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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA„ TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1913.
DEMOCRATS SCORE TAFT'S
CIVIL SERVICE ORDER
Charles Bartlett, of Georgia,
Succeeds in Amending the
Postoffice Bill
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—The house
today adopted an amendment to the
pcstofficc appropriation bill, proposed
by Representative Charles L. Bartlett,
of Georgia, which is a slap at Presi
dent Taft’s recent executive order put
ting fourth class postmasters under
the civil service. Before the amend
ment was adopted there was an acri-*
monious debate and the vote was along
party lines. A number of southern
Democrats joined the Georgia member
in vigorously protesting against the
executive order.
Th e amendment offered by Represent
ative Bartlett of Georgia reads: “No
part of the sums provided in this bill
for the salaries of postoffice inspectors
or their per diem allowances, shall be
paid or allowed to them while they
may be engaged in making selections
.or recommendations for tl^e appoint
ment of fourth class postmasters.”
• Democratic speakers roundly criti
cised an executive order which con
veys into the civil service at the vir
tual close of an administration more
than thirty thousand fourth class post-
•masters.
Representative Bartlett asserted that
postmasters in his state were appoint
ed “at the will of three Republican
referees who act on the recommenda
tions of Republican politicians and com
mitteemen.”
The executive order, .he said, would
retain in office those postmasters who
had been appointed by Republicans and
who could not be removed except for
cause.
“Does politics play a part in the ap
pointments?” asked Representative Cox
of Indiana.
“Politics play the chief part,” said
Mr. Bartlett.
“A Republican is selected, if that
is possible; if a Republican isn’t avail-
able^ a man who isn’t a Democrat is
named; sometimes they recommend a
’woman.’ ”
Representative Lloyd, of Missouri,
said that 334 of the 395 postoffice in
spectors were Republicans.
“They might have been in March,
1909, 4 ’ commented Representative Mad
den, a Republican of Illinois, “but most
of them will be Democrats after March
4 next.”
“When you cover forty thousand
postmasters in the civil service after
the close of an administration and then
say that they shall not be. removed ex
cept for cause,” interposed Represent
ative Lloyd, of Missouri, “it’s no ap
peal to the party fhat will soon come
into power.”
“Neither does it appeal to the sense
of justice with reference to conveying
into the civil service men who have
been selected regardless of'efficiency and
who could not be elected to the posi
tion they are now holding,” comment-
»Pfl —Owner, ..a** - Texas
Democrat.
“If you gentlemen on that side of
the house are in favor of th e spoils
system,” said Representative Mann, the
Republican floor leader, “why not be
frank and'say so? My information is,
however, that there are mor e Demo
cratic inspectors than Republican. If
you object to this order, it may be re
voked easily by Mr. Wilson when he
comes into office.”
Every order extending the civil serv
ice, Mr. Mann declared, necessarily con
veyed into that service certain employes
already on the rolls. President Cleve
land, he said, had issued orders of this
character just before he left office and
there was no kick from the Republi
cans.
"Ther e are thousands of Democratic
employes on the rolls of the depart
ments in Washington today,” added
Mr. Mann. “But we do not make a
partisan issue of it. If you take away
from the postoffice inspectors the right
to make investigations and recommen
dations regarding the appointments of
fourth class postmasters it will sim
ply mean that some one else must
do the work. It does not effect the
status of order at all.
“Let President Wilson revoke the or
der if the Democrats insist upon the
'spoils system.’ ”
Several Democrats arose to protest
that they were not seeking spoils and
then they vot€d for the Bartlett amend
ment, which was intended to stop the
president and his eleventh-hour exec
utive order.
DREADED TO EAT
A Quaker Couple’s Experience
How many persons dread to eat their
meals, although actually hungry nearly
all the time!
Nature never intended this should be
so, for we are given a thing called, ap
petite that should guide us as to what
the system needs at any time and can
digest.
