6
Stomach Blood and ||
Liver Troubles $
Much sicknezs starts with weak stomach, and consequent -
poor, impoverished blood. Nervous and pale-people lack j
good, rich, red blood. Tbeir stomachs need invigorating
for. after all. a man can be no stronger than his stomach. Xy ? .
A remedy that makes the stomach strong and the liver - 3
active, makes rich red blood and overcomes and drives s»i !
out disease pnrd f t"ing bacteria and cures a whole multi- ijL Ep~2srl
Cade of diseases. trSSSsfefe* |
Get rid of year Stotnacb Weakness and CL, ,
Liver Lazineaa by taking a coarae of rL-fl
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discover? Hl 1
-the treat Stomach Restorative, Liver 91
/nrigoraror* and Blood Cleanser. ($ I
Yims can’t afford to accept any medicine of eatavam .* ‘j
msi/»rriffrn as a substitute tor “Golden Medical Discov- r^_— I
ory,’’ which is a medicine or known composition, having
a complete list of ingredients in plain English on its bot-
tie-wrapper, same being attested as correct under oath. X—■—■"
Or. Pferca’s Pfsesaet Pilleti nputam and invigorate Stomach. Liver ans Bowvla.
N nuc - TIMELY ■
| jOME topics
C/WOCTEP BYJTOS. WH.HLTO/1.
m votes cossvmptiox cube
I cannot tell our readers how often I
save been appealed to through urgent
letters to republish the following con
sumption cure. I have so many clip
pings from newspapers that It is like
hunting a needle in a haystack to find
one after several weeks have elapsed.
I am indebted to old-time friends. Mr.
and Mrs James Paden, of Woodstock.
G*_, for a copy. They have been read
ers of the Country Home column many
long years and express some kind wishes
for which I am more than grateful.
Some correspondents have offered to pay
considerable sums of money to get
this formula for sick friends, and while
I have never had occasion to give it a
personal trial to test its properties. I
feel sure it has given relief in many
cases or it would not be in such de
mand ;
Ruffin. N. C.
Mrs. W. H. Felton: I send you with
this the formula for consumption.
Most respectfully,
MRS. A. J. GRIFFITH.
Ruffin. N. C.
A CURE FOR CONSUMPTION.
The distinguished Dr. Hoff, of Vienna,
has made public a remedy for consump
tion. It is the result of years of practi
cal investigation and is fortified by his
experience in the treatment of the dis
ease according to the formula he has
recently proclaimed. We here give this
formula, or prescription, as he has com
municated it to the world through the
medium of the Central News Agency:
"Acid, arsenic. 1.
Kai. carbon, dep.. 3.
• Acid clnnamyllc, 3.
Aqua deatill., 5.
Coque usque ad perfectam solutionem;
deinde adde cognac. 3.5.
Extr. laudan. aqua 3.
Quod in aqua destill., 2.5.
Solutum et deinde flltratum suit.”
Converted into plain Englilsh the for
mula runs as follows:
-Arsenic acid 1 part, carbonate of
potash 3 parta clnnamyllic acid 3
parts, and distilled water 5 parts; heat
until a perfect solution is obtained,
then add 35 parts of cognac and 3 parts
of watery extract of opium which has
been dissolved in 25 parts of water and
filtered."
And next comes Dr. HotFs statements
and specifications:
-Dr. Hoffs directions are: 'At first
take six drops after dinner and supper,
gradually increasing to 23 drops.*
“He states that he has tried the rem
edy on 200 patients from the lowest
classes, who had been long under obser
vation.
-Mild cases were quickly cured, and
partial cures were soon brought about
in severer cases. The appetite and
weight qrere increased steadily, the
fever lowered, night sweats, insomnia,
and asthmatic symptoms lessened,
cough decreased, and rattle stopped.
The patients are asked only to keep the
kidneys in order.
'The duration of Yhe treatment de
pends entirely upon the condition of
the patient. Mild cases are cured in
two months, but the more severe require
a year or two.
“Dr. Hoff says he does not claim for
the solution the power of a magic wand,
which cures at touch; but he can state
thia—that one of his patients had cav
ities tn the lungs big enough to put
one’s fist into, yet he was cured in
about two years. It is absolutely nec
essary that the solution should be taken
after eating, when the stomach is full.
