About Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1911)
2 EXPERT DISCUSSES PINE BEETLE PLAGUE Fulton County Anti-Pine Beetle Association Is Formed at Buckhead RTo encourage the suppression of the pine beetle, E B. Mason, of the United State* bureau of emomology, Tuesday ■poke at Buckhead. and an association known as the Fulton County antl-Pine Beetle association was formed. B**»er his address. Mr. Mason and T. F. Snyder, who is also of the bureau ♦ of entomology, gave a practical demon* ■traiion of how to detect the presence ' of the pine beetle. Mr. Mason said in part: “If you do not wish to put your timber in danger, do not cut any living or dead trees during the summer in a beetle-in fdsted district, unless everyone in the neighborhood cuts their dying timber at ■ • the same time, and only then under spe cific advice. "The beetles kill a tree and leave it in about 30 days, or even more quickly Three or four broods in the north and four, or possibly five, in the south de velop during the year; in other word*, they may be increased four or five times from their original number during » season. They fly in swarms during the ' night, light on the upper trunk of a pint (|they are seldom found in the first eight or ten feet butt cut) and preferably on the largest and best timber. They bore through the bark to the wood, but do not bore into the woefl On the surface of the wood they make those winding gal leries with which you all are familiar. These galleries crossing and recrossmg one another, girdle the tree many times, thus kfiling it The eggs are laid along the galleries, hatch into little grubs which feed on the sticky inner bark for a short time, and then go Into the outer bark, where they change into betties with wings. The beetles bore through the bark t« the light and fly away In swarms to attack other trees' In conclusion he added: “First, do not be deceived by the small number of trees you find whose foliage -indicates the pressure of the beetle and believe that the invasion is at an end; it may only be beginning. “Second, watch out for trees to change all winter—it is not in the nature for things that thew should all change at the same time. Some are more lightly attacked than others—attend to the changing trees as soots as you see them— i don't wait. “Third, talk to your neighbors, make them come into fine. Put us in touch with them.'* Court Is Postponed BLACKSHEAR. Ga„ Nov. 29—The fall term of the superior court met here this morning and on account of the busy sea p son of the farmers was adjourned to the being no cases of much Importance Quite third Monday in January, 1912, there a large crowd was here to attend court jli My Large New Organ Book—All My Wonderful Buying Plans and Offers IKI l| —My 30-Day Free Trial Order Blanks—All Free Postpaid if you just Im Send meYour Name SM • JUST fin out the coupon below—write your name and address plainly—and send it to me II *1 now—today. 11l send everything complete to you by return mail, postpaid—quote you IB direct from factory prices on Thiery Organs, which everybody knows are the finest organs manufactured. I’D show and tell you why hundreds of readers of this K Jflgk paper alone have bought Thiery Organs during the past year. 111 show you how by dealing direct with me and cutting out middleman fig Iw i wjT??ls|r|T ’ll a ß en *» y° u can save f rom $30.00 to $50.00 as easy as can be. | TO ME \ T SEND you ra > laret new which !?. ” y rA "rrvT VOtT' ALMOST II iSu 1 shows in fuUpafje colored pictures every style two'yEARSTOIE TO PAY ME FOR U- Sdf nr ' Tillilwlil *W| Organ exactly as they appear when set ONE O F MY ORGANS. There are dozens of X allllß I up tn your home. TTus book shows the finest for dozens of ways to buy Iff 'Vo'YOU THATCUT THE direct from me and my buying plans tell all about J them. L '» than ten cents a day-less than seventy. F- G Lutmy THIRTYDAYS five cents a week wrli enable you to get one of my IB ■ t..,, 0,.. r ■ Mr . - .