The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, June 26, 1913, Page 2, Image 2
(Ihr Bamberg Beralb
V
ESTABLISHED APRIL, 1891.
A. \V. KNIGHT, Editor. f
- i:
Published every Thursday in The
Herald building, on Main street, in
the live and growing City of Bam- c
berg, being issued from a printing o
office which is equipped with Mer- E
genthaler linotype machine, Babcock
cylinder press, folder, one jobber, a c
fine Miehle cylinder press, all run by s
electric power with other material e
and machinery in keeping, the whole
equipment representing an invest
-. AAA onH nnwarHs_ V
HI trill U1 iiiu,vvv uu\* ..?
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insertion. ,
Communications?We are always
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No article which is defamatory or
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pressed in any communication.
_____________________________________ a
Thursday, June 26, 1913 f
= ii
We nave great respect for Senator n
#
John L. McLaurin, of Bennettsville, e
and we do not believe he will listen c
to the siren vcrice of "Bull Moose" r
Beard and become a candidate for a
governor. t
m p
PA primary is to be held in Augusta ^
Saturday of this week to vote on the ^
commission form of government, and .
as there is a call for managers and '
clerks to conduct the primary, the
Augusta Herald is calling on the ^
ministers of the city to serve in these
o
capacities. This is certainly something
new under the sun. Why we
were under the impression that the c.
politicians did not want the preachers ^
to have anything to do with politics,
and we fancy the idea of The Herald
e
is not likely to be popular.
WEBB LIQUOR*LAW CONSTRUED. "
, b
Attorney General Says it is Not a p
Criminal Statute. M
Washington, June 19.?The Webb "
law forbidding interstate shipments
of liquor into "dry" States, is not a I
criminal statute and violations of it fj
cannot be prosecuted in the United ti
States Court. . E
* M/>Povnnlds <?o n
AllUIUC* UCUtiai
declared in instructions sent to-day to w
every United State attorney in the e
country. The law merely prohibits s<
such interstate traffic and contains no s<
penalty for infractions. ii
"Its purpose," said the Attorney fi
General, "is to permit State laws to p
operate in respect of intoxicating li- w
quors moving in interstate com- p
merce." k
The law simply deprives shippers ir
of any privileges they might claim on rr
the ground of interstate commerce w
and permits the application of State ir
prohibition laws to interstate com- e1
merce in liquors. tc
This is the first time the depart- tc
ment of justice has construed the ir
Webb law, which was declared un- u
constitutional by former President p
Taft and former Attorney General
Wickersham. President Taft vetoed ^
the bill on the ground that it violated ^
the interstate commerce clause of the m
Constitution by delegating the regu- g(
lation of interstate commerce to the t]o+otoc
The hill was nassed over his I
~ ? X- . Lv
veto. e<
Attorney General McReynolds's in- j n
terpretation is said to mean that the ! a
Federal Government is not called up-1 p
on to enforce a law for the violation !
I
of which no penalty is''imposed and ^
that the interstate commerce forbid- 0
den by the law is "outlaw" commerce n
in regard to which the States are free ^
to apply their statutes. The Attorn- ^
ev General did not attempt to pass +<
upon the constitutionality of the Act n
and it is believed that this question ?
ultimately may reach the United f,
States Supreme Court. t]
SWINDLER CAUGHT AT LAST. a
a
Clever Crook Has Been Getting t!
Thousands in Easy Money.
Jacksonville, Fla., June 19.?Sher- n
iff Dowling left for Savannah this u
morning to bring A. C. Reynolds here
on the alleged charge of swindling v
the Seminole Hotel out of $35 on a L
fake draft 011 the Thermos Bottle b
Co. of New York. n
That concern wires that a man sup- 0
posed to he Reynolds has cashed bo- f
gus drafts aggregating thousands of t'
dollars in many cities on the firm d
swindling hotels, it is said, by placing h
the ware at a cheap figure and then e
getting advances on drafts. e
He is alleged to have tried in Sa- a
vannah yesterday and the police there e
warned from here, arrested him.
CHARGES AGAINST MILL MEN.
Varrants are Issued Alleging Violation
of Law as to Hours of Work.
