Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, November 26, 1909, Page 9, Image 9
O>< ▼ ■*&£ss& no more than "doctored” /* “ T$K 4jmWje brands. The reputation of this O'd I * V Reliable Mail Order House was til . built on the following well known ( Fi ; jflKp WE PAY ALL EXPRESS CHARGES. Bjg OUR SPECIALS. JLJfI- UK iTvirr cm. 4 m im. c.cs « rd Qw*.» « I £O7 COOM4 lit. 4Fd Qw>u. F 315 Bld Own. SMO <\.VA ULgyj js£ H Jug*. H Botfl**. 11\ Per G»l. 3 Grf. 4Fo I Qts- 8 Fwll Qu. J U. R»e. . . yOO 55.75 Sj 20 MM Li VV’U- Dußwßr,. .1.25 645 T 45 4.75 WCmGowR". ... 2.50 720 2/ 0 525 - Rre 300 <l/0 3.20 625 ■■I I||l&l ‘W ' 500 ".50 6.00 HOO §g N. C ¥«£hoe C«b. 200 5.75 220 4/0 ■ fcSZ’&tfEL: JS iSS 53? • 111 COUSINS SUM S Kfe &wtw.4oo / Richmond, Virginia V S£x IS 13 Im 525 :.::3.-5 9.25 3.50 6.50 Ml COUSINS SUPPLY COMPANY, Richmond, Va. | The OU Reliable Mail Order Haute. M. 1. He&tberg & Son, Proprietors. | • T T THETHER you uso whiskoy as a beverage or not, there SgKSN. Uk | Jp tOII vV a~ tune. When pure whiikey would b. useful i> the YLk 1 1 /3y 7“ ” T homo for aiekiMß*. When you buy Atlan'ie Coast A /&? . F‘\ Dist’iiitur Company's whiskey, you »et direct from ths dtatill- fflff ’ ar. the purest and best w hiskey with all Its original strength. FllWaX jK’ M-MEf. ’• richness and flavor, that eau be produced from our well Ir *'“W equipped distillery You obtain roods that have oot passed \ \V\ » 2*l A W f W thro the heads at retailer*. thus earing their mg proflta-and TT-MJF\ \ nMlltllNl turther. »oa obtain at the distiliers pru-e a whiskey which FJWW W vI/zIAJt can't ba bat at any price -and yet it coats less than saloons \ \ i charge far the inferior adulterated kind. Sand us a trial or- lirtflglf FM IH I der. endosinr U 94 in eash. er by money order or personal Wflljaf J x cheek certified and we wii) ship you thia4 & , gallon kea of Ek- ?‘M*4w f 'N<l HC WfVl J fc"* Fire Corn Whiskey—and after using as much as a quart, !'ll I if you don't think our Whiskey is better than what you have t HJnftrft I L . • ■•2 I been buying at fancy prices; send the remainder back at our WiliCEhW I 13 M expense and we will refund your money. If we don't satisfy I ■ you-we bear all the losx How could any offer bo fairer? .XA»~m Air'iA.J i;rtVTV S Order at onee and remember the cut price named above only |f| FLAIrV/ 1 * \ZIW Irfl jM holds good until the 10th of next month. -' ..T'lTy V J Atlantic Coast Distilling Co., Inc. V JH Wa/ebouseNo. 11 JACKSONVILLE. FLA. ‘ JUST KIDS—By T. S Allen II c< i J // * S Vj "W hat a tne muturr, little giriT ”1 uunno, but 1 t ink it’s me liver." “BREPEAT ; th* satisfaction has been grren. That is ths reason why we bold our customers. Direct dealing with the Distiller saves the consumer the mid&eman's profit and eliminates ail chance of ad alteration. Also < the highest quality at lowest prices. v CaamnlMd Bader NaOooal Pare Food Law. Eaprac Qurte. Prepaid cr the foCowia«: » • era. -a an. , <**_ Manor SfratU Rye. 5(0 13 50 450 . Cl milrt Rye. - - 300 €SO 2.50 r Family Cons. - - €OO 11.00 350 Special Cam. - - 3.00 850 2SO jft jranwCb.. • - €OO 11.00 350 ■ OMTtfGta. - -3 00 830 250 I Road Pot O£c- er Fares* Money Order, or 1 1 Lzf>*r. Orders dumped the sams day / 1 Men fad. Addrens J. & L Mahoney, 1 \ PORTSMOUTH. VA. » SALOON KEEPER PAYS *1.50 FOR WHISKEY Why Shou’d Ycu Pay More When Wo’!! Sell It to You at the Same Prce? \V e have been dsti'.lers and w‘-«!esalem for miny years and h tve accumulated a large stock of whiskies. Many of our best customers have been forced into line. ■tnrrrm saloon aadl«al OTQon laws, ard we .-.re icrced to sell to the co :sun>er direct. We want 1 ' «»>consumer » ustonierr We pr pose to sell eheaner tha . we did to the aalo> n keeper, t* e have cut «ff expensive traveling salesmen —we give i o credit—take no chances. The whiskey we sold to Mlt . ihe .a oon kee ve at $1.75 on credit, We can offer you at 91.50 lor cash. This is the first tln,e sou ever , *’ e opportunity to purchase tine whiskey of a reliable distiller for less than yaa n ttai-—I tile s^oon keeper has to pa .. « FSH i Fine, High-Grade $4.09 37 | * "JB I uLL Whiskey, in 2 G’ass Jugs, v■ W ■JLf. ■ BwWy Ii - ! Vnw Ki >4 Same amount as is contained jstf 1 '■> rvWWIjWyvH I ISZiIeI in H full quart bottles, or same dJF Ulin 1 FA* Wldf. J*/r, •Trt’l'VjJXfd tSir-w tMli.mfcW’ittiW amount as is contained in &£/»■ . IwtMms 16 full 16-ounce pint flasks, for only SSa*® *■-' UfaTCtfrfl *? " OireT nACK WITHOUT A QUESTION IF NOT SATISFACTORY jO ■■2 I ’ M.lj lUvl*** Bi, ' J*. yy ■ A,,» Proc < t'li'i < *n* ?' us €2.97 and we will seed you, same day your order is received, xj£a XV E* 'A. £ y**’ ■"*»**'**'*'’"• >n a i unrecojniKble package, 3 full gallons of fine, pure whiskey, §w ■ V*W S 'p **( SjTg rich and mellow. Iry it and test it tn any way you wish and if you do not find it to be the best |U| S 3 ,j| 'J L ‘■'"'fe AJr U whizkey you ever purchased at twee the price, send it back and we will return your money, KJ ■r ■ nJI jg - E ■ Send P. O. Order, Express Money Order or Bank Draft. Do not send private checks. We ffE| ■v ■ J E- 4P ■ carrot afford to pay exchange at the price we sell our goods at. •’v. ■ . ■•' This i, tn unheard-of low price, but go to your saloon dealer and ask him what he pays per ts A ZIAIT Oa’ W AfZ AT I.Ol’A gallon for wh key by the barrel in l.rge quant ties, for which he charges you 10 or 15 cents Rix »wI*"VL» V a drink, and if he tells you the truth ro t will snd he pays from $1.40 to $1.50 a gallon. By M *— ~ ; this spec al offer you are enabled to buy in 3-pallon lots at the same price tint your dealer \_d ———————————————— - a y S uj luje quanutica by the barrel. Why pay more? We quote in larger quantities: HB id REFERENCE*: National Bank of the Republic. Na- „ OE ■ n ~ \fl tion.l Bank < t Ccmme cr. Cenimcrce 1 r st C0.,-all of 5 Gallon Ke< . . • $7.25 135 Ga lon Hali Barrel $33.£0 a Kansas Qtv, Mo., and all Express companies. 10 Gallon Keg . . . 13.011 50 Gallon Barrel . ... 61.50 , . M. CAIMAN DISTILLING CO. M. CALMW, RIFFIAN TRIBESMEN AT MILILLA SURRENDER MILILLA. Morocco, Nov. 24.—The Rif- I fian tribesmen at Nador appeared before I j General Marina, governor of Mililia, a?d II formally surrendered. Solved the Problem Ix>iHiou Tid-Blts. 11 A Ultle boy w.»nt into the village x tores the 11 o:t,cr aftcrn.-.ra xn.l waited for xoineoue to no- I tier Un. He carried a sheet of writing ;>ai*r II in bis band, at which he gianctd from nm* to I li-Ue. I Cine of the asMatenta caine to him finally and I tin- b»y. reading front bis i>ap<-t. aauouuced in I a -InK-Mine votcet I "My n>oth< r wants 10 rounds of rice, }o I po nm| s »f xngsr, 12 rounds of oatmeal. 2u I of ” I “Hohl o»i!” intemu>t<-<l the assistant. "Aot I ao fa>t. Supjwxe you give m«- chat paper and I I’ll fill nut the order?” I Put the l>oy insisted on railing off the ar- I tides liil.i-el f . I Two other assistants were pressed into servtcj, I ami the tl roe men proc< «de«t to <io up the vn- I rlons package* a« the boy called the articles oft. I He wanted ail kinds of things and he askst I the price of each article a* be went along. I making a rote of it rn bi* paper. The assist I ant* had the long counter stacked with packages E wt-.cn the boy wound up with "eighteen rounds | ot Hour ” I One of the shopman called out the price, and I the l«oy continued, in his sing-aoug voice: ; “Ami how uiueii inonej does my mother nave I to pay f--r her tilings?” I One of the men counted up the total and »n I tiounce-t it. Tim boy made a note of the total I pad -tnrteil out. l ••C.'oute back uere! When- are you going •” I they cried in chorus. I I “Why.” slid the boy, as lie made for the door. I “that’s me 'ritlimetic l<-s*on. I have to know It by the mcrolag, or I'll get licked.” THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 26. 190‘ FOUGHT FOB filfi 15 BLACK DAMP CAME Caught by the Explosion in Cher ry Mine, the Miners Rigged Up Fans in Effort to Keep Back Sure Death. CHERRY. 111., Nov. 24.-Bodles of at least 150 miners were found in the west level of the St. Paul mine today. The bodies were found 500 feet from the main shaft, on an elevated surface where they had reirested before the ad vancing water and fatal black damp. They had not been able to escape the lat tti\and had died after a struggle that may have continued for two days. Messages, scrawled on wood and the natural slake cropping from the walls, placed the number of dead at 160 or 168 One message read: "We are all here to die together.” This is accepted by mine officials as in dicating that many men whose escape from the second vein had been cut off by fire had descended to the lowest level and that lass than a dozen bodies will be found in other sections of the mine. WILL TAKE? BODIES OUT. To take out the bodies today, a skiff lias been brought from the Illinois river, seven miles away, and will be