Jobber an agreement to oharge the re- {taller a specified price, the joBbers de- fault in this agreement authorising the | mAnufacturer to refuse to deal further lel‘n him. This provision has been strictly enforced by the defendants, who refuse to continue dealings with any jobbers who fail to maintain prices so fixed. “The broad questions presented are: I— Whether a manufacturer in connection Wwith an absolute eale of its product to a Jobber may lawfully control the price at which the complete package shall be re- sold by the jobber or by the retailer who buys from the jobber and (2) whether the selling plan in question is an unlawful restraint or monopoly, actual or at- nbral rule is well setlled that a system of contracts between manufac- turers, jobbers and retallers by which the manufactnurer attempts to econtrol the price for all sales by all dealers at wholesale or retail, whether purchasers Or subpurchasers, elimmating all com- { petition and fixing the amount which the consumer shall pr> amounts to restraint of trade, and is ii.vulid both at common law and so far as it effects interstate commerce under the Sherman anti-trust law. "It seems entirely clear th&t “the de- fendant's selling plan here in question | €0es beyond any protection afforded by the patent on the eartoon and is in its essential principles violative of the Sher- man act.” Girl’s Body Found Near Trysting Spot; Alleged Lover Held NEW YORK, April 16—New York's latest murder mystery assumed new | angles today after the police had estab- lished to their apparent satisfaction the identity of the victim as Miss Claudia Hansbury of Lansingburg, N. Y., arrested | Raffacle Viullo, & well-to-do contractor, |and charged him with homicide. The new | element was the discovery, in Troy, N. Y., of Mrs. Willlam H. Burk, who formerly wae Miss Claudia Hansbury, and who erroneously had been reported missing. The spot where the mam girl's body was found, in a vacant lot of the Aator estate in the Bronx, was her trysting { place, according to John F. McKenna, watchman on the estate. McKenna told | detectives that he had seen a girl and ;mu near the spot on several occasions. | The girl he identified as the one whose body lies in the morgue; the man as | Viullo, Viullo, whose fountain pen, the police assert, was found near the body stoutly refuted after many hours of cross-ex- amination, the accusation that he had caused the girl's death. | News Notes of Deshlor. | DESHLER, Nel April | tal.)— |H. M. Harms, secretary of the Commer- clal olub, and C. E. Bauer, one of the directors, will attend the meeting of the {Commercial Club Secretaries of N braska, to be held in Lincoln May & and | B L Graham has been re-elected prin- ‘pal and Miss Josephine Herney teacher f the primary department of the Desh- {ler public schools. | An auto polo company will put on an |exhibition at the Thayer county fair |mlmdl at Deshler May & Deshier village officials have recelved word from Afttorney General Reed that where a town has voted on the question lof Sunday ball it is not necessary to vote on the guestion again until the people re- quest it. The special election to have been held Aprtl 20 will not be held Farmers in the viciity of Deshler were entertained at a get-together meeting held in the school house Tuesday evening un- der the ausplces of the Commercial club. The county fair was discussed by Albert ughey, and the financial condition of charge. He was alleged to have told a|too good for this latest addition to the | the road districts was presented by C. L wirl clerk in kill her. |Pighest grade of material throughout drug store that he would |ty’s fine bulldings and has ordered the |Richards, county attorney | were served. ¢ | HARD BLOW FOR PRIGE FIXER, PARTLY SUBMERGEL' GERMANS LOSE BIG - FIGHT IN HUNGARY | Picked Army Attacks Russian: i Marching on Berez and is De- i feated After Long Battle. | AUSTRIAN DIVISION WIPED 0U1 GENEVA, Switzerland, April 16.— | (Via Paris.)—The Tribune publishes ;l dispatch from Unvgar, in north- 1 | eastern Hungary, sayine a great bat tle has been fought between the Stry and the valley of the Ondava. A German army composed of picked men attacked the Russians marching on Bereg. After thirty-two hours of severe fighting the Russians repulse] the Germans and captured a quantity of arms and ammunition. Another dispatch received here from Vienna says sixty-five Austrian officers have been disciplined for negligence which resulted in the the annihilation of a division of reserves near Bereg and the Austrian defeat in the Sarac region. The annmouncement also s made in Geneva that Austrian troops from the Berbian frontier are being sent to the Trentino and that a number of them al- ready have passed through Salsburg. News Notes of Haatings. HASTINGS, Neb., April 16.—(Speclal)— Mayor Madgett, who was inaugurated ‘Tuesday night, bas {ssued a warning that all laws will be strictly enforced and that persons who cannot obey them to the letter had better be moving at onee. Major Crosson of the Nebraska Na- tional Guard, has been appointed chief of police, succeeding George Harm, for teveral years the leading home run hitter In the Stato base ball league. Charles E. Bruckman s the new city attorney, The Chamber of Commerce has begun preparations for an old-fashioned Fourth of July celebration and a fall festival in Hastings this vear. Hastings was the first city In the state to hold a fall festival. None was held last year, but this year's event will be bigger than ever. Action on the application for saloon licenses was deferred by the city coun- efl Tueeday night. It is reported that remonstrances may be falled against a number of the applications. A new license has been granted to the Hastings Brewing company for the year beginning Mav 1. News Notes of Mullen. MULLEN, Neb., April 16.—(Speclal)— Greek Parsons left for Missoula, Mont., where he will spend the usmmer in the mountains. Mrs. Lioyd Temple expects to join her husband on their claim in Wyoming as soon as Mr. Temple gets his house com- pleted. The merchants of Mullen have been rushed since the snow blockades have melted away. Scores of four and six- horse loads of supplies are going out, some as far as fifly miles into Cherry and McPherson counties. Blood Needs Attention Even a Sweat Gland May Result in Severe Consequence. 1n our intricate body the use of 8 8 8. for the blood has a most remarkable Influence. We Mttle realise our gland- ular system. It may be & tiny bulb no bigger than & pin point, and yet If a disease germ gots into it, there is & tremendous swelling. It becomes a boll, & carbuncle, it may be & “blood rising,” and it is often & source of con- tinuous misery if n the ewelling of a tiny a dlscase germ. And it is 8 8 & that spreads t t tubmmwpmhmc sueh eonditions. Or ¥ they have al- started, 8. 8. & will soon put the blood in such a state of health as to overcomse the to mlandular tendency "::l;lln It 18 & natural medl T . to 1he blood (s imguce: &8 Sre e meats fats, grains sugers of our delly It contains ene ingredient the active purpose of which is te stimulate the exchange of new flesh for dead or waste matter. Get & bottle of & 8 8 today of any druggist, and if your case is stubborn write (o the Medleal Adviser, The Swifi cifie 108 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ge :rm i iu charge of & noted PR

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