'The treatment must not be forced by
increasing the doses. As long as the
patient shows signs of Improvement the
dose should not be increased. It Is
sometimes beneficial to reduce the
dose.'*
Evidently. Dr. Hoff is not a quack
with a nostrum to sell or a prophylactic
to exploit. He Is a professor of medi
cine. recognized as high authority in
PMMgf-ra ~ T'VBfot tbe ne«te« money tnakJnr proportion
■rT-.-'rH J** -bLHeBm I in tbe c»«mry to offer wide-awake men.
f/>>7 2?f / /»m7? y, flgrys£3a *lt i» oey to pick up $lO to S2O a day rep-
B < 'ill roraint me. and root buiineaa keeps cettint better
>L— JSre I 4 # tbe lonrer you are with me.
, LSr - * «»■ u By offering thia “Lucky ’teres" outfit (relne
& I HV*%’ ~"• ‘ - MEBM $1.20) to your cnatosnerr for only JI.OO, don t you
b<' ‘rowots7l think you can make a bit your townr It will
Here | s ng Explanation:
J I am a bit manufacturer in Chicago and aell only
11 ■ 1— » through my representative*. I make tbe
Finest Toilet Articles and Soaps in tbe country. My scheme of introdudar them It a tremendous money maker.
Riff Mffnav..F>tV Work We Back Yom with our capital and experience and supply everything you need
Dig IWVIIV J ulia J n Uih wfcb fuU so that you can start right out at once to make money.
The foods m 3 ttsmsstvss Tea would eader-taad Dais tetter if you saw my Soap aad Toilet Ari I ate Combinations.
I aaasfaetare as o»a reads, aad nil direct th roach ssy •*" rerre»retot»re» only—that's why you can offer better goods
than otters aad nadsreoil ttem 3 to 4-x sad st>!l msk« Mr yoersslf ISO to *»< prodt *
My claim that you eaa mats #3OOO par ysor is qaite cwatarretire— tot you can actually make mors than that if yon want
SB basdo and put suorgy aad gragor into year work
What Others Are Doing
sewrts ato hi sate a day, areregiag saaily OJS 00 daily prod*. They are going at a clip away beyond the 03,000 a year mark
as* tw yam. it ts portly ap to tte man CP TO TOC—oer ncbhff roods aad **the plots** de the rant.
ftlf.- Isssat a lire street st ooee la erary community, and in order to ostabil.h an Sfsst in your
SnSCISI O’ter * r, *Tl“
te M W wires vll wl plirS bead leatherette earn, without any cost to yourself, if yon reply al once. Get my liter- ■
stare and valreble ln*oimali» a bow This is no ord leery prepeeitton- I TALK tog money for yon and I MtAN IT. You can't ■
effo d MOT to wnta. no nutter tew ssoch es a doubter yea ssay ba. Jost a postal era Irtter saying "send mo your plans, " R
wtn brine yea tte wte.e pre passtma FRU. Send today, address:
LM. DAVIS. PresMert, E. M. Davis Swp Ca., 600 Ditls Bldg., Chicago, 111. |
TRUCK OR DAIRY FARM
On a main pike just one mile from the city limits of Rome. Ga., 30
acres of exceedingly rich river bottom. 15 acres of fenced and watered
pasture. 23 acres of good timber, 19 acres of bench garden soil. Total, 78
acres.
This place is improved with a new small house, barn and stable. It
has a new wire fence. It has two springs, one of which can be run into
the house by gravity.
Any property in one mile of a fifteen thousand growing city, on a main
pike, is worth over SIOO.OO per acre.
Price. 1C5.00 per acre. Terms can be arrayed.
HUGHES T. REYNOLDS
YEATHEBSTOM BUXX.DXVG KOMI, GA.
the scientific world, but he submits his
remedy on its merits, without money
and ’without price, solely in the inter
ests of mankind and for the honor of
the beneficent profession he represents.
At least it is worthy of thoughtful con
sideration.
EXAGGEBATED IDEAS ABOUT
MATBIMOVT.
Dorothy Dix and other writers give
us extended advice as to how a woman
should treat her husoand, all of it
good enough, perhaps, but It is some
times tiresome.
Marriage is a contract and two people
go before a ministew or a justice and
there take mutual vows of love, duty
and other things too common to par
ticularize. ,
But the whole business means that a
young yoman has been courted and
has promised to marry an urgent
suitor, and both take vows to behave
well and set up a new family relation
in good faith and with pure motives.
So long as the two persons behave
themselves, never forgetting what is
due to each oth/r, there can be plain
sailing and great mutual satisfaction in
each other’s company.
But I never did understand why the
wife must be urged and directed to
keep a smiling face and keep her hus
band impressed with her extraordinary
felicity when she is greatly worried
with the baby or tired to death over a
hot stove or suffering with the tooth
ache or fretted with an overflow of
sudden company.