lowered 56t‘ leet to the vein in which the bodies were found. It will be rowed across the tour feet of water In the vein to the spot where the bodies lie and they will be transported to the main shaft for re moval to the surface. The exploring party of four, led by Anton Lodycieni, were in the gallery for more than an hour before the bodies were found. They had waded in water, waist deep, through the circular tunnel making their way toward the elevation of the shaft or "ridge” where they had ex pected to find the men living or dead. The signals given by the rescuers and the usual,cry "Anybody alive in here?” were not answered. BODIES PILED HIGH. "When he climbed up on the ridge,” said Lodiycieni, “we almost stepped upon the bodies piled up on top of each other ; In heaps. Some had their heads resting on ; folded arms as sleeping. Others were lying across each other and some were sitting as if resting against the wall. “Nailed to the wall were two fans made of timbering tied about pick han dles and under them ware the biggest heaps of bodies. “One poor fellow had liie hand up hold ing the fan. 1 think he died as he was turning it. Another had a basket held in his hand. He was flat on his back and must have died as lie climbed up on the ridge. The bucket was half tilled with biack water, that he must have gone some distance to get. “The black damp surely killed them long before the water readied them. We had been in the shaft more than an hour then and though the air was fairly good, we knew it was time for us to get out. "WE ARE HERE TOGETHER- IGS.” “We did not stop to move any of the bodies or try to identify them, although wa probably could have if we had had more time. Tom Mulligan, one of the party, picked up a piece of natural slate on which was written: •• ‘We are here together, 168.' “That must have meant the number of men. and I think that was about the right number. He put the slate in his pocket without trying to make out the name on it, but as we climbed to the shaft to the second level, it fell out of his pocket. “On a wooden box, used to hold tools, I saw written witli a lead pencil: ‘We are here to die together.' Some figures were scratched-under it and 1 read it as 160. but I am not sure, as the writing was waver ing as if it had been written by some one who was mighty weak." ANGRY PROTESTS. No evidence that the men had attempted to barricade themselves from the black damp was seen. Many of the former wickers in the mine protested angrily after they discovered that the men would have been safe from the deadly gas had not the ventilating fan of the mine been stopped shortly after the discovery of fire. They assert that the men had retreat ed to the ridge where under ordinary conditions the noxious gas would not have reached them and believing them selves in no danger merely had fortified themtelves .against hunger, thirst and the supposedly lesser danger of gas that naturally would be generated after a few days of imprisonment. The fans fashioned by them, they as sert, would have dispelled this gas which would have formed in small quantities and have given the men enough fresh air to sustain them for weeks. With the re versal of the fan, they assert, the deadly fjas forming in the second gallery and creeping out of the escape shaft was hurled back into the lower level and the men strangled before they had opportu nity to seek pockets or erect protections ngainst it. The announced intention of mine offi cials to pump out the water in the lower 'eve! before the arrival of the skiff was balked by the refusal of machinists to aid them. The connections of the pump have been disconnected near the second 1 level. Machinists who were called upon I declined to risk their lives in repairing J the machinery. | Robert Shaw, of the party which found (the bodies, told of reading a piece of islate bearing the following: I “Thirty more came in. Twenty four more. Fourteen more. One hundred and twenty here now.” • The number exceeded 130 when the tally ended. “I think some of the men had barri caded themselves in pockets in the gal lery, but were driven to tjie ridge by the rising water," said Shaw. “If they had not got out of the pockets they would have drowned in them.” . Shaw also told of an attempt of the men to build a barricade at the we?t end of the ridge to hold back the black damp. The wall was only a few feet high, the builders apparently having abandoned the attempt or being overcome »>« ’'"fore it had afforded them any protection. Miners Taken from the Grave at Cherry, 111. ’Az U| I j t J»| WILLIAM CLLLLAND, HEBO OF TEE CHEEBY MINE DISASTER. This man doesn’t look exactly like you expect heroes to look, does he? Yet lie is a hero of heroes—one whose name is praised by hundreds of thousands of people today. William Clelland—they call NEGBOIS BURNED BE ALABAMA POSSE Assailant is Found After Night' Search and is Tied to Stake and > Body Riddled With Fusilade of! Bullets. ANNISTON, Ala.. Nov. 24.