Spartanburg, June 20.?Warrants
or the arrest of Mac Smith, superntendent.
and W. L. Hames, weaveoom
boss of the D. E. Converse
ompany of (Jlendaie, were sworn;
>ut before Magistrate Gantt this
norning charging a violation of the
riminal statute in reference to the
chedule of working hours of employ's
in cotton mills. It is alleged that
>peratives in the weave shop are
working a half hour overtime every
[ay and on complaint made to the
abor commissioner's office, a factory
nspector. \V. S. Bonner, came to
>partanburg yesterday and investi;ated
the case. The date for the
learing has not been set.
The first report of this alleged
iolation of the law, it is said, was
nade by a woman who was dischardd
from the mill because she refused
o work overtime. Several witnesses
have been summoned, who, it is
laimed, will testify in corroboration
if her charges. The defense is exacted
to plead that this overtime
rork was in an effort to make up suficient
time so that the operatives
night have a full holiday on Satur[ay,
July 5.
The Hapgood Editorial.
Columbia, S. C., June 19, 1913.
Dear Mr. Knight: Every true
ioutherner who notes your stand
gainst the invitation of Xorman
iapgooa to aaaress tne souin uaroina
Press Association on the 27th
nstant should do so with great admiration,
especially if he be acquaintd
with the facts connected with the
ase. However, from what I have
ead it would seem that few recall
ccurately the incident which at the
i
ime brought forth such a vigorous
rotest from the press of the South,
laving been especially interested in
he matter at the time, I believe that
he details of the article published as
*ell as the other facts in the case
rere impressed upon my mind more
eeply than they would have been j
rdinarily, therefore, I feel called up- i
n to take issue with several of the;
apers, which, through their expres- j.
ions, show a lack of knowledge of j
he incident.
The Spartanburg Herald express- ;
s its doubt that Hapgood was re- (
ponsible for the article in the words:
If Mr. Hapgood was ever responsile
for such an article.", To this
aper I wish to say that Mr. Hapgood
as responsible for the article accordig
to his own admission. 1
To the esteemed Columbia Record
wish to say that its memory is at '
ault when it recalls either explanaion
or repudiation of the article by
lapgood, as he had not the grace to 1
ffer either. At the time the article 1
as published I was a constant read- 1
r of Collier's and expressed my re- !
entment to Mr. Hapgood in a permnal
letter, to which he replied, stat- j
lg that he would discuss tne matter,
irther through the colum6 of his pa- '
er later, though a month passed i1
ithout the article appearing as |'
romised, and replying to my second ;
'tter on the subject he denied hav- '
lg promised to further discuss the :
latter through his paper. That he ]
as interested in the outcome of his '
lsult to Southern womanhood was
ridenced by his having a represenitive
of his paper call on me to try
) smooth the matter over, as he did
i other quarters where vigorous pro- 1
jsts had been raised against his ex- s
ressions.
The Charlotte Observer must never
ave "observed" the editorial under
iscussion, judging from its statelent
that your opposition to Mr. Hapood
was due to an article in connecon
with the driving out of Wilming- j
>n of the negro editor Manley. The
ditorial which aroused the ire of so
lany Southern men was written
propos of a lynching which took .
iace at Springfield. 111., in course of
r\rr>a c i ATI tn 59 V that I
here Ivnchings occurred for assault ,
r attempted assault upon women by ,
egro brutes the Ivnchings followed, J
1 a majority of cases, identification
y the victim while in a state of hys- .
>ria and often the identification was
lade to cover up darker crime. Mr.
lapgood, with his great store of inDrmation
at his fingers' ends, knew
hat this dirty insinuation was untrue
nd yet. he deigned no reply when his
uthority for sitting in judgment of
he virtue of Southern women was
sked for and specific instances delanded
to justify his unclean insinations.
If he had never meant to insult the
roraen of the South as the Gaffney
*edger says, why did he not retract
is statements and make a frank and
aanly admission of his errors, or
ffer positive proof that he was right?
le would never have been lowered in
he esteem of a single man had he a
opted either of these courses, but to
ide behind his right to refuse to do
ither unfits him to address any body,
very member of which is a champion
nd guardian of the purity of Southrn
womanhood.
WILLIAM C. PATRICK.
AGAINST TRUCKERS' TRANSFER.
Complaint of South Carolina Carrier
is Dismissed.