- SSJiI by shortest railroad route-giving you any defect in material or workmanship as long as you ■■ ¥ SES'jHi I THIRTY DAYS FREE TRIAL AND TEST keep it. Thiery Organs are carefully constructed ||| —on the instrument with the absolute agreement be- Nom the best material and are warranted in the JJM.II forehand that you art to SHIP THE SAME strongest manner. A copy of this guarantee will, I RIGHT BACK AT MY EXPENSE at any sen t with the style book. 4W B time during said trial, if you don’t find the organ A Fi 3 exactly as I represent I not only mean that you will find the organ exactly as I represent, but you . Loo 9ft mB Mb!&I will find SIOO.OO organs in your neighbor's homes a.2J? Q<a 2 4'4 L | El that aren't anywhere near as good as the Thiery ■" ■fl ini II! Organ which you can get for half that price, /.nd 11 1 * H || * rII to onc my b caut ’f u l organs, all you need do | ' s’ is simply fill out the order blank for the free trial pi 11 -- ——;| H and mail it to me AND THE ORGAN COMES L J I - • TO YOU AT ONCE if your payment terms Il| I S' are satisfactory. ffl[ E aaßil .' ,- z ''f/ ' Jli 1 1 S And you find my terms so easy, so simple and safe that you have no excuse left for || r jßffllmnM / ' iji ' 111 I doc having a Thiery Organ in your home. If you don’t want to pay cash, I’ll trust you (J E I? I I 1 Read Below What Owners of Thiery Organs Write Me: jfc Here are a few letters I want you to read. They’re from just a few of the thousands X. '"' ts 7 Q i H of owners of Thiery Organs. You can buy an organ almost any where—but you can’t J] S\ J I ff l Hi I buy a Thiery Organ anywhere in t! e country except direct from me. Fifteen thousand j ,'.j W kjjß B homes bought Thiery Organs in the past two years, and what some of them say bg Qi A I about dealing direct with me should interest you, so read the letters following: ' K* ” TUm.C«lmb*b. Gatw, T«n—i»e>.write#: ’*Wa Thiery Orran I nave the finest organ in Titusville. ~£' ~ are mere than pleased with the organ sent to us. One of my friends, a music teacher, inspected it //• 'tf* B There is not another organ in our neighborhood and claims it is the finest instrument in town and Z, n that is in any way its equal either in tohe or worth #50.00 more than paid for it according to ' <ggg' '■« design and we can safety say that anybody the prices organs sell tor around here.” MTi'ff'ff —V-Tr**^*-*, l * —buying direct frum you will be money ahead j. O. Frederick. Elko. So. CaroHna. writes: Tll__ J“Z ' T 1111 1 rrr_M_i 11 11 11 iTI r.l 1 1 MjM I'J by doing so.” “Your organ has come co me and stands in this 1 \» I & E.D.Samfeed. Brewton. Alabama. community as an organ of the highest class. I I W > WfiXc W l feTjgT’lß 7■ JaSrlnlEKl M — ; “Your beautifulThiery Organ have several friends who are very sorry that they I— TO PIANO AKD xrrv is giving great satisfaction. Myself were so hasty in buying organs without waiting to fc====-—=-—. I fr 7 IWtl Wil and ail my friends think it is bet- see mine when it arrived." - t'--- ■■■■ , IJSLLL-LLIJL—Z— I WT! WAJIKFF wrxmxxm ter tkan *“* other organ in R ota Fender. Fargo. Georgia, says: “After i T TEgll6? r .. "*?Wr/kf W a.HAWAM« kA, . cur secnon at anywhere near haring your organ tur some rune. I thought .t my LJL^i—# W - duty to write to you and tell you that it is looked ’ff/jj /ijin T 1 cehe more orders for or- up< ,n as the finest organ in this town, both in tone W/glll "w/ ; : Innlj I//H LFM ktnri to me ooatnaid bv return gans from tbis place.’ and workmanship, and I would not send it back to f IIH III\ II ■Nl' W 111111/ U '//frS T J. F. Metager, vou for anything if I could not get another one just XT* 5 A W/ffls (| Mffll M WV W I T> trail your targe new orgvn boo*, like it. I shall always be glad I saw your adver- If 1L -A llm 1/H , | mini Ilf fj’r® boyix< plans and all information writes- In the tisement and ordered the organ from you." ' I '///I ! complete, just as you advertise in R. H. Reaeell. Anna, llliaeis, writes s“I am writing to let you Sf? I |n\iA ftnl 1/ li 111 dW Mi I UUy|])|| know that lam more than pleased with the organ sent to me. , /AY I MllA Ul 4 / j j|. WiV\V///l Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal. We could not begin to get an organ like it elsewhere unless we FH 1 b r Tqcsi ... r— f.ifilD NTT P*»d ljo.oo or #40.00 more for it, and that