—After re peated crimial assaults on Mrs. W. C. Cheatwood, wife of a farmer living near Edwardsville, Ray Rolston, a negro, was hunted down by a posse of citizens yes terday and after being riddled with shot, the body was burned. Mrs. Cheatwood is in a critical condi tion. DOOR BATTERED DOWN. According to reports of the crime re ceived here today the negro went to the Cheatwood home and battering down the door, seized Cheatwood, saying, "We've got you now and we’re going to kill you.” Cheatwood escaped and fled through the window to arouse his neighbors. While he was absent Rolston attacked Mrs. Cheatwoodf The brute then dragged his victim by her hair to the woods near by and there repeated the assault, after beating her over the head with sticks and rocks. Finger prints on her neck also showed where he tried to choke her into insensibility. I The negro, according to the statements received, then laid down near his victim and went to sleep. After recovering con sciousness Mrs. Cheatwood crawled back to her home, where she notified her bus- { band and friends who had gathered. The posse quickly found the negro, when they! riddled his body with bullets and burned' it. < CHILDREN ESCAPE. Cheatwood’s three small children ( fled from the house when the negro en- ■ tered. It had been raining and was cold, I and they were in an exhausted condition' when found several hours later. SITS ON SIDEWALK; KILLS POLITICIAN LOUISVILLE. ky., Nov. 24.—William E. Proctor, Republican candidate for city auditor in the recent election, was shot and probably frtally wounded today by R. M Culley. The wounded man died later without re gaining consciousness. Culley claims that Proctor insulted his wife. Culley at 7 o'clock this morning pur chased two revolvers and 100 cartridges. ! He then went to a barber shop, where I Proctor habitually stops every morning. I and not finding his intended victim there. , sat down on the curbstone to wait. When Proctor appeared Culley sudden- ' ly arose, a revolver in' each hand. Pro< - ' tor attempted to hide behlyid a telegraph pole, but Culley’s aim was good and a bullet hit the politician in the jaw. Proctor then fled across the street, run ning up the steps of a vacant house and ; tried desperately to break in the door . Unable to gain shelter, Proctor wheeled ' and begged for mercy, pleading that lie j was unarmed. Culley with an oath open- , ed fire again, and after missing with his I first shot, put a bullet into Proctor's ab- j domen. Proctor fell and Culley walked away, i He was arrested, and stated that his wile ' last night informed him that Proctor had I made an imporepr and insulting remark to her while passing her on the street yes terday. PROPER MUZZLING OF DOGS ADVOCATED BY JOHN KERR I WASHINGTON. Nov. 24.—The destruction of | nil animals afflicted with rabbles anil the I proper muzzling at all dogs In infected areas ■ of tVe disease are strongly advocated by John I W. Ke,r. assistant surgeon-general, and Arthur j M. Stinson, past assistant Burgeon of the public , health and marine hospital service, in a report i made publie today. , The report is made up on more than 3.283 ' replies to inquiries sent out by Surgeon-General ! Wyman to state health officers and others, j having know ledge of the disease, to determine: its geographical distribution. From information I gathered it Is shown that rabbles have been] endemic to the I'nited States for more than' ICO years. ‘ There were 111 deaths of human l>eings from , hydrophobia reported from 30 states during ( ’ 1808. Rubbles was reported in the lower animals j i from nt least M 4 localities in 39 states and; territories, including the District of Columbia. : i Evidence was secured of nearly 1.500 persons. I i whose account of exposure to rabid or presum-1 I ably rabid animals, were obliged to take the, I Pasteur t-catment. SPECTATOR IS KILLED IN FLORIDA AUTO RUN TAMPA. Fla.. Nov. 24.