Under any of such conditions, I do
not see where she could be expected to
play the hypocrite to hubby—but he
should do a good deal on the spot to
help her along with some smiling and
some helping. Put him in the same
place, and he would oe scarce of com
pliments or polite invitations to dance;
I feel very sure. •
The woman's part in a matrimonial
contract calls more f»r sympathy, than
caresses or compliments and if she is
a sensible woman, as she ought to be,
she will quickly understand his loving
care of her, when he provides for her
pleasure and comfort without always
clamoring for a smiling face to greet
his arrival.
I’ll admit there are a lot of silly
people of the woman-kind variety.
They are brought up to be petted and
humored and get to be very miserable
under fancied neglect. From bad to
worse, the thing at last gets Intolerable
and then a divorce or even something
worse.
But what I am aiming to comment
upon Is the continual clamor for the
wife to assume a smiling face, and get
down on her marrow-bones of servility
to free her spouse from any suspicion
of her worries and ailments. These
come naturally to married folks and
even to single folks In this hard old
world; and the most contented married
folks I have ever seen are (hose who
say but little about smiling faces and
ready slippers and where both under
stand that married life means generoua
loyalty to each other.
A MAD DOG ECHO.
Last evening’s Atlanta Journal gives
me the sad information that 12 persons
were bitten by one mad dog in Decatur,
Ga. This is an echo from the late dog
bill that was a repeal of the dog-tax
law and which our governor signed
promptly. The paper also /tells us that
all of the victims' were hurried to Atlan
ta for pasteur treatment Decatur is a
suburb of Atlanta in reality. It is large
ly populated by residents who do dally
business in Atlanta. The pastuer treat
ment will cost more to the victims than
the dog-tax carried into the state treas
ury from Decatur. With a horde of mad
dogs, sheep killing dogs, suck-egg dogs,
and diseased dogs turned loose on our
people, with no protection for human
life, and no remedy for this flood of
dogs, we can easily see where we are
at! Eggs and chickens are among our
•TIE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL; ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1912
“The Spasm of the Unscientific”
By Bishop W A. Candler
There are many evidences appear
ing in various quarters that the
waves of rationalism, which have
swept over the world during the last
twenty-five years, are subsiding. The
reaction has set in very strongly.
Destructive criticism lias about run
its course in the lands where it'first
took its rise, having “perished in the
counter-currents of its own antagon
ism”. Some belated rationalists in
our own land still despOrt themselves
in its muddy pools, but they may be
expected to abandon such practices
soon; for their most striking charac
teristic is a pronounced unwilingness
to be out of harmony with dominant
public sentiment Meanwhile they
are hearing some very plain things
from men whom they dare not affect
to despise.
In a recent editorial of that able
Presbyterian paper, The Advance,
published in Chicago where the ra
tionalists of the United States have
sought to fortify themselves, appear
ed the following vigorous deliver
ance against the follies of these
pseudo-scientists:
There never has been a time
when more was aid about science
in religion than now. And yet
there never has been a time
when there was so much in the
sphere of religion which was un
scientific as at present. Nothing
could be more unscientific than
for professors in theological sem
inaries to be trying to teacji
young men religious truth in
doctrine when they do not know
what they believe themselves, but
not a few of them are making the
attempt. Nothing could be more
unscientific in its line than for
the seminaries to be training men
to preach and at the same time
filling their minds with doubts
as to whether they have anything
to preach, and yet they are doing
it. Nothing could be more un
scientific than for preachers to
go on preaching when they do
not know what they believe, and
yet there are those who are doing
it. Nothing could be more un
scientific than for churches to
put men over them to lead them
who not know where they are
going themselves, and yet it is
done. Nothing could be more
unscientific than for professed
scholars to try to maintain that
the Bible will be more believable
when they have proved how little
it ought to be believed, but they
are at it every day. Nothing
could be more unscientific than
to think that the church can be
built up by destroying all its
foundations, but nobody can look
over the theological literature of
the day without seeing how much
of this is going on. Nothing could
be more unscientific than to try
to persuade the world that the
men and women who have done the
most good in the past were the
worst mistaken in their premises,
and yet ti is done right along.
Nothing could be more unscien-f
title than to think that we can
prevail upon the reluctant and
selfish world to do its duty by
sowing its mind with doubt, and
yet the doubt-sowers are as busy
in the church as farmers who
sow for a harvest in their fields.
