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PAGE TWO THIN PEOPLE SHOULD TAKE PHOSPHATE Like Plain Ritro-Phosphnte to Put on Finn, Healthy Flesh and to Increase Strength. Vigor and Nerve Force. Judging from the countless prepa rations and treatments which are con tinually being advertised for the pur pose of making thin people fleshy, de veloping arms, neck and bust, and re placing ugly hollows and angles by the soft curved lines of health and beauty, there are evidently thousands of men and women who keenly feel their ex cessive thinness. Thinness and weakness are usually due to starved nerves. Our bodies need more phosphate than is contained in modern foods. Physicians claim there is nothing that will supply this deficiency so well as the organic phos phate known among druggists as bitro phosphate, which is inexpensive and is sold by Americus Drug Co. and most all druggists under a guarantee of sat isfaction or money back. By feeding ■the nerves directly and by supplying he body cells with the necessary phos phoric food elements, bitro-phosphate quickly produces a welcome trans formation in the appearance; the in crease in weight frequently being astonishing. This increase in weight also carries with it a general improvement in the health. Nervousness, sleeplessness and lack of energy, which nearly al ways accompany exoessive thinness, soon disappear, dull eyes become (bright, and pale cheeks glow with the bloom of perfect health. CAUTION:— Although bitro-phos phate is unsurpassed for relieving nervousness, sleeplessness and gen eral weakness, it should not, owing to its remarkable flesh-growing prop erties, be used by anyone who does not desire to put on flesh. adv WHEN YOU WAKE UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER Wash the poisons and toxins from system before putting more food Into stomach. Says Inside-bathing makes any one look and feel clean, sweet and refreshed. Wasn yourself on the inside before breakfast like you do on the outside This is vastly more important because the skin pores do not absorb impuri ties into the blood, causing illness, while the bowel pores do. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out of the body. If this waste material Is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and generates poisons, gases and toxins which are absorbed or sucked into the blood stream, through the lymph ducts which should suck only nourishment to sus tain the body. A splendid health measure is to drink, before breakfast each day, a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless way to wash these poisons, gases and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal befor putting more food into the stomach. - A quarter pound of limestone phos phate costs but very little at the drug store but is sufficient to make anyone an enthusiast on inside-bathing. Men and women who are accustomed to wake up with a dull, aching head or have furred tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, sallow complexion, others who have bilious attacks, acid stomach or constipation are assured of < pro nounced improvement in both health and appearance shortly. U. S. LIBERTY BONDS BOUGHT and SOLD Insure your property against l oss or Damage by Fire with N. M. DUDLEY COTTON AVENUE AMERICUS, GA. REPRESENTING AMERICAN COMPANIES STOVES & RANGES BICYCLE & AUTO TIRES Williams-Niles Company HARDWARE B. F. AVERY & SONS, PLOWS, PLANTERS, FARMING IMPLEMENTS AND REPAIR PARTS TELEPHONE 706 j The j Promoter’s Wife By JANE PHELPS. ? (Copyright, George Mathew Adams) ) AT FIRST BARBARA THINKS HER HOME WONDERFUL. CHAPTER X. Neil's face held always a look that puzzled me. It was the look of one who lived life eagerly—never think ing beyond the present; never finding it dull. And yet there was also an other look, a sort of recklessness to tally at variance with what I knew and thought of his character. That he was self-willed, temperamental to a degree. I had no way of knowing Our courtship had been the quiet, un disturbed intimacy of a small town where there was nothing to bring out any unusual traits in either of us. | That he was impatient of criticism j I realized; but I had been in no criti | cal mood. What he did was right in my eyes. We were settled and had moved into the apartment. Oh, how happy I was! This wonderful home was mine, mine and Neil’s. I loved him passionately and he seemed to return it with equal ardor. Not a single cloud could I see ahead of us. When I said something of all this to Neil, he returned: “This will do for the time, but we’ll soon have something better. I have a little deal on that may bring us money enough to live differently.” Long afterward I learned, through knowing Neil that it had been a morti fication to him that he could not live in the style in which the friends of his bachelor days lived. Neil’s was a firm which promoted mines, oils, etc., he explained. And he had said there was no need of per petually struggling. Success, I soon learn, is a characteristic women ad mire in men. The methods by which it is attained, however, are seldom understood nor interesting to most women. It was no different. We were scarcely settled before I realized something that was particu larly galling to me; and that was that Neil would leave me at any time—stay away as long as he wished —to pursue any course that would advance him one hair’s breadth in his busi ness of making money, or which held out a promise of reward. Then, often when we were alone he was inanimate from the extra la bor, and I would feel irritated that FEIUTIT THEIR BONES Rheumaitic sufferers are highly sensitive and easily affected by any change in the weather, "they feel it j in their bones”. j Rheumatism 5s the foe which steals away the joy of life. ! "Neutrone Prescription 99”, the different remedy, has banished winter terrors for all. Each week more and more suffer ers in all walks of life take i "Neutrone Prescription 99” and every week adds more names to the long list of permanent cures. Go to your druggist today and get a 50c or SI.OO bottle. It will repay you many