Washington. June 21.?Decision is
announced by the interstate commerce
commission against the Truckers'
Transfer Company, a boat line, which
asked for through routes and joint
rates from river landings near Port
Royal S. C., on an equal basis as a
connection carrier, with its competitor,
the Beaufort Transportation Company.
The commission notes in its
decision that under its charter obtained
from the State of South Carolina,
the Truckers' Transfer Company
is prohibited from doing any business
as a common carrier, but it is
admitted by the commission that interstate
commerce, not being subject
to State law, would not fall within
this prohibition. Decision against the
Truckers' Company is based on the
conclusion by the commission that
the complainant is not capable financially,
or physically, to assume the
obligations which through routes and
joint rates would inpose if it were
so capable, and were able to demonstrate
the fact by putting up financial
security. The complaint in this instance
is dismissed.
Wliite Women Work in Fields
Atlanta, June 19.?White women
of Georgia are working in the fields
this summer who never worked there
before, according to the observation
of people who have traveled through
the farming sections within the past
two* or three weeks.
Sturdy wives and daughters have
bravely set to, with hoe and harrow,
to help out the men folks at a time
when money is hard to borrow and
it is difficult to raise the necessary
cash to employ enough labor to work
the crops.
Girls home from boarding school
for the summer have willingly put
aside their silk stockings and embroidery
to lend a helping hand to
mother and father at a time when
help is badly needed.
There is no serious pessimism
about agricultural prospects, but the
fact is admitted that in many sections
the farmers of average means have
borrowed practically all they can to
pay for foodstuffs and imported grain
pending the harvesting of the cotton
crop, and that they are temporarily
up against it for money.
The Proper Age for Marriage.
"What is the proper age at which
to marry?'^
This question has become so chronic
in the women's departments of the
"yellow" newspapers that a statistician
has gone to considerable trouble
to collect data that will enable the
questioners to settle the subject for
themselves. These precedents con
stitute tne result 01 tne laours:
Adam and Eve, 0; Shakespeare,
18; Ben Jonson, 21; Franklin, 24;
Mozart, 25; Dante, Kepler, Fuller,
Johnson, Burke, Scott, 26; TychoBrahe,
Byron, Washington, Bonaparte,
27; Penn and Sterne, 28; Linnaeus
and Nelson, 29; Burns, 30; Chaucer,
Hogarth and Peel, 32; Wordsworth
and Davy, 33; Aristotle, 36; Sir William
Jones and Wellington, 37; Wilberforce,
38; Luther, 42; Addison,
14; Wesley and Young, 47; Swift,
19; Buffon, 55; Old Parr, last time,
120.
If Adam and Eve married before
;hey were a year old, and the veteran
Parr buckled with a widow at 120,
Dachelors and spinsters may wed at
any age they like, and find shelter
ander great names for either early or
late marriages.
KNIFE TO STOP GROWTH.
Surgeons Will Operate on 15-YearOM
rjiant (i Fcpt 7 Inches Tall.
Surgeons at the Medico-Chirurgical
Hospital are anticipating the successful
outcome of an operation on a
15-year-old boy named John Michael,
who is six feet seven inches tall, for
physical overgrowth, by removing a
portion of the pituitary gland from
the base of his brain.
This operation has never been performed
before for such a reason. The
pituitary gland or pineal body is believed
to control human growth, and
to stop the boy from outgrowing his
constitutional strength they have decided
to perform an experiment
shown to be successful on the dog.
Michael outgrew all his comrades
and would not go to school because
his fellow pupils joked him about his
size, and the smaller children feared
him. When he got on the trolley
cars everybody tittered, and he had
to stoop when he entered a door.
At home his father had to have an
extra bed made for him, and at the
hospital where he was undergoing
the rest treatment a new cot was
necessary to accommodate him.
Mentally and in other respects the
body is normal-. He is simply growing
beyond his strength and years,
and the surgeons say that if the
operation is not performed he will become
afflicted with a mental disease,
for the overgrowth of the body
will affect his mind.
BOYS LOST IX NIAGARA RAPIDS.
Two Lads Dashed to Death in Pres- 1
ence of Hundreds of People.
Niagara Falls, N. Y., June 22.?