But we get in a hurry, swal
low our food very much as we shovel
coal into the furnace, and our sense
of appetite becomes unnatural and per
verted. Then we eat the wrong kind
of food or eat too much, and there
you are—indigestion and its accom
panying miseries.
A Phila. lady said:
"My husband and X have been sick
and nervous for 15 or 20 years from
drinking coffee—feverish, indigestion,
totally unfit, a good part of the time,
.for work or pleasure. We actually
dreaded to eat our meals. (Tea is
lust as injurious, because it contains
caffeine, the .same drug found in cof
fee.)
"We tried doctors and patent medi
cines that counted up into hundreds of
dollars, with little if any benefit.
“Accidentally, a small package of
Postum came into my hands. I made
some according to directions, with sur
prising results. We both liked it and
have not used any coffee since.
“Th e dull feeling after meals has
left us and we feel better every way.
We are so well satisfied with Postum
that we recommend it to our friends who
have been made sick and nervous and
miserable by coffee." Name given upon
request. Read the little book, “The
Road to Wellville,” in pkgs.
Postum now comes in concentrated,
powder form, called Instant Postum.
It is prepared by stirring a level tea
spoonful in a cup of hot water, adding
sugar to taste, and enough cream to
bring the color to golden brown.
Instant Postum is convenient; there’s
no taste; and the flavour is always uni
form. Sold by grocers—50-cup tin 30
cts., 100-cup tin 50 cts.
A 5-cup trial tin mailed for grocer’s
name and 2-cent stamp for postage,
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek,
Mich.—(Advt.)
Quickly lispeis
Stomach Distress
Whatever the Trouble, It Disap
pears in Five Minutes After
Taking a Stuart’s Dys
pepsia Tablet.
All of the unpleasant sensations at
tendant upon eating: too heartily are
almost instantly relieved by a Stuart’s
Dyspepsia Tablet.
TUSKEGEE GRADUATES ARE
Heaaviness of the Stomach from Undi
gested Pood Quickly Believed, by
a Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablet.
When you take food into a stomach
that is tired and over-taxed, the gas
tric juices do not form fast enough to
digest it properly. So the food becomes
sour and at once begins to throw off
gases. Your stomach becomes inflated
just as surely as if you attached a toy
balloon to a gas jet. Then the gases
aiid foul odors issue forth and pollute
your breath. Your tongue quickly be
comes coated and you can taste the
foulness that is within you.
Now all this condition is changed
almost instantly by a Stuart’s Dys
pepsia Tablet. This little digester gets
busy at once—supplies all the digestive
elements that were lacking—digests
the food in a jiffy and sweetens and
refreshes the mucous lining of the
stomach and bowels and restores peace
and content.
One grain of a single ingredient in
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets will digest
3,000 grains of food. This saves your
stomach and gives it the rest it needs.
All muscles require occasional rest if
they are ever over-taxed. The stomach
is no exception to this rule.
Try a box of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tab
lets and you will wonder how you ever
got along without them. They are sold
at 50 cents by all druggists every
where.—(Advt.)
HOUSE TO INVESTIGATE
’S SHIP LI
International Merchant Ma
rine Organized by Money
King Under Probe
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—An investi
gation Of the International Mercantile
Marine, the $120,000,000 American Cor
poration controlling numerous foreign
and American companies, with J. Pier-
pent organ as the chief witness, is con
templated by the house committee on
merchant marine in connection with its
hearing of the so-called shipping trust.
Mr. Morgan is said to have organized
this great company and to control its
stock.
Chairman Alexander, of the committee,
announced today that Mr. Morgan prob
ably * will be subpoenaed immediately
upon his return from abroad. P. A. S.
Franklin, vice president off the White
Star Line, one of thp important com
panies connected with the international
mercantile marine, already has been
subpoenaed and probably will be ex
amined in the near future.