is the verdict of all I IMIh)| UA‘ raj WMJ |i |ll I , \lKl|' \\LvX//)|i ’Ww who have seen and inspected it." V WaW'll Hill /Av I' iWwlvZw/ HVw' J. A. Berglund. Okeley, Minnesota, writes: "Ire- IMJWH fgff [\v - - Z.. ~~tl \\l\ (111 111 VI ceived the Thiery Organ the 10th of last month, and j* gWJ J /. \\Kl /JW IT! ILTjKZ ~~~~~g l\jH) 11// fin Name am very much pleased with it. You have saved me it Ny/l I x/An riW, I WAXJ /iKi waj Bl /)| g/ I|l wa money and I can also tell you that your organ is /X < //iVlxWl f /W) /•V/*' I IH- ///-7 J I LSI the finest that 1 have ever seen at that figure." ' 'WAX]/ K / Av ■ w//n uI I Ail a— B. THIERY WffgSOl It 1 THE PIANO AND Tn'«"i"^' 1 1"1 11 1 !1 1 J IBf ~ ■FW. ORGAN MAN "—nw ' MILWAUKEE, WIS. County State ■ This Woman Stopped I HerHustandsDrinking To " Her She Will Gladly and Freely Tell You How She Did It W * ? For over twenty years the husband «?■ of Mrs Margaret Anderson a ■ *3 drunkard. Ten years ago she stopped ■. iris dunking entirely. She did It with ■ a simple, inexpensive home remedy BW which anybody can use. and if you K 3 ■■ wish to stop a friend or relative from KK ■ drinking she wifi gladly tell you just ■■ M what it is. She has already given K rj this information to hundreds in all M-5 iKg parts of the world and we advise ■" every one of our readers who has a KS dear one who drinks to WRITE TO B * I HER AT ONCE. The remedy is per- M t w fectly safe and easy to use and the ■»'« r| drinker s knowledge or consent is ■»} Ka not necessary. Mrs. Anderson re- Fj quests that vou do not send her mon- J|g ■ ey. She only desires that you are Ml personally interested in saving one ■■ PM who drinks. Write her then with E3 trust and confidence. She will reply K| Ea in a sealed envelope. Her address Bi is: MRS MARGARET ANDERSON, K i ■ Pine Avenue, Hillburn, N. Y. t I SOTt-r.eiw "Tito cam* f all addrewpUlnly K ? ASSOCIATED PRESS WILL HOLD NASHVILLE MEET NASHVILLE, Tenn.. Nov. 29.—The pro gram for the meeting of the southern and southwestern divisions of the Asso ciated Press here, December 6 and 6, was outlined yesterday afternoon. Both mornings will be devoted to business. The afternoon of December 6 will be given up to a “seeing Nashville” tour, followed by a banquet given by the Associated Frees papers of Nashville. E. B. Stahlman will be' toastmaster and the most notable speaker will be Melville E. Stone. On the afternoon of the second day the visitors will go to the Hermitage, General Jackson s home, as guests of the industrial bureau. In the evening, the hotel at which headquarters will be maintained will be host at a beefsteak dinner. THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ATLANTA. GA.. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1911. CROWD LOUDLY CHEERED IS VERDICT IMS READ Decision Came After Jury Had Spent Sleepless Night in Debate. DENVER, Col., Nov. 29.—Mrs. Ger trude Gibson Patterson has been declar ed not guilty of the murder of her hus band on September 26. The jury In her case agreed upon its verdict lees than 14 hours after the case had been finally submitted to them. Judge Allen, who was attending the funeral of Judge Bliss, was notified and when he had convened court the verdict was read and Mrs. Patterson wa B discharged from custody. The verdict came as a surprise. It had been persistently rumored that it was a finding of gutity.. In fact, early in the morning lt.wal reported that the Jurores had agreed that she should be acquitted and that they were delayed only by inabiliy to determine of what egree of homicide she should be con victed. Mrs. Patterson herself had become convinced that she could not expect ac quittal. DENVER, Col.. Nov. you dear men—if you would only look up here,” softly cried Mrt Gertrude Gibson Patterson this morning as members >f the Jury that is trying her for the mur der of her husband, filed into the court building from late breakfast. They passed benath the window of Mrs. Pat terson’s cell In their short journey. However, none ot them looked up. They passed in to continue their deliberations and soon afterwards it was announced a verdict had been reached. JUDGE AT FUNERAL. Judge