Donald Roscoe, ten years old, and <
Hubert Moore. 9 years old, both of i
Buffalo, went to their death in a '
small boat this afternoon in the i
whirlpool rapids, while hundreds of .
men watched helpless from the shore. '
The boys were playing in a flat i
bottom scow half a mile above the (
rapids when the rope holding the 1
boat broke and they were carried out i
into the stream and down the river.
Until the boat reached mid-stream S
it made little progress. After it 1
passed the bridges the current car- <
ried it swiftly towards the rapids, i
The bridge men did not see the boat 1
until it was close at hand. Then they '
called fire headquarters and two companies
of firemen were sent to save 1
the lads if possible.
Hundreds swarmed to the river 1
banks in a vain effort to rescue. The :
boys, realizing their fate, stood up (
as the boat neared the edge of the 2
roaring whirlpool and shook hands in s
farewell. A second later they were 1
engulfed by a great wave in the rap- s
ids. The boat shot out of sight. One (
boy was seen for a moment strug- 1
gling in the rushing waters. Neither ]
body has been recovered. 1
Never at any time was there a !
chance to save the boys. Scores of
passengers in the cars along the
Gorge route watched the hopeless (
struggle of the boys, as did hundreds 1
who had gathered at the water's
edge. Men became hysterical and
women passengers on the cars wept ]
and prayed in distress at the plight 1
of the lads, who were standing in the *
boat calling for help.
As the boat neared Swift Drift, the ]
first breaking of the water from the 1
calm upper reaches to the rapids, it *
began to rock. The boys sat down to 1
keep from tumbling into the stream.
Then, caught in the swift drift, the (
boat went racing under the cantilever (
bridge. Whatever hope the boys had
of rescue was lost. They ceased their
cries for help, turned towards each
other and calmly shook hands, then "
with the boat in the tumbling waters, c
threw themselves on the seats of the
scow and clung with all their
strength.
The craft held to its course until it
encountered a huge wave, which
crested at a height of forty feet. It
seemed to dive into the very middle
to view it was bottom up. A second
or two later a little head appeared
bobbing on a wave below for a moment
and then was seen no more.
The bodies of the boys are in the
whirlpool, and may never be recovered.
There was a quantity of driftwood
whirling there this afternoon
and the bodies may be beaten to pieces,
as were those of Mr. and Mrs. Eldridge
Stanton, of Toronto, and
Buell Peacock, of Cleveland, the victims
of the ice bridge tragedy of February
4, 1912. They were battered
by cakes of ice.
The point where the boat broke
loose is about a half-mile from the
beginning of the rapids. It drifted
down in about twelve minutes.
The Roscoe boy's mother is very
ill and was not told of the tragedy.
The boys are members of well known
families of Niagara Falls. They were
chums.
]
THE WORK OF THE WIFE.
\
Why Farm Women Die Earlier Than c
Farm Men. f
Farm and Fireside, an agricultural \
paper published at Springfield, Ohio. s
contains in its current number an in- t
teresting account of farm life as view- r
ed from the standpoint of women.
The author of the article (a woman)
says that as the farm becomes more
prosperous, the farmer has more help
?both men and machinery?while ?
the work of the wife is increased? I
more people to cook and wash dishes s
for, more fruit, more chickens and c
milk to attend to. In the majority f
of cases, the farmer's wife does not f
have help as her work becomes 1
heavier. The author goes on to say: 1
"It is a statistical fact that farm ?
women die earlier than do farm men, c
and that those who survive the years
of drudgery break in health sooner g
than do the men. The opposite is ?
true in town. There is no doubt in t
my mind that the biggest factor in ?
the development of this state of af- j
fairs is the woeful lack of labor-sav- i
ing contrivances in the farm woman's
home. Many houses in the country t
are still without that greatest of la- f
bor-savers?a kitchen sink, a sink
with a pump or faucet and with a 5
drain leading out from it. The car- e
rying in and out of water is the most t
laborious and back-breaking task of 1
all the hard tasks belonging to the t
housekeeper. There is no substitute (
for a kitchen sink. If you can add ;
but one thing to your home this year
and if you have no kitchen sink, let
that be the addition." 5
^ c
Mr. Pollice Sandifer is all smiles, s
'Tis a girl. 1 5
SENSATIONAL DERBY BETS.
fn Old Days Plungers Put Up Fortunes
on Single Race.