The International Mercantile Marine
owns the entire capital stock of the
Oceanic Steam Navagation company (the
While Star Line), the International Na-
vagation company, the American and the
lied Star Lines, the Mississippi and
Dominion Steampship company and the
Brand North Atlantic Steam Navagation
company; and owns the controlling in
terest in Frederick Leyl^nd & Co.,
with the shipping business of Ismay,
Imrie& Co., and Ricgard-Mills & Co.
The combined sailings of the various
companies covers forty-five services
from New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Boston, New Orleans, Galveston, Quebec,
Montreal and Portland to Liverpool,
Plymouth, Southampton, London, Havre,
Cherbourg, Bremen and Antwerp. The
corporation also operates various lines
in the distinctly foreign service.
FRANCE TO ELECT NEW
PRESIDENT ON FRIDAY
Poincare Is Favorite but Will
Not Accept-Senate and
Chamber Names
BY WM. PHILIP SIMMS.
PARIS, Jan. 11.—Within the next few
days France will have a new president,
yet at the present moment an opaque
shadow covers all the “possibilities” in
this direction. Who will the new chief
executive be? No one seems to have
the slightest idea.
To date there are no avowed candi
dates. Party leaders who have ambi
tions are saying little or nothing. No
one seems to care about talking politics.
Newspapers simply deal in generalities.
Little more is to be heard in the streets
and cafes concerning the important
event than would be the case if a new
librarian were needed for the public li
brary.
Whereupon there is talk of a reform
in the manner of electing presidents in
future. Elections come each seven years
and there is a growing sentiment in
France for a change before 1920, the
date of the next one.
FAMILY SAVES INVALID
FROM DEATH BY FIRE
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MONTEZUMA, Ga., Jan. 10.—Colonel
J. M. DuPree narrowly escaped being
seriously burned at his home at Spald
ing. He was sitting in his invalid’s
chair before the fire with a blanket
wrapped around him, when a spark
popped out of the fire and fell on the
blanket.
It at once caught on fire, and but for
the members of his family being ip an
adjoining room and hearing his cries,
getting to him in time to remove the
burning blanket, it would have been
serious.
That Negro's Best Place Is on
the Farm Is Taught by
Industrial School
TUSKEGEE, Ala., Jan. 11.—The ques
tion is often asked as to the extent
to which the former students and grad
uates of Tuskegee Institute engage in
actual farming.
It should be stated that the teachers
of the institution itself keep constantly
in mind the fact that the south is large
ly an agricultural country, and that at
least eighty per cent of the colored
people depend upon farming for their
living, and that furthermore, the negro
race as a whole, is far better off when
in cultivating the soil than in any
other occupation.
TUSKEGEE INSTITUTE MAKES GOOD
CROPS.
As an immediate result of this teach
ing the school has been able to produce
on its farm during the past year the
best crop in the history of the institu
tion.
As a further illustration of the re
sult of this training, in Macon county
alone, in Alabama, in which the Tuske
gee institute is located, there are three
graduates of the school, who have more
than a hundred farms or that number of
colored farmers under their supervi
sion.
Thirty of the graduates and former
students of the institute are teaching
agriculture in various schools, at Snow
Hill, Ala., Prentiss, Miss., Tallahassee,
Fla., Lawrenceville, Va., Denmark, S.
C. and at the University of Porto Rico,
Porto Rico, and elsewhere.
Eight of the graduates are working
for the United States Department of
Agriculture, as Agricultural Demonstra
tion agents, in the State of Alabama,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South
Carolina, and Virginia.
BALL PLAYER-PREACHER
TAKES SHOT AT HIS FOES
“Billy” Sunday Arraigns Peo
ple of Columbus in His
Characteristic Style
COLUMBUS, Ohio, Jan. 11.—The Rev.
“Billy” Sunday, the former baseball
player, who is conducting a series of
evangelistic services here, has devoted
one sermon to Columbus, its people
and the churches that have not joined
in supporting his campaign. Among
the most widely quoted sentences from
his sermon are these.