times in health. Madl orders Ailed cn SI.OO size. ! For sale by Howell’s Pharmacy and I leading druggists everywhere. adv AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER. he was so. Even the way he relaxed, scarcely speaking unless I questioned him, annoyed me immeasurably I commenced to feel that I had a rival. I was miserably jealous of him. That my rival at this time was nfs work, and not another woman, detracted little from my bitterness of the rivalry. I was well aware that we needed money, must have a certain amount upon which to live. But his salary had seemed to me so adequate for our wants, that I thought him foolish to want to earn more. I should have been wonderfully sur prised had anyone told me that soon my every act, my whole mind, would push him toward success—would urge upon him the necessity of financial in crement because of my demands upon him, as well as because of his own extravagant tastes. Already I was willing to have nothing but the best. We had been married about two months, in which I had been wonder fully, gloriously happy save when Neil came home too exhausted to talk with me. One night he came home to dinner jubilantly, full of high spir its. On his face was the look of a [ | ‘7 he Great Hot Spot Engine jjjj iI; has made dm Chalmers one of Jj 11 the few great cars of the world ~ jj j j HIS great engine, which now gas after it leU the carbureter. This put [ §—^ :; |j | j I has a record of many ion the gas in pertec” shape for combustion. miles behind it, has crerc.i a Now the task was to get this “fine I II , , new moveme!lt 1,1 the au: '’ ; °- as powder,” or as the engineers sav ‘dry ■! | lm e mdustl 7- gas” into the cylinders without letting [ Ipljf ' ! . j It has swung the attention from it condense on the short 18-inch but j l== multi-cylinders, extra valves and the like hazardous journey. Gas is tricky. t §Bl' j ■ f° ,h ? sub j cct of getting-the-./ery-last- Thev succeeded in designing a brand brt-of-power-out-of-every-drop-of-gas. new type of cana , or ma ° ifo] |_ minus || | j||g j For gas has gone down and down in angles, corners, sharp corners and the > !^= | j~T grade; the price has gone up an 1 up; and like—and this they call the Ram’s-horn. 1 S whilethepublicbegan tosav -r’: weren’t pc i man :g | miking cars as well is the- to” Ghalmers can tel! you how wonderful : n§ I r . ,ii - , •n I hey have made the Chalmers now ■ §ES I : I the car. It was the low grade mis. Ihe n l-. • . . (i :i== i c a c l a u i a § reat automobile. 1 his is what thev 1 II :lm food for an engine had changed; a new • accomplish: X 1 ||| ; iim _ Among the first to observe this con- Perfect engine running in 30seconds on a cold dav. fr I HH I I dition were the Chalmers engineers. M ‘ >re P ower out of th;m lias ever been extracted | Hjj | jHII || They designed a Hot Spot device crank case and subtequent lubrication trouble. i j I j §l§§ j I and attached a new type of intake mani- Develop a smoother, softer kind of power. j EH, j HH I fold now known as the famous Ram’s- SphTmore' *7** £** v ‘ l,r: * tio “* iljgjli jj . By means of the Hot Spot they I here are many more '• lH W | See the new Chaimek 'gj man who ia triumphant, assured of success. He seized me in his arms and covered my face with kisses. He looked tenderly at me as he held my face in his hands. Rapidly he explained to me that a deal upon which he had been work ing for months was going through— that it meant money for him, for us. I interspersed questions, words of praise and congratulation. But he was so engrossed in his own delight that he scarcely listened, and he did not reply. "It Is certain we will be rich, and soon!” he executed another pas seul while the dinner cooled on the table. During the meal he talked constant ly. Once when he halted I asked him how much he would make. It was inconceivable that we, Neil and I, should have so much—we would not know what to do with it. “Don’t worry about, that!” he laughed at my expression. “Wfell find ways to dispose of all I can make.” To-morrow—. Neil Praises Blanche Orton. $ CHRONIC AILMENTS STOPPED BY INTERNAL BATHS. Mr. Joseph Rosenbaum, 5017 Drexel Road. Chicago. 111., writes Tyrrell’s Hygienic Institute of New York, as fol lows: “For many years I was a sufferer from Rheumatism. Neuralgia and Con stipation and after trying many reme dies I purchased your ‘J. B. L. Cas cade.’ Have been using it ten or twelve years and find it most Denellcial. All the above ailments have disappeared and I now enjoy excellent health.” You can help Nature in Nature’s most effectual way, by internal bath ing with the “J. B. L. Cascade,” and in an easy non-habit forming manner keep the intestine as sweet and clean as Nature demands it to be for perfect health. Over half a million keen bright, healthy Americans testify to its results. It is the invention of Chas. A. Tyr rell, M. D„ of New York, a specialist on Internal Bathing for 25 years, and is now being shown and explained by Americus Drug Co., Americus, Ga. They will be glad to give you free on request a booklet by Dr. Tyrrell, “Why Man of To-Day Is Only 50% Efficient,” which is most interesting, and will tell you facts about yourself that you have never before realized. adv THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1919. TO THE PUBLIC! We do not believe it would be possi ble tor us u> bottle and sell ONE HUN DRED AND FIFTY GALLONS of Nd. 101 Tonic per day if it was not an es fective treatment for influenza A man who works a large force of len came to our office several days aga and told us he had twenty-five men taken with this malady in one day. He immediately distributed an ample sup ply of No. 101 Tonic among them there was not a fatality in the twenty-^B The formula by which this Tonic is made is given to the public, so it can not be listed as a secret nostrum, it contains Iron, which is for the blood; Quinine, which is deadly to the influ enza germ and Magnesia, which thor oughly opens the bowels. Sold throughout the South by wholesale and retail druggists and drug dealers. IDE E. D. MLIIIIIIIS CD. QUITMAN, GA.