These things are all so utter
ly unscientific as to make the
professed devotion to science In
religion seem extremely peculiar.
As a plain matter of fact, there
is more of the scientific in the
preaching in a backwoods school
house which calls sinners to re
pentance and faith in the Saviour
of mankind than in some of the
boasted theological leadership of
the day. Any preacher outside of
Bride Doesn't Suit,
So Groom Returns
To Sunny Mexico
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
QUITMAN. Ga., Aug. 30.—A blighted
romance at Pavo, a little town on the
line of Thomas and Brooks counties, lias
resulted in a would-be bridegroom, who
came all the way from Mexico to get
married, returning unwed. Owing to
the way the romance turned out the
names of the parties have been suppress
ed, but it is vouched for that a well
known lady near Pavo advertised for a
husband. Among the interesting an
swers was one from a man in
Photographs and other personal Inform
ation were exchanged by the couple and
a mar iage was agreed upon. •
When the man arrived last week and
saw the lady he just backed out from
his bargain. It seems he was disap
pointed. His imagination, fed by dreams
in the loneliness of his Mexican ranch,
was keyed to expect beauties that did
not exist. All the way from Mexico he
had pictured the blooming complexion
J which would contrast so beautifully
I with the swarthy skin of the Mexican
I belles.
! When he met the lady he frankly ex
pressed’ his disappointment; he evident
ly did not feel that gallantry should
make him go on with a bargain In which
he was disappointed! He thought the
photograph he had received of the lady
was one which had been taken at an
earlier period, or else had undergone
that process known to the photographer
as “retouching,** to such an extent that
it was not a true likeness.
most valuable farm products and egg
culture will become an impossibility on
farm lands. With the destruction of
eggs, goes the deficit *of the chicken
crop.
As I have said repeatedly, wool cul
ture is well-nigh a lost art in Georgia.
There are tens of thousands of waste
acres in GCTirgia that could easily sup
port the grazing sheep, if we could
protect sheep from the vagrant dog. But
the deed is done!
The governor aided these unwise leg-
I islators by not vetoing this repeal of
I the tax on dogs. The law had not been
I given a decent trial in Georgia, but ev-
I erybody knows that the number had
I greatly decreased; because the tax was
■ a hindrance to the quantity.
Decatur is as we might say in a
stone’s throw of Atlanta, within call of
the state house, so to speak. Tester
'day. August 28, there were 12 persons
bitten by a mad dog in the town of
j Decatur.
It will reach a point where nobody
will be safe from dogs on the public
road from vagrant dogs. Yesterday a
strange flop-eared hound rushed to my
I buggy as I was driving over my. own
land. If you carry a pistol for dogs,
the officer will take you up and fine you
and if you shoot down a sorry man's
dog you may have a new barn to build.
We have had three fired within the last
12 years, and you must even lock your
| coops and poultry houses, not only to
keep four-legged dogs out but the two
j legged variety, which the Georgia legis-
■ lature applauded.
IBF
the paralyzing sphere of "mod
ern thought” knows that the way
to influence and save men and
women is to preach religion into
them, and not out of them. And
that is what the church will do
when this spasm of the unscien
tific has passed.
Such a deliverance is wholesome’ in
the ’ast degree, and it eight t«» '*ause
some of the half-educated imitators
of the critics to take notice of the
folly into which they have been be
trayed. The men, whom they have
followed so blindly, are not scientific
in spirit or method. “Science” and
"the scientific spirit” are but cant
phases upon their lips; but of real
science They know precious little.
There are several sentences in the
timely editorial of the Advance to
which special attention should be
drawn. One is this: “Nothing could
be more unscientific than for churches
to put men over them to lead them
who do not know where they are go
ing themselves”.
Business men are puttthg a good
deal of money into the erection and
maintenance of churches. Is it “good
business” to Invest money in diminish
ing the sum of faith in the commu
nity? Shall we pay for the propaga
tion of doubts when we are already
too faithless? Shall we compensate
men for leading our children into
scepticism? Are our children so dis
posed to be over-religious that we
should engage men to make them less
devout? Are the clerks in our count
ing houses so rigidly and rigorously
honest and reliable that we need to
employ teachers to weaken their mor
al convictions and enfeeble their re
ligious beliefs? Are our public
servants so virtuous that we require
pastors to prune away their conscienp
tious scruples? Are our churches so
strong, healthy, and potential that we
need to reduce their vitality by put
ting them on a minimum ration of
spiritual truth?