Allen, at big home, said that no announcement of the verdict, if one was reached would not be made be fore noon, as he intended to attend a funeral and could not be in court until that hour at the best, possibly later. SPENDS RESTLESS NIGHT. Mrs. Patterson spent a restless night Her brother and sister remain ed with her until midnight At this hour told the matron she was glad the actual trial was over. From time to time during the remain der of the night the matron looked Into the cell. The prisoner was either awake, tossing fitfully, or moaning in her sleep. Thirty yards away, in the second sto ry of the court house, 12 men, scarce ly less restless, discussed the case. 1 It ,was nearly 8 o'clock this morning when Mrs. Patterson arose. The pallor noticeable in court yesterdtfy was still apparent The hours dragged slowly to the priso ner. Knowing that her fate had been Since John Quit Drinking By John’s Wife a. mmmk » - mmm f / •/ Used Golden Remedy, The Great Home Treatment for Drunkards. Odorless and Tasteless—Any Lady Can Give It Secretly At Home In Tea, Coffee Or Food. Costs Nothing to Try if you have a busband, eon, brother, father or friend who Is a victim of liquor, all you have to do la to send your name and addresa on the coupon below. You may be thankful as long as you five that you did it. Free Trial Package Coupon. Dr. J. W. Haines Company, 1625 Glenn Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. Please send me absolutely free, by return mai) In plain wrapper, so that no one can knov what it contains, a trial package of Golden Remedy to prove that you claim for it U true in every reapect. Name.< Street City State decided, she paced the floor of her cell or gaxed from the window watching for the arrival of the which would be the signal for a verdict. In cases of murder In the first degree the jury may fix the penalty at hanging or life imprisonment, For less degrees the court may fix the penalty as follows: Murder in the second degree, impris onment ten years to life. Voluntary manslaughter, Imprisonment from Ito 10 years. , Involuntary manslaughter, jail sentence from one day to one year. • Dr. Osgood Dead ROCHESTER, N. Y., Nov. 29.—Di. Howard Osgood, who was a member of the American committee for the revis ion of the old testament, is dead here, aged 81. For 25 years he held the chair In Hebrew at the Rochester Theologi cal seminary. Harvard, Brown and Princeton had honored him with the degrees of D. D. COOK IS ILL; CAN’T JUDGE AT BIG SHOW Sends Exhibition Birds and Cup Anyway—Many Chil dren Enter Pets Secretary Thomas M. Poole has just been notified that Percy A. Cook, of Scotch Plains, N. J., famous originator of the Orpington breed. Is dangerously ill at his home, suffering with typhoid fever, and will be unable to act as a judge at the coming show of the South ern International Poultry association. This will be bad news to breeders of Orpingtons all over the country, who had hoped to see Mr. Cook at the ’big poultry exhibition, but they are assured by the executive committee of the asso ciation that a competent, honest and ca-. pable official will be selected to take Mr. Coos's place in the list of judges. i unable to be present himself, Mr. Cook announces in a letter to Sec retary Poole, that his manager, Mr. Dealman, will come to the Southern In ternational's show, bringing big pens of White Orpingtons, Buff Orpingtons, black Orpingtons and Diamond Jubilee Orpingtons, in addiuon to two hand some cockerels of the White, Black and Buff varieties. These birds will not be entered in the competitive classes, simply be placed on exhibition at the big show, according to rules regulating entries of Judges. The presence of these birds at the big show will be of especial interest, since Mr. Cook with his father, originat ed all Orpington varieties, and his birds Ars of Interest wherever pure strain poultry is known. The handsome silver cup, valued at 850, which Mr. Cook is offering as one of the many awards of the show, has al ready been received by Secretary Poole at his office, 316 Temple Court build ing. The cup is one of the prettiest trophies ever awarded at a