—Francisco Fal sone. an Italian 75 years of age, was run down by car No. 16. in the endurance, contest to Jacksonville and return, yes- I terduy. Twenty cars were entered in the run, 1 and while parsing through Ybor City. No. i 16. driven by F. A. Wood, of St. Peters- j burg, struck the old man. carrying hhni |SO feet on one of the fenders before the' machine was finally stopped. him Bill at the Cherry mine—was rescued after a living death of seven ddys in the Cherry mine. It was Clelland who forced two prowling miners, buried like himself, to stop stealing water from one of the survivors who was sick. He led the vic tims in prayers from the bowels of the ATLANTA TEACHERS MAY BE PENSIONED A system of pensions for the public school teachers of Atlanta is being de vised by the women’s board of visitors, an adjunct body to the board of educa tion. In the near future, it ia expected, the matter will be presented to council. | The motive and method of the proposed ! pensions are similar to those which led j the government to provide for the declin ling years of its judges and army officers. The salary of the teacher is, at its best, comparatively small and prevents the ac cumulation of any considerable income. At the same time, no public servant con tributes more directly or abundantly to the good of society. Realizing this, the Women's board of visitors to the public schools of Atlanta i set to work some time ago Investigating the feasibility of a pension system for the city teachers. They found that numbers of progressive cities have already adopted such a plan and that it is working with a high degree of satisfaction, notably in ■ Richmond, Va. Statistics have been I gathered from many quarters of the United States. Every phase of the propo sition has been gone into thoroughly so that when the ladies go before , council they will have a definite and practical i suggestion to offer, in asking for an ap propriation. It was the women's board of visitors that was perhaps most largely responsi ble for the establishment of medical in spection among the Atlanta schools, and no feature of the school system has ' proved more timely or productive of good i results. The members of this board visit I the various schools from month to month i and then, from the observations they have gathered, make suggestions to the board of education. They are appointed by council for terms of two years. The j [members of the present board are: Mrs. J. K. Ottley, chairman; Miss Theresa A. ,1 I i| FREE IN EVERY CASE H wineJ S free S OUR CHOICE BRANDS OF WHISKEY ARE One Gallon Case Two Gallon Case Four Quart Case Eight Quart Case 12 Quart Case / Mountainous Corn $2.00 $3.20 $2.20 $3-75 $5.50.... rE'Wßafl Ridgeway Straight, 100 Proof 2.50 4.25 2.<5 4.75 7.00..,. Private Stock Com, 3 years old 3.50 6.25 3.65 6.75 10.00..,. iHShIvH American Pride, Bottled in Bond 10.75.... (Express Charges PAID to any Adams or Southern Office.) SH Above are our selected brands, taken from our lists, which we guarantee to give perfect satisfaction. Ridgeway Fl’*' Ikit Straight Corn is as fine as can be run direct from th* still and is absolutely pure. Our guarantee covers these goods under National Pure Food Law. We will refund money to any dissatisfied customer as cheerfully as when received. W * refer you to the Atlantic National Bank, our city. This Special Holiday SSE PMNKLEfhSTILLINGGft | Readers, Special Notice If you are not a REGULAR SUBSCRIBER to the Semi-Weekly Journal we hope that you will be interested enough in this sample copy to favor us with your subscription. The regular size of the Semi-Weekly Journal is eight pages. (Never less than eight, and often more.) We furnish you the NEWS OF THE WORLD in condensed form, a first class MARKET REPORT and GENERAL AGRICULTURAL NEWS, besides SPECIAL ar ticles by PROF ANDREW M. SOULE, PRESIDENT of the GEORGIA STATE AGRICUL TURAL COLLEGE You cannot afford to be without the Semi-Weekly Journal for the small price we ask, and we will make you the following LIBERAL OFFER, just to GET YOUR NAME ON OUR MAIL LIST AS A REGULAR SUBSCRIBER: WE WILL GIVE YOU One year’s subscription to the Semi-Weekly Journal One year’s subscription to the Southern Agriculturist One year’s subscription to the Woman’s World Magazine And a Five-Year Guaranteed Safety Razor All for SI.OO . Trusting you will tak' advantage of this most liberal offer and favor us with your sub scription, and thanking you in advance for same, we are, very truly yours, THE SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL P. R. RANDOLPH, Manager, ATLANTA, GA. earth. This remarkable photograph was taken for The Journal just an hour after Clel land had been dragged out. It shows his children, Willie and Frances. Are they glad to get their father back? Well, look at the picture and see. I Erskine, secretary; Miss Cora Brown, I Mrs. W. A. Gregg, Mrs. John D. Pickett. I Mrs. 11. M. Beutell, Mrs. E. V. Carter. Mrs. C. J. Simmons and Mrs. Arminius Wright. FINLAND RAILROADS TO HAVE NEW MANAGER ST. PETERSBURG. Nov, 24.