And here is another weighty sen
tence: "Nothing could be more un
scientific than to try to persuade the
world that the men and the women
who have done the most good in the
past were the worst mistaken in their
premises”.
It is commonly that Mar
tin Luther did a great work in his
day in Germany. The period of the
Reformation is reckoned as the start
ing point of modern progress. Luther
believed in the divinity of Christ, the
necessity and virtue of Christ’s atone-
BRIDE ON ROOF
STOOD IN RAIN
’TIL COPS CAME
(By Associated Press.)
LOUISVILLE, Ky., Aug. 30.—Mrs. W.
I. Whitehouse, a 17-year-old bride, and
Lavinia Adams were rescued by a po
liceman at an early hour yesterday
morning from the ropf of the former’s
home, where they bkd marooned them
selves to escape supposed burglars. The
two were startled by noises In the house
and climbed out of a window onto the
slanting roof, where they stood in the
rain until their cries attracted neigh
bors.
DR. E. H. MURRAH DIES
AT AGE OF 75 YEARS
MACON, Ga., Aug. 30.—Dr. E. G. Mur
rah, aged 75 years, died here suddenly
last night at the home of his son, B. W.
Murrah, 605 Forsyth street. He leaves
one son, B. \v. Murrah, of Macon, and
one daughter, Mrs. E. L. Knott, of At
lanta.
For 54 years he was a member of the
North Georgia Methodist conference. In
U 75 he graduated from a Philadelphia
dental college, and practiced his profes
sion for a number of years. >
At the time of his death, he was in- the
employ of the city as sanitary inspector.
Hundreds of friends here mourn his
death.
The funeral occurred from his late res
idence this afternoon. Interment was In
Riverside cemetery.
TAFT’S OFFER MAKES
ART CIRCLES SORE
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30.—President
Taft has stirred up dissension In art
circles by Inviting competition for the
honor of designing the medal author
ized by congress to be presented to
Capt. Arthur- H. Rostron, of the liner
Carpathia, who rescued more than 700
survivors of the Titanic. No responses
have been received, .and it I s said artists
resent the competijflon feature, on the
ground that it terids to commercialize
art. The commission is not considered
highly alluring, as the cost of the medal
is not to exceed SI,OOO.
SPLENDIDLY~EDUCATED,
HE DESERTS HIS WIFE
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MACON, Ga., Aug. 30. —Local police
and deputies are searching for J. P.
Williams, aged 35 years, who deserted
his young wife 'kt Kathleen, Ga., 12
miles south of Macon, last Monday.
She appeared at the chief of police
headquarters this morning and gave the
officers a description of her missing
husband and told of how he left her.
She described him as being a man of
splendid education and a cultured mu
sician. He weighs about 140 pounds
and lias black, wavy hair and light blue
eyes. When he left home he was
wearing a dark green suit and a brown
hat •
ment, and the authority of the Scrip
tures. Did he move to the accom
plishment of his great and benign work
under the impulsion of false beliefs?
John Knox wrought great things in
Scotland, and he too believed these
same orthodox things. Was the faith
of Knox a superstition, and is the re
ligious history of Scotland the out
growth of falsehood or folly?
John Wesley mightily affected the
English-speaking world in the eigh
teenth century, and his influence
still permeates the civilization of the
Anglo-Saxon nations and through
them the whole world. These nations
are not at the front among the pow
ers of christendom. Was their apos
ae in the eighteenth century a mis
guided fanatic and an “unprogressive”
blunderer? Yet he too believed that
Jesus was divine, that Christ made
atonement for sin, and that the Bible
is the sufficient rule of faith and
practice.
If these mighty men of faith and a
host of others in the past of like
mind were all in error concerning the
essential truths of Christianity, then
the pursuit of truth ceases to be a
matter of interest or importance; for
with erroneous tenets, as the body
of truth which they taught, they
worked the most benign reformations
and revivals; and in that case we
see that error is as good, or perhaps
better than truth as an instrument
for doing good. What is the use
then of making such an ado about
"scientific truth” or any other sort
of truth, if false teachings are so
fruitful of good lives?
Moreover, if the great clyistiam
leaders of the ages have all been mis
taken, how can any man be sure
that he also is not mistaken? If the
greatest intellects, exerting them
selves under the impulsion of the pur
est motives, have been utterly mis
taken about the fundamental truths of
Christianity, so that they have been
but blind leaders of the blind and
with their misguided followers have
all fallen together into the ditch of
error, the men of our day should be
warned against over-confidence in the
opinions which they so boastfully put
forth. Perhaps the next generation
will pour as much contempt upon
their ooasted theories as they now
express for the creeds of the gener
ations of saints and heroes who have
made the past glorious and the pres
ent possible.