poultry show, and will shortly be /placed on exhibition in the window of a downtown jewelry store. Increased interest has been manifested in the children’s department of the show, the date of which is December 11-16, inclusive, and entries In this department are piling into the office of the secre tary. In the children’s department the en try fee is only 26 cents, and birds bred by any boy or girl under 16 years of age, may compete. Among the prises in this department are the Uncle Dud ley, the S. B. Turman, the Loring Brown and other important cups. A number of children wishing to enter their pets in the big show have been unable to locate Secretary Poole, and he wishes them all to know that during the day he can be phoned at' Main 8836-J. The entry list for the big show, which has been heralded as “the south’s great poultry exhibition,” will close at midnight of December L Beef Ring Th® object of the beef or mutton ring la to provide it® members with fresh meat. It is especially use ful in the warmer months when meat will keep fresh only a few days, it resdlly provides the only practical way for country people to hav® fresh beef in warm weath er, unless they are convenient enough to town to patronize the butcher. And this latter method, as a rule, does not provide good meat, as small towns generally do not get th® beet beeves. The club should consist of enough members so that each can con veniently consume a share per week; large families or boarding house keepers can take two or more shares. Frequently a dozen members is the number chosen and sometimes as many as 20 make up a club. A club should appoint necessary officers and adopt rules of govern ment. There should certainly be a president and secretary and treas urer. The latter two offices may be combined in the same person. A butcher should be appointed and he can do the actual work of butchering or hire someone at a price fixed by the club. All beeves had better be killed in some one Convenient place. A chart should be made of a dressed animal and it should be so divided that each member will get some of each part during the sea son. And at each time every mem ber should receive two or three cut#, providing for a boiling ple<« and a steak or a boiling piece and a roast or for all three. The rough tallow may go to the mem ber furnishing the beef or may be made up by the butcher and the receipts turned Into the treasury. The hide may be given to the own er of the animal or sold as was suggested tor the tallow. Each member will, of course, furnish art animal weighing about a fixed number of pounds and ranging in age not over a certain llmU and being in such condition as will satisfy the butcher. When the qfub is organized the order in which th® members are to furnish th® beeves should be fixed. Some clubs are organized thus simply, each member paying for the butchering of his beef and taking hide and tallow home. Each beef furnished is of about the same size and the butcher cuts as eveuly as possible, no further evening being done. • But other clubs fix a price for the different cuts, give each mem ber credit for the beef fumisheo by cuts and charge each for amount used. Saving Money on Eggs Improper and antiquated methods >f handling eggs In the United States result in losses that reach #n estimated total of >46,000,000 an nually. This is 17 per cent of the’ estimated total value of the entire zrop. Practically all this loss is 1 borne by farmers and other pro ducers, and a large part of it can oe prevented. How the department >f agriculture through its bureau it animal industry is solving this problem is told In bulletin 141 re cently issued, entitled “The Im provement of the Farm Egg.” In order to show how this loss might be prevented, th* bureau of animal industry last year sent ex perts into Kansas to conduct inves tigations. The results of the first season’s work are given in detail In bulletin, with suggestions for improvement that may be ap plied anywhere. "Although but one season has be*n spent by the bureau in this work,” says the bul i,‘>tki, “several much-des’red I hanges have been brought about, ."he most important