—The min ister of communications, Rukhloff, has ordered the officials of the Russian rail roads to equip their lines in Finland with officers and managers chosen from the staffs in direct control of the general management. This step is taken by the minister in anticipating of railway strikes in Finland, which may be called as an expression of the passive resistance and the Finns to the new legislative relations between the empire and the duchy. These new relations have been deter mined practically by the Russian majori ty of the Russo-Finnish commission and the plan as recently published is not wholly acceptable to the Finnish commis sioners, whose earlier proposals were re : jected. The Russian personnel of the ' railways in Finland will be subjected to the orders of the military authorities at St. Petersburg. FIRES ON MAN IN BED AND IS KILLED HIMSELF GOLDSBORO. N. C., Nov. 24.-Inflam ed by liquor Owen Ginn, a wealthy far mer of Snow Hill, Wayne county, enter ed the home of his son-in-law, Samuel Joyner, and opened fire upon Joyner as the latter lay abed. Escaping the first few shots. Joyner managed to reach his pistql and returned the fire, killing Kinn instantly with the first bullet. Earlier in the day Ginn made an at tack upon his wife and shot and pain fully wounded his young son, who was I making a defense of his mother, and I who finally worsted his father. Ginn had been on a protracted debauch. After La Grippe “I had suffered several weeks with LaGrippe. Had pains in my head and eyes. It felt as though there was a heavy weight on the top of my head, until it seemed that my brain would burst. I was so nervous that I could not rest or sleep. When 1 dozed off I would awake with a sudden jerking of my whole body. Dr. Miles’ Nervine, Heart Remedy and Nerve and Liver Pills cured me. A number of friends have since realized the same benefits.” MRS. ALVIN H. LOCKS, Seabrook, N. H. The after effects of LaGrippe are often more serious than the disease, as it leaves the system in a weakened condition that invites more serious troubles, such as pneumonia, etc. Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine should be taken for some time to thoroughly restore nerve strength. Dr. Miles’ Nervine is sold by all drug gists. If the first bottle does not benefit, your druggist will return your money. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. DS. COOK’S RECORD ' ANO REPORT READY With Document from New York on Thursday for Copenhagen, Denmark. NEW YORK, Nov. 24. —Th» records which Dr. Frederick A. Cook will sub- A[ mit to the University of Copenhagen in proof of his claim that he reached the 3? rorth pcle on April 21, ISOS, are today in completed form Walter Lonsdale, secretary to Dr. Cook. . ' will vail tomorrow on the steamer United ‘ j States for Copenhagen, taking the records .. J with him. Mr. Lonsdale said today that It tooz several weeks to arrange i the original records and compile the report upon them. The report contains between 25,000 and 30,000 words. “I don't think that the general public ■ understands the work that we have 1 been dedng." continued Mr. Lonsdale. *‘lt has been said that we were preparing the records.’ Such a statement is inac- v -» curate. The original records go to the university just as they were made by S| Dr. Cook in the arctic regions. What we x have been preparing is the report to ac- - company them.” Mr. Lonsdale said he expected to reach Copenhagen December 7. What precautions had been or would jy be taken to guard the records en route he did not care to reveal. Commander Robert E. Peary an nounced today that he would not go on the lecture platform. “If I do any talk ing at all,” said the north pole explorer. «5 "I will speak before one or two scientifk bodies. But I will not make a lecture tour.” 9