Nothing can be more discouraging
(if it be not disrupting) than the spirit
which seeks to break with the past
and start the world of life and faith
over again, as if nothing had been
done worthily and well until we ar
rived In the world. it is egotism
run mad, —conceit in convulsions.
The "Advance” uses a felicitous
phrase when it calls all this folly
“this spasm of the unscientific.” The
editor is quite correct when he inti
mates that it will soon pass. Fits
can not last always. Already this
fl tilled fakirlsm is being discredited
even in quarters where it once re
ceived favourable consideration.
Some have begun to have fits for
revenue, and the bystanders are be
ginning to ■ see through the trick.
When a man has a fit he owes it to
the spectators to lose self-conscious
ness, and look like he is really over
whelmed with the shock. But our
theologians, whp have been winning
notoriety by "throwing fits” of ra
tionalism, are now showing too many
signs of plan and purpose in their
madness; they want "somebody to
hold them” when they fall, and they
wall their eye-balls too "scientifical
ly” by half.
People of real culture and serious
mind are growing exceedingly weary
of the protracted "spasm of the un
scientific.”
William Odom Is
Charged With Crime
Done Years Ago
(Special Dispatch to The< Journal.)
QUITMAN. Ga.. Aug. /30.—William
Odom, of Nankin, in this county, a farm
er of ten years’ residence, is either an
escaped convict or else the victim of a
grievous mistake. He has been arrested
by South Carolina officers and taken
back to that state on the charge that
he was convicted of the crime of bur
glary there 15 years ago, that he was
sentenced to three years in the gang,
that after serving three months of his
sentence he escaped from the road gang
of which he was a member, which was
Nothing Can Take the Place
of Sweet Organ Music whShM
The sweet charm q( organ music appeals to the finest sentiments of
the human heart, bringing into your home-life an influence so wonder- vt
fully potent for good—making ’for refinement and education—that its < fl
true value can never be measured in mere money. I
The Adler Organ, combining as it does, all the tonal qualities of a /"’h > ■ Vul
small orchestra, is a never-failing source of real pleasure to all those for- ji’
tunate enough to be brought within the enchanting circle of its influence, i M
Think what satisfaction it would be to you, personally, to sit k.
down when the day is done and listen to your daughter play —to £ 1 W
gather around the organ in the twilight and, to its sweet accom- uW
paniment, sing the dear, old songs we love. wHMkgai so.
The ability to play the organ la an accomplishment which •twry child W fwjg .tQMKgMgMSSaSaBwnMK
•hould have-and which any child, or adult, can easily acquire In a short time. • ’
I know there are hundreds of thousands of home- Z. V ' !|j®MS* : ; fgSL/
loving families who would like to own an organ, but who xSvASwiIUI»iCTF7 4 -*'l/
feel that It is out of the question, because of the pre- V. IHw/ /
vailing high prices. To you, music lovers, to you J
% particularly, I want to say that I have
' a a plan whereby you can afford any A i »
I Adler Organ you may I• Z ft 2 w RhtfJCS ■?' w ’ r fiSP
_ 1 select. . > w SH H TWirff" A t
Payment Plan To Suit Everyone
Read Every Word of My Personal Statement to Yon
Mki xS bBhR RI* 1 ' * And Learn All About My 30-Day-Home- Trial, No Money Down, Direct-From-Factory
To-Home Selling Plan Which it Sweeping the Country Like Wild-Fire, Resulting in Most Stu
pendous Nation- Wide Organ Sale Ever Known, Banishing All Competition. Whirlwind of Orders.
| Have No Agents or Middlemen 30 Days Free Trial In Your Home
Jost think of it—you couldn’t buy in Adler Organ from an agent or dealer Adler Organa are quality organ?.— I haven’t had one returned in a dozae
even if you offered double our price, all cash. When you buy an Adler Organ, years—but that you may satisfy yourself and see and test and compare it with
the famous World’s Fair Prize Winner—you just take a short cut and buy di- other organs in your neighborhood, this 30-Day Free Trial offer is made at my
teet from the $500,000 Adler Organ Factory, the greatest in existence, on my expense. If the organ does not prove my claims—send it back. I will pay the.
|W "Dlrect-From-Factory-To-Home” Selling Plan you > “ d 1 rive you a omdiw
BW and you get your organ at the very lowest, wholesale net factory priee-putting UIIC F 1111 YC3T AOprOVHI TCSI
W all the’’in-between”, fellows’ profits *nto your own pocket and at lout n . y on , ny Adier for cre if it does not prove all
RH $48.75, besides obtaining an organ not to be equaled anywhere at any pnee. that ] claim for Jt jn my bi frr< c<x 4 f gh ; p it back to me Bt expcnM
C«>nd Nn MoneV In Advance I will cheerfully refund every cent you have paid.