of these was the adoption by shippers of the 'loes-ofF system of buying and selling egga” ~'iif J | "REPEA TER" ■ Smokeless Powder rnffig™ H Shotgun Shells ■ Winchester “Repeater” shells JM have won first place in the esti mation of hunters because they give the maximum efficiency at a minimum cost Although comparatively low priced, “Repeater** ■ shells are made and loaded with the same care and precision which have made Winchester “Leader” the best shells on the market Only the highest quality of powder and shot are used in “Repeater” shells, and for any load in 10 gauge up to 3# drams and in 12 gauge up to 3 % drams of powder they give entire satisfaction. No shells, price considered, give better results than the Winchester “ Repeater. ” Try them and you’ll be con- m £» g t|| vinced. Ask for “Repeater.” ▼MAM I The Yellow Shell with the Patented Corrugated Head » I fk 9 5 »9 3m| Guaranteed 5 Years Kl . •f K T»»dwrtito bmtom, mk. trimii, w 4 lundw. our fro* oMkcw tlga <* KI - A ONLY 96 CENTS. fcj* A * IK ttutliM 1 . feM. full Blokol «U.«r plow. pouotor. ». Anta. *O4 Md Ml, • tteokrwor fuij tux'**** t« i ,«n. Is .Min* to th. nW*. «itl>M«uyut*ob.m votnMM. C.rd*«tM nrtk ntStotornA vka M wJk/'J Va J'“.XaF F” W"* 1 “ pureOwM from *r tototor* A9. m pul oSm .f A HANDSOME WATCH FOB FREE, s*4 tti.Mwti*M.«to«Mtbr>«Mto.*4MS*i *<«««««, «4 *4 mrt b? nan BbU port fbM. BwSotorttou ftoMMMrt to toMar toNadM. Bnd 05 a*ta fOOAT ao Mi* adwtltoani ntf art *pp.*r a*ia. AMtort ( CHALMUS A 00., JCWILKRS, MS SMik Daa-bws •»„ CHISAGO, ILU NEIL HAS CONFERENCE WITH RAILROAD MEN NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 29.— Charles P. Neill, United States commissioner of labor, yesterday with lo comotive engineers employed by the New Orleans and Northwestern rail way. and also with officials of th® rail road company. Labor troubles on th>® railroad, it is said, have been impend ing for sometime. Although neither Mr. Neill nor others interested will discuss the matter, it is understood that all differences now seem certain of adjustment. Mr. Neill will continue his conferences today. senFon trial If you are sick, you can get a full-size on® dollar box of Bodl-Tone on i twenty five days’ trial. If it benefits you. you pay >I.OO for same. If it does not help, pay nothing for This is ther way Bodi- Tone is being offered to the sick in the large announcement on the last page of this paper and the way thousands have already been cured by it •*• HURL SHELL IN FLAMES; EIGHT ARE BADLY HURT (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) PENSACOLA. Fla., Nov. 29.—Elgnt persons were injured, one possibly criti cally, when children tossed a ten-inch cartridge or shell used for sub-caliber practice at United States forts, into the fire at the home of Andrew Jones, a .notorman, on West Jackson street, last night The entire family of Jones and some neighbors felt the force of the explo sion, being knocked to the floor, while burning embers and hot ashes were pil ed upori them, ths windows forced out and the doors and shutters driven from their hingea Miss Belma Hammac, 1« years of age, was the most seriously injured, being burned from her feet to her breast Oth ers injured were: Mrs. A. Hamniac, leg broken when the shell struck her, and burned about the face and body; Charles Hammac, IS years of age, burned about face, hands and bruised; Andrew Merritt bruised on head and f#ce and hands burned;'daugh ter of Andrew Jones, severely burned on legs; Mra Sam Jones, burned about face and body; child of Sam Jones, burn ed about face and arms; baby of Sam Jones, burned about face, arms and body. COTTON PLANTERS FORM MUTUAL BENEFIT CLUB MERIDIAN, Miss., Nov. 29.—Farm ers and business men of this section at a meeting here yesterday recom mended the cotton growers the per manent organization of whet is to be known as the mutual benefit cotton corporation, and outlined a plan pro viding for the withdrawal from the market of one million bales of cotton to be used as capita) in fighting the influence of the speculator. It is said a charter for the organi zation of the corporation is to be drawn up at once, stock subscribed and a meeting called for the election of of ficers. The plan is primarily for Lau derdale county, but provides from in clusion of the state of Mississippi and ultimately the entire cotton growing section. t TOBACCO HABIT ffISSS I offer a cenwtae *waranteed remedy 111 and tailir.