"Bookies are afraid to lay good
xlds, nowadays," an old racegoer renarked
at Newmarket recently, says
rid-Bits. "Bets are mere trifles compared
with those of the old days."
A.nd certainly we do not hear of
'plunges" such as those, for instance,
vhich characterized the transactions
pf Mr. Davies, the first bookmaker to
pe called a "leviathan" who betted
n tens of thousands.
In the year 1856 he laid Mr Clarke
5500.000 to $5,000 against each of
:hree horses the latter had in the
Jerby of that year, Mr. Clarke having
to pay, while, if Barbarian had
svon the Derby of 1853 instead of
Daniel O Kourke the leviatnan
would have netted something like
5500,000.
One of Davies' first big wagers
svas to lay Lord Strafford $60,000 to
55,000 against The Cur for the
2esarewitch. Davies started life as
i carpenter, and began betting in a
small street off Gray's Inn road by
:aking half crowns. But by great
shrewdness and insight he soon gained
the confidence of the public, and
:he amounts he paid away daily to
ready-money clients were enormous,
tie is said never to have quibbled or
suggested mistakes, and such was
his honesty that on one occasion,
when he found that a successful client
had died since making the bet,
he paid the winnings over to the
widow.
Another famous book maker who
made big bets, and in whom the racng
fraternity had the same high conidence
born of actual experience, was
:he late Mr. Fry. In the course of
his long and successful career he
paid out as much as $100,000 on a
single wager, and in more than one
nstance a sum of $50,00. And while
le lost upward of $500,000 through
defaulters nobody ever lost a penny
)wing to his failure to pay up.
It has been suggested that there
tiave never been such big betting
;ransactions during the last twenty
rears. In 1902, however, when Ard
Patrick won the Derby, the Grately
Stable had a tremendous gamble on
Pekin, and would have taken more
;han $500,000 out of the ring if he
lad won. Only a few Epsoms ago an
imateur speculator had $60,000 on
me of his horses in a selling plate,
md lost the money, while more recently
still $100,000 to $10,000 was
aid to the stable against the horse
;hat won the Cesarewitch.
Reference might also be made to
tfr. Henry Chaplin, who was said to
lave made a quarter of a million
vhen his horse Hermit won the Der)y,
but probably half that amount
vould be nearer the mark. At the
)dds of 66 to 1 Mr Chaplin would
lave had to invest less than $10,000
0 do it.
Quite naturally, it is in backing a
avorite that the largest bets are
nade. The odds are, of courSe, small,
md it takes money to make money. It
nay be accepted as an axiom that in
1 first-class race half the betting is
>n the favorite.
Thus, when the favorite fails to
vin, the public are badly hit, and
he bookmakers net thousands and
housands of dollars. Probably never
lid backers suffer more severely than
vhen Sir Hugo won the Derby in the
.892 race, at the odds of 49 to 1.
There was probably only one man
vho backed that horse to the extent
>f $3,750, and he received $120,000
or his bold venture.
But on La Fleche, the favorite at
rery small odds, gold was poured in
i ceaseless stream?in fact, until the
jookmakers refused to take a soveeign
more.
Distinct Attorney Resigns.
San Francisco, June 21.?United
states District Attorney John L. Mc
s'ab announced today that he has resigned.
In a long telegram to Presilent
Wilson, McNab said that he feels
orced to resign because of orders
Tom the attorney general tying his
lands in the prosecution of the
Diggs-Caminetti white slave cases
md the indictments against officials
>f the Western Fuel company.
He says he had orders to postpone
tction in the case, received by telegraph
yesterday, in spite of his pro
est and statement to the attorney
general that efforts to tamper with
government witnesses in the cases
lad been made.
Maury Diggs, former State archiect.
and Drew Caminetti, a son of
ormer State Senator A. Caminetti,
vho recently was appointed commissioner
of imigration. it is alleged,
doped to Reno, Xev., last winter with
wo high school girls of Sacramento,
eaving their wives and babies behind
hem. They were brought back to
California and indicted under the
dann white slave act.
The people of Abbeville will erect
t manument to Capt. Riley, late
:hief of police of that city. He had
;erved in that capacity for thirty-one
rears.
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH CAROLINA
Scholarship Examination. \
The University of South Carolina
nffprc a Tpjjfhpr's Sohnlarshin to onp
young man from each county. The
scholarship is worth $100 in money
and exemption from all fees, amounting
to $158.