W Adler trusts yon no matter where you live. All you have to do is to send YOU HaVC All TTIC Time YOU Want To Pay
I yoar name and address on the coupon below (or on a postal) and receive a C °PX I HfIVC No f
1 Sf mv big Free When'you
> will send it on approval without one eent el money in advance. mn buy u<- Clteßded crcCit pUn> arrange to suit your eonven-
a __—— ——fence —the raoct liberal ever devised—pay small amounts once a month, every
KnSiSB tegßEa K3AO BKfiM three or six months as you c'-ccse. I also make a Special Fall Payment FropO'
KMS BSM EaEM aition. My big Free Organ Cook tells you all about it.-
CYRI ’L. ADLER, Pres.. Adler Drain Co.. ___ | its the bimrovt ® uar ® n,c ® Bond
9 336$ W. Chestnut St.. Louisville, Ky.
Send me a copy of your Wonilerful Free offer ever made by any responsible manufacturer. Over 65,000 homes have been
Illustrated Adler Organ Book and Special Offer. iQfrgpwam ma de happy by Adler Organs being placed in them under this liberal guarantee.
B' Scnd Me Yoar Name Today—Coupon Or Postal
KA MF • I Sell rnatter whether you sre considering bnying an orsran riarht now—or not-*
w > Only Direct ls ? on ar «. • of music and wooftd 1 ike to own an organ sometime, let me
HI From Factory Dlnnrated Adler Orcan Book, the best book of its kind
atatwvqq The Famous P ubhßbed ~* n ' l the fafreet and most liberal celling plan ever thought out.
mm mJB $500,030 AdierFactory CYRUS 1. ADLER, Pres’t., Adler Organ Co.,
HW HE SMI &£■ EMS Ewram Greatest in Existence 3366 West Chestnct Street, Louisville lj<
I ■ i
>
-K _ , >
. ' ■ - "S' i 4..*'~ i r42Bgi''!
MTE OF BIG POULTRY
SHOW FIXED FOB UEC. IB
Southern International Wil!
Ask Georgia Association to
Join in Big Exhibit
December 16 to 21 is the date which
was fixed at a meeting held Thursday
afternoon for the next show of the
Southern International Poultry associa
tion, which is expected to eclipse in
size and importance last year s exhibit,
.which was the biggest ever known to
the south, more than 3,000 fowls being
displayed.
The members of the association de
cided that an invitation will be ex
tended the Georgia Poultry association,
which also contemplates a show to
unite with the Southern International
in an exhibit that can vie with Madi
son Square garden and the other
famous shows of the east.
A committee composed of Dr. S. H.
Peck, John S. McCreight and T. P. g
Hunnicutt was appointed to confer
with representatives of the Georgia
which also contemplates a show, to
unite the two big shows into one stu
pendous production.
J. G. Postell, better known as Uncle
Dudley, president of the association,
presided at the opening meeting.
Among the other officials of the asso
ciation present were Loring Brown, of
Smyrna, chairman of the executive I
committee, and T. M. Poole, secretary.
A score of the most proponent
breeders in this section of the country
attended the meeting, and all were en
thusiastic over the prospects of a bril
liant 1912 show.
PROMINENT DIVINE
WAS THE ONLY OFFENDER |
fSnecial Dispatch to The Journal.)
THOMASVILLE, Ga., Aug. 30.—1 n
the report of State Game Warden Mer
cer, just issued, Thomas county is
credited with 62 of the 190 non-resident
game licenses taken out for the yea 4
making just about one-third of the
whole number issued. Os the county
licenses Thomas has 59, and of state
licenses 33, the amount paid in from
this -county for these licenses being
3852.25. In the number of licenses
Thomas county ranks third in the state,
coming next to Chatham and Fulton.
Only one violation of the game law Is
reported from this county.
In the report a prominent divine of a
near-by county is mentioned as violat
ing the law by killing a “turkey hen.*’
It is said that the minister, who is a
very good sportsman, did not go out
after “turkey hens” or turkeys of any
sort, but there was a covey of the
birds which insisted upon getting in his
way and were so evidently bent upon
getting shot that in spite of himself
his gun went off, with the result that
a big fat hen turned up her toes and,
of course, after she was killed she had
to be eaten. There have been several
instances of the sort happening around
at timqs, but it was generally thought
to be unnecessary to bother the warden
about such trifles.