« ~t of hair and for tobaooo or »nu« habit >u 71 h iun. It i, ai.M. many other dtaordiTa. It I. minute ana tortwr nleaaanl atren<iheaiag Oreroumeo that pecoltar In* matu-n.pt tocure rourtell at tobaaeo aud ado* aera oaoaew aud erarinc tor ei«arette«. batat by .addenly •u» ( ,pni»—4oa tdo t; Tbeenrtert ■l*ara, p|p«, ehewta* tobaeeo or aaetf. method la u> eliminate the nieotiue peAwa foboMO U naiaaaaaa and aeriotuly Injure, from the ayawm. the wrakrmd irma the health in aeraral way*. oaanac aaeb lt~r ledmembrane. and nerrw and der* a. narrow drioepaia. aleepleesnea*. s". the 'taring X OO qatebly to belrbiug yne.lag or other u'.<tmronable am bom, and enjoy yt arwlf a tboomnd tttum b»itiit aauou in a otuach; eonodpatlon. headaebe, while fee hay alwaya la mbuM M Ft CT weak rye.. nf vl«nr. red .pot. on * abotl tb. • k la. th rout Irritation, catarrh, arthma. Method, Wtyte. Ahojtoeret broaehlUa heart failure, law* trouble. Methodfcremqmrtae melaneholy. nevranhenia Impotener. 100. ot memory aod wllT.po«-r. Im- hla I 7 '*’7^*7, pare .poiaonwl) Mood, rheoma-l.m. lemhaao. aetatte. nmrtrta. heartburn, my Hook on Tobaeeo-towd s■»< HaMt toroid liver. lo—of appr*U-.b.i >~<h fb.,l breath, ‘..•‘f -te la- kof mailed la Main wtanp«* free. io WARD /. WOODS, 534 Sixth Av®., sm 8. ft®®* Vork. M.V. BUILDING TRADES ASK CARPENTERS TO RETURN The building trades department of the American Federation of Labor Tuesday afternoon voted to reinstate the United Brotherhood of Carpenters. The car penters were suspended at St. Louis last year and were ordered reinstated by the recent convention of the American Feder ation of Labor. Because of the necessity of conferring with the executive board of the Brother hood of Carpenters, no delegates from the (carpenters were present to reply to the action of the convention. The decision of the executive board will determine what this reply will be. If the board di rects to returh to membership they will do so. The building trades convention also concurred in the order of th® Federation of Labor that the steam fitters and plumbers be amalgamtaed into one union. *' Delegates to the building trades de partment Tuesday night attended a the ater ijarty at the Lyric. They will be enerta’lned Thursday night at a ban quet. Learn to 1 Hypnotize! You May Mow Muter TM# Wonderful, Mys terious and Fascinating Science With out Leaving Your Own Home. SendJYour Address at Onos and Receive * FHEE Copy of ’ a Wonderful Book on Hypnotism, Personal Magnetisa, Magnetic Healing and Other Occult Science*. Do you want to know bow to utilise the most powerful and mysterious force of na ture? Do you value control over others? Do you value the mean* of securing friendship and personal Influence Do you value the power tr> conquer pais aud bnnieh slokbe**, to reform a misguided friend, to gain business success, to gain wealth, position and bappt ness? If you do, you must learn to Hynotlue. Why not? 5o other accomplishment la *o easily acquired. It may be mastered in a tew bouts' time, without leaving your home. Then you can surprise and startle all your friend* by placing others under thia hypnotic spell and making them think, act and feel just a* you desire. You can perform the most won derful and astounding feats and create fun and amusement foe hours at a tiaae. You ean make money by giving eiMbition*. treating dis eases or by t» aching the art to others. M short. Hypnotism Is the very key to Health, Wealth, and Happiness. The coat of learning is but a trifle. Success sure. Investigate now! Wri> at once, enclosing 2c stamp, for fre* illastratsd booklet on Hypnotism, Personal Magnetism, Magnetic Healing and other oc cult sciences. Just send your name and ad dress and a 2c stamp to show that yon are truly Interested, and the book will be sent at once br mail, free and poet paid. Address M. D. BETTS. Bta. 158. Jackson. Mi<*.