Great God! Columbus, open your
eyes!
People hold their noses when they
speak of you.
Every brewer in Columbus, every
barkeeper, every gambler, every crook,
every blackleg, every thug and plug-
ugly is' arrayed against this campaign.
If you are in this .class go ahead.
If you are in a business that religion
hurts, you are in a dirty, rotten, stink
ing business.
The sermon was delivered ln< charac
teristic Sunday style. The athletic min
ister raced from one side of the stage
to the other, ducked, feinted, delivered
imaginary uppercuts, stopped grounders,
made snap throws and did everything
but wait out the pitcher or settle under
a fly.
TO
Central Union Depot in Cin
cinnati Forced to Aban
don Tracks
(By Associated Press.)
CINCINNATI, Jan. 11.—The flood sit
uation in this city took on a serious
aspect tonight when the Ohio river rose
to a point where the Central Union
depot was forced to. abandon its tracks.
Weather forecaster DeVereaux tonight
issued warning to those merchants
whose places of business would come
within' the 58-feet danger line. It is
expected to reach that stage and if
the cold wave which is expected to reach
here by tomorrow noon does not materi
alize the prediction is that between 60
and 61 feet will be reached. This will
cause considerable damage.
YOU MAKE FFIENDS BY REC
OMMENDING A RELIABLE
KIDNEY MEDICINE.
Your representative called at my door
yesterday meaning to leave a sample of
your noted Swamp-Root and I am cer
tainly pleased to see anybody connected
with the firm who makes a medicine
which has done so much for me and my
family. A few years ago I was suffering
from a -terrible pain in my ba9k and
when I was up around the house I had
to walk with my body bent nearly
double, xf you had placed a thousand
dollars above my head I could not
straighten up to get it.
Hearing of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root
I sent to you for a sample bottle and
from the effects of that small amount
I was sure it would help me so I bought
one bottle and it has cured me.
Shortly after that my husband who
was a coal miner, was suffering from
kidney trouble and could not work and
I sent for some of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-
Root. He was in a terrible condition,
but as the doctors had not given me
any relief, I had more faith in Swamp-
Root and it was well founded, for it did
the work and after taking a few bottles
he was completely cured.
I daily recommend the use of Swamp-
Root to my friends and neighbors.
Sincerely yours,
MRS. JOHN NORDQUIST,
Galeton, Penna.
Sworn and subscribed to before me,
this 14th day of May, 1912.
W. D. ALLEN, J v P.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Boot Will Do For
You
Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will
convince anyone. You will also receive
a oooklet of valuable information, tell
ing all about the kidneys and bladder.
When writing, be sure and mention the
Atlanta Semi-weekly Journal. Regular
50 cents and one dollar size bottles for
sale at all drug stores.— (Advt.)
President-Elect Addresses the
Chicago Commercial Club
Which Is Attended by Many
Millionaires and Packers
^Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
CHICAGO, Jan. 11.—Before an audi
ence of 200 Commercial club banquet
ers, who included the principal mon
eyed men of Chicago, President-elect
Woodrow Wilson tonight expounded his
doctrine of “new freedom,” and told his
audience that they ought to conduct
their business honestly, in compliance
with the law and with the sense of
"mercy and justice.”
Governor Wilson’s theme was “The
Relations Between Business and Gov
ernment.” He plainly indicated that
business need not expect to be let
alone if it was engaged in using or
striving to use the government to., get
specie, help and particular favors.
The functions, of government, he de
clared, was to serve mankind and not
any class or party. He said all con
nection that retarded that end must be
broken.
The president-elect arrived in Chicago
to find the city in a turmoil of excite
ment over the efforts, of the two Demo
cratic -actions to get his ear and gain
his support in the contest between the
Hearst-Harrison faction and the Roger
Sullivan faction for two United States
s^natorships and control of the state
Democratic machinery.