The examination will be held at
the county seat Friday, July 11,
1913. General entrance examinations
, will be held at the same time for all ?
students. s
The University offers great advantages.
Varied courses of study in
science, history, law and business. *
Write at once for an application fl
blank to
THE PRESIDENT,
University of South Carolina, flH
Columbia, S. C. ?j
DO IT NOW J
St
Bamberg People Should Not Walt
Until It Is Too Late.
The appalling death rate from kid,
ney disease is due in most cases to ^ ,
the fact that the little kidney troubles
are usually neglected until they be:
come serious. The slight symptoms
1 often give place to chronic disorders fj'
and the sufferer may slip gradually in- V
to some serious form of kidney com
? . .
. plaint.
If you suffer from backache, headache,
dizzy spells; if the kidney secretions
are irregular of passage and
unnatural in appearance, do not delay.
Help the kidneys at once.'
Doan's Kidney Pills are especially j1
for kidney disorders?they act where
others fail. Over one hundred thouaart/4
T?a/vnl? hov'fl ra/->r>m manHaH tVlOTYl
VOUU pvvyiv 1*1* I V ?WViM4UVUUVU toMVAM*
Here is one of many oases in this
Vicinity.
D. J. Pelk, Main St., Bamberg, S. C.,
says: "Doan's Kidney Pills procured
at the People's Drug Co. have been
used in our family for kidney complaint
and backache and have brought f
great benefit. 1 am confident that
Doan's Kidney Pills are a good kidney
i medicine and act just as represented."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, *
New York, sole agents for the United .
States. *
Remember the name?Doan's?and
take no other.
To Prevent Blood Poisoning A
apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR.
! PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL, a surgical
dressing; that relieves pain and heals at
the same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. $L0Ql
w^MB
ra
[K Mrs. Jay McQee, of Steph- [J
K enville, Texas, writes: ' For W
M| nine (9) years, I suffered with ?
IV womanly trouble. I had ter- W
19 rible headaches, and pains in Ift
I I ? U ' - - - - ai It im
Imy oacx, eic. u sccuicu ? u in
I would die, I suffered so. At H|
last, 1 decided to try Cardui, |w
the woman's tonic, and ft ?
helped me right away. The yH
full treatment not only helped WA
me, but ft cured me." TM
TAKE [J
Cardui g
The Woman's Tonic H
Cardui helps women in time [ffl
of greatest need, because ft [9]
contains ingredients which act Iw
specifically, yet gently, on the fj|
weakened womanly organs. (H
So, if you feel discouraged, Jk|
blue, out-of-sorts. unable to IK] 9
>m do your household work, on (jf
A account of your condition, stop M
W worrying and give Cardui a IV]
E trial. It has helped thousands I Xf
E of women,?why not you ? [W
W Try Cardui. E-71 H
For sixty-seven years we have been manufacturing
and perfecting Engines. None can surpass
the high-grade service the Schofield
Engines render today. ? Every
engine heavily constructed with proper autri-.
butioa of metal, which prevents strain wbero wear
cornea. Built for heavy duty, and particularly adapted
for mw mills, oil mills, cotton ginneries, or any place
engines can be used.
All sizes. Center Crank type?12 horsepower to 109 horse
power-side crank type?50 horse .
"To 0*'
* Mdall kiadj of ni*chineTj~mili.
Schofleld Iron Works
For Weakness and Loss of Appetite
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic
3 ROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives ou
Malaria and builds up the system. A true toni<
md sure Appetizer. For adults and children. 50c
/
3ures Old Sores, Other Remedies Won't Cure.
The worst cases, no matter of how long standing,
ire cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr.
Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieves
Pain and Heals at the same time. 25c, 50c, $1.00
BAMBERG DRUGGIST
MAKES A STATEMENT
We always advise people who have *
stomach or bowel trouble to see a
doctor. But to those who do not wish
to do this we will say: try the mixture
of simple buckthorn bark, glycerine,
etc., known as Adler-i-ka. This
simple new remedy is so powerful
that JUST ONE DOSE relieves sour
stomach, gas on the stomach and constipation
INSTANTLY. People who
try Adler-i-ka are surprised at its * j
QUICK action. Bamberg Pharmacy.