Five Miners Killed
GELSENKIRCHEN, Prussia. Aug.
30.—Five coal miners were killed and
another dangerously injured by falling
down one of the shafts here this morn
ing. The accident was caused by the
collapse of a wooden platform.
working near the state line, and swam
the Savannah river, getting safely away.
They also charge that hiis real name is
Herbert.
Odom has lived in Brooks county about
ten years. He was married and had a
family when he came here. Mrs. Odom
came to Quitman after the arrest and
removal of her husband and she strongly
denies the truth of these charges.
Odom’s arrest was accomplished in
Madison, Fla., and he was lured there
by a decoy letter. Two years ago Odom’s
son, John Odom, was killed by a man
named Holwell, who escaped. The decoy
letter urged Odom to come to Madison
on a certain day on Important private
business. He supposed it had something
to do with the capture of Holwell, who
was supposed to have escaped to Florida,
and he went only to the arrested by the
South Carolina detectives.
It is not known why the officers chose
to get requisition papers from the gov
ernor of Florida and not from the gov
‘ernor of Georgia, unless it was because
of the /recent argument between these
two officials anent requisitions. But the
arrest was evidently carefully planned
an came as a great surprise, not only
to Odom and his family, but to the
neighbors among whom he has lived these
ten
■ 1 W :
BBMjBKa jS
3 Years to Pay
for the Sweet-Toned
Meister
Piano
$175
30 Days’ Free Trial
We Pay the Freight
You arenot asked to depos».or pay nr advance
a eent in any way until you write ns and say that the |
MEISTER is entirely satisfactory and you wish to
keep it. Then these are tha terms of sate:
s*l aWeekor a Month I
No cash payment down. No interest j
on payments. No extras of any
kind. Piano stool and scarf free.
Sold direct from the maker to you at a
guaranteed *aving of £IOO. No dealer’s profit foe z
you to pay.
Send now for our beautiful Free Catalog which
shows eight styles of Meister Pianos.
Our rwortws exceed J 4.000.000. We. ee!! more pianos
direct to the homo than anx other concern m tha world. ,
S Rothschild & Company
Dept. 97-P Chicago, Illinois
Drank Poison, Then
Prayed For Life
J (By Associated Press.)
/MACON. Ga., Aug. 30.—Luther Meek, a
young engineer on the Southern railway, ’
went to his wife last night and told
her that his wages had been garnisheed.
He took a bottle of carbolic acid and
dran)c the contents before she could in
terfere.
Then he ran to the front veranda of
their home and dropped on his knees
and prayed God that his life might yet
be spared.
Meek was but 25 years old. He came
here three years ago from Forsyth, Mon
roe county, to take his position. He
died at the Macon hospital at midnight,
an hour after he swallowed the acid.
TAFT’S OWN PAULINE
HELD UP AND ROBBED
■
(By Associated Press.)
CANTON, Ohio, Aug. 30.-Paullne
Wayne, President Taft’s prize cow, was
held up and robbed on the White House
grounds a day or two ago, by J. F.
Koehler, instructor in agriculture In a
high school here. Koehler, just back from
his trip to the capital tells how he saw
Pauline of whom he read, calmly rumi
nating on the south lawn of the White
House grounds. His professional instinct .
being dominant, and no policeman in
sight, he determined to see if Paulina
would “back a log" and “give down”
for him. ,
Approaching Pauline, hat in hand, and
with his best manner, he found her com
plaisant. Then the ready hat found ita
use. and quickly he obtained a supply
of milk, which later he found to justify •
the encomiums that have been bestowed
upon the prize of the White House sta
bles.
' IS BELINDA O’HARA
IRISH? OHIO .ASKS
. (By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30.—The su- I
; preme court of the Uhlted States was
asked yesterday to decide whether Be
linda O’Hara, a working girl, is a citi
zen of Youngstown. Ohio, or of Ireland.
On the assumption that she was a citi
. zen,of Ireland, the federal court of
northern Ohio awarded her 57,000 for in
juries received while geting off a street
i car on her way to church in Youngs
town two years ago. The Mahoning Val
iev Railroad company yesterday filed an
application for a review of the case on
the ground that she was a citizen of
Youngstown, in which event the federal
: court would have had no right to have ,
tried Miss O’Hara’s case. ( /