To avoid unpleasantness, Governor
w'ilson left his train at Englewood, on
the south si£e, met the reception com
mittee of the Chicago Commercial club,
and was taken to the North Side, ten
miles, in an automobile, to the home of
David R. Jones, one of Wilson’s school
mates and former Princeton trustee.
Governor Wilson made known at once
that he did not desire to be drawn into
tho political feud, and as a result,
neither faction made an effort to reach
him.
At the Jones home Governor Wilson
had a long visit with Charles R. Crane,
chairman of the finance committee in
the Democratic campaign. He had not
seen Crane since election. The presi
dent-elect declared afterward that he
had talked with Crane as he had talked
with other Democrats at Trenton, for
the purpose of getting his “information
and opinions.”
Crane, r/ho has frequently been men
tioned as a cabinet possibility or min
ister to China, is not affiliated with
either Democratic faction in Illinois.
DECEMBER WAS GOOD
MONTH ON PANAMA CANAL
(By Associated. Press.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11.—Kxcavation
from the Panama canal last month was
2.815,816 cubic yards as against 2.505.358
cubic yards in November, while the
average daily output in December was
112,623 cubfc yards as' against 104,390
in the month preceding. The amount
of concrete laid in December was 62,907
cubic yards as against 55,078 cubic
yards in November* During the month
196,426 cubic yards of fill were placed
in the dam against"248,630 cubic yards
in November. Decreased rainfall and
one more working day thap in Novem
ber were responsible for the higher con
struction record last month.
SUING AND TALKING
CAT PUZZLES SCIENTISTS
Cat Sings in Perfect Tone and
Pronounces Six Words Dis
tinctly
(By Associated Press.}
HAMBURG, Jan. 11.—German scien
tists have a new problem in Peter, a
singing and talking tom cat. Today
sc era. of the leading wise men of
merman called on the cat’s owner to ob-
s_rve a demonstration of the feline’s re
markable talents.
Peter’s owner is Dr. Sutoris. .a woman
dentists, and many witnesses confirm
her statement that Peter talks and sings.
“More, hurrah, no, enough, Anna, and
Helen, at present form Peter’s vocabu
lary, spoken in the best high German
dialect.
Employing the syllibal “lah” after the
practice of all the really great prima
donnas, Peter sings in perfect tone and
hormony the music of three German pop
ular songs of the day.
Peter has no pedigree. As a stray
kitten, ,lean and hungry, he Was picked
up on one of the docks.
500 MOORS KILLED IN
BATTLE WITH FRENCH
Twelve French Soldiers Slain
in Conflict East of
Mogadsr
(By Associated Press.)
MOGADOR, Morocco, Jan. 10.—A
French column today fought a severe
battle with a large body of Moors, whom
they routed wtih a loss of 500 killed.
Twelce French soldiers were killed
and sixty wounded.
The Moors attacked the French troops
twenty miles east of Magador, where
they were guarding the lines of com
munication into South Morocco.
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AT
BULGARIA'S FRONTIER
Warning Issued to Bulgaria
About Boundary Lines
She Maintains
PARIS. Jan. 10.—Roumania decided
today to mobolize her army if she does
not obtain within forty-eight hours sat
isfaction from Bulgaria in regard to the
rectification of her frontier, according
to a dispatch from Bucharest to the
Temps.
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ECZEMA
Moultrie Women Meet
MOULTRIE, Ga., Jan. 10.—-This aft
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Worth While club, Moultrie’s leading
women’s club, will be installed and the
various committees for the year will
be appointed. Mrs. T. W. Mattox is
the new president of the organization
and ihe members look for a most pi*os-
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read by every one who is Interested in the
cure of weakness and disease.
Dr. Hathaway A Co. are old, reliable *pe-
ciallata and you can depend upon what they
tell you. If you have a weakness or disease,
write them at once for a book and symptom
blank. They will be glad to carefully examine
your case and tell you how to get well. Con.
saltation free. Address—
DR. HATHAWAY & CO.,
37 Inman Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
in 15 Days
New Way Home Treatment
I n stantly
Successful
I don’t care h#w
thin you are, how
old you are, how
fallen and flaccid
are the lines of
your figure or
how flat your
chest is I can
give you a full,
firm, youthful
bust quickly, that
will be the envy
of your fellow- '
women and will
give you the al-
hirements of a The (harm Of 8 Full,
hood that wiii be Firm Bust Is Worth More
irr They“ay there <0 I WoiMII Than 2»«H)
is nothing new
under the sun, but I have perfected a treat
meut that I want to share with my sisters.
What it did for me It can and will do for you.
and I now offer it to you.
Others offer to build up your figure with
drugs, greasy skin foods, creams, dieting, mas
sage and expensive instruments and devices.
I have done away with all theaa injurious meth
ods and have given a legion of women a ltix-
| uriant natural development by a treatment
j never before offered the public. No massaging,
' nothing to take, nothing to wear.
Why he skinny, sorawny, flat and unat-
j tractive! I claim to be the highest priced
' artist’s model in the United States, and
what I did for myself I can do for you.
I don’t care what your age may be. I ask
only vhat you be at least sixteen and not an
invalid, and I will ^undertake to develop your
bust in two weeks. All I ask is five or ten
minutes of your time every day.
Write to Me Today for My Treatment
It will only cost you a penny for a post
card and I will mail you this wonderful
information in a plain cover so that no
one will know your secret.
Don’t let a false pride and a silly sense of
shame keep you from enjoying to the full the
charms you should have to be a perfect speci
men of womanhood. Let me help you. Your
communication shall be held in absolute con
fidence and secrecy. Write me today.
ELOISE RAE
1325 Michigan Avenue, Suite 2591, Chicago, Ill.
RUPTURED
FREE toe
TRIAL OF PLAPAO
Awarded Gold Medal and Diploma Oyer
All Competitors, International Expe
dition, Home, and Grand Prix, Parts.
STUART’S PLAPAO-PADS are a wonderful
treatment for rupture, curing as they do the
worst forms in the privacy of the homo with
out hindrance from work and at slight expense.
RUPTURECURED
by STUART’S PLAPAO-PADS means
that you can throw away the painful truss
altogether, as the Plapao-Pads are made to
cure rupturo and not simply to hold it; but
as they are mado self-adhesive, and when
adhering closely to the body slipping is im
possible, therefore, they are also an important
factor in retaining rupture that cannot bo
held by a truss. NO STRAPS, BUCKLES OR
SPRINGS. Soft as Velvet;—Easy to Apply.
Plapao Laboratories, Block 187 gt. Louis, Me,,
is sending FREE trial Plapao to all who write*
Avoid Blends! Send us your order for
Hayner BOTTLED-IN-BOND Whiskey
You KNOW it is good and pure—the Government’s
Green Stamp over the cork is your protection.
LADIES. send us your name and address, plainly
written, and we will mail ynu postpaid, on credit, 16
boxes Thompson's Toilet and Complexion
Cream to dispose of among friends at 25 cents a box
When sold remit us the four dollars, and we will
promptly send you for your trouble Eight (four pair)
Nottingham Lace Curtains, nearly three yards
long. Ladies, write us at once for the 16 boxes Cream
CHAS. B. THOMPSON
Lace Dept. 463 Bridgewater, Conn.
1 AM FREE—YOU CAN BE FREE! A Dandy Tailor Mat/0
'" ~ SUIT THEE
My catarrh was filthy and loathsome. IP
made me ill. It dulled my mind. It under-,
mined my health a.'d was weakening my will.'
The hawking, coughing, spitting made ine ob
noxious to all, and my foul breath and disgust
ing habits made even my loved ones avoid me
secretly. My delight in life was dulled and
my faculties impaired. I knew that in time it
would bring me to an untimely grave, because
every moment of the day and night It was
slowly yet surely sapping my vitality.
But I found a cure, and I am ready to tell
you about It FREE. Write me promptly.
RISK JUST ONE CENT
Send no money. Just your name and address
on a postal card: Say, “Dear Sam Katz: Please
tell me how you cured your catarrh and how
i can cure mine.” That’s all you need to say.
I will understand, and I \will write to you
with complete information, FREE, at once.
Do not delay. Send the postal card or write
me a letter today. Don’t think of turning
this page until you have asked for tills won
derful treatment that can do for you what it
has done for me.
SAM KATZ, Suite 578,
1325 Michigan Ave. Chicago, Bl.
Wo Pay Express ea
Everything.
And More Money Than
You Ever Mado Before
P ROSPEBITT—your prosperi
ty—Is here to stay. Here Is
your chance — a chance to
look prosperous and be prosper
ous, and all free.
Our .
Startling Offer
Our local sales managers are the real
money makers in the tailoring business.
They ci in dollars where others ere
scrambling for pennies. You want to
bo one of our men and we went you.
That’s why we start you right with the
awellcflt, best fitting, classy suit
you can ever put on your back.
And it is f reo—wc even pay expressage.
A Postal Card Brings All
including our bigoutflt, books, samples
and everything you need and full par
ticulars. Don t wait—we need more
men and are making special induce
ments. Get busy. Just a ponny posts',
card brings everything,
Pajwon Tailoring Co,,
Dept. 106,
CHICAGO
N O MATTER what
others may promise
—no matter how
tempting their offers may
seem—see if they offer
Bottled-in-Bond whiskey
—and remember—there
is only one way you can
be sure of getting pure,
straight whiskey — and
that is to insist on
Bottled-in-Bond.
That’s what we offer you—Hay'
ner Private Stdck Bottled-in-
Bond Whiskey — rich, pure
and delicious — shipped in
sealed case—Direct from Dis
tillery—and all it costs you is
$3.20 for FOUR full quarts—
express charges paid.
There’s no question about a
whiskey like this—the Gov
ernment’s Green Stamp over
the cork is your assurance that
it is Bottled-in-Bond—fully
aged, full 100% proof, full
measure — and a guarantee
that it comes to you just as
it left the distillery, in all its
original purity and goodness.
Note the price—only 80 cents a quart—de-
livered. Where else can you buy a Bottled-
in-Bond whiskey of this magnificent quality
at this price.
FULL *4
WKSj
20 w !
flAYNEfc
WHISKEY’
BOTTLED IN BONO.
DSTU-INS CO****
— etHtutUnffmnnrt —,
eS
you _
TRY this whiskey
on our guarantee
you will find it all we
claim—as fine as you
ever tasted —and the
best value you ever saw
—or you may send it
back at our expense—
and we will return your
money.
Remember—you take no
chances. We take all the risk—and
we stand all the expense if we fail
to please you.
No letter is necessary—*
Cut Out and use this Coupon
and address our nearest office
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO.
Enclosed find 83.20 for which send
me FOUR full quart bottles of
Hayner Private Stock Bottled-in-
Bond Whiskey—express paid —an
per your offer. It Is understood
that If this whiskey is not found
as represented and satisfactory to
me In every way, it may be returned
at your expense—and my W.to 1* to
be promptly refunded. C**2R
Orders for Aria., Cal., Colo.. Idaho, Monu. Nev.,
N. Mex., Ore.. Utah, Wash, or Wyo. must be on tb*
basis of 4 quarts for $4.00 by Express Prepaid or 2f
quarts for $15.20 by Freight Prepaid. t-N
THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY, DeptG-26
DISTILLERY
TROY, OHIO
Established 1868
Dayton, 0. St.Lrals. Mo. Kansas City, Mo. Boston, Mass.
St. Paul, Mian. New Orleans, La. Jackson trine, Fla.
CAPITAL
•"area* I