Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, January 28, 1913, Image 8

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... - 8 THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1913. C. P, Long, Wealthy Wholesale Liquor Dealer of Jackson ville, Kills Miss Susan Brown and Commits Suicide (Special Dispatch to Teo Journal. > JACKSONVILLE, Fla.. Jan. 2b Broken pieces of a champagne glass, shattered over the office floor, where only a few 'moments before Charles P. Long, a wholesale liquor, dealer of this city, and Miss Susan Brown, a beautiful divorcee, of Wilmington, Del., had pledged each other’s toast, probably pos sesses the only knowledge of the motive which prompted Long to fire three bul lets into his companion’s body, and then end his own life with one of the remain ing cartridges. A late dinner in a road house on a famous boulevard of Duvall county, near the St. Johns river, where wine flows as freely as the* strains of music from the rustic band stands, an early meeting Sat urday morning in Long’s town office, the champagne toast. the shattered fragments of glass and the revolver shots form the only history of the tragedy. \ Friends of Long say that he had visit ed the “Half-way house’’ Friday night' with Miss Brown and that they had much wine. None of Long’s friends who have been seen Saturday had seen Long and his companion after they had left them in the road house. It is understood that wine was freely served at the dinner. HEARD SHOTS FIRED. The first intimation of the pitiful cli max came early Saturday morning when the shots were heard in Long’s town office. Occupants of the building who rushed in found Long and Miss Brown both dead. A smoking. revolver was tightly clutched in Long’s hand. Only one car tridge remained. Four shots had been fired, three hitting the woman and the fourth entering Long’s head. Nearby lay the splintered bits of the cham pagne glass. Invisible Aeroplane Is Latest Discovery Of U. S. .Signal Corps (By Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.—Invisible aeroplanes with great stability because of a slight change in th^ adjustment of the biplanes soon will be available to the war department as the result of discoreries made by officers of the sig nal corps. The “invisible’ material Is liquid and is molded into shape out it is said to be lighter and stronger than canvas and to be adaptable to any description of frame. The war department expects soon to make public the discovery. The invisible aeroplane In time of war is regarded by army officers as of incalculable value. With the new ma terial they believe that a heavier than air machine would be virtually indis- ^in^gishg^g^St 500 feet, a much near- lit to an enemy’s position than any aviator probably would essay un der present conditions. This invisibil ity and the use of a muffler on the aeroplane’s motor, in the belief of of ficers, would render the heavier than air machine one of the most silent and deadly engines of cTestruction, besides making it invaluable for scouting pur poses. WEATHER BRINGS FLOOD LETTERS TO FORECASTER (Bv Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.—Unseason ably warm and wet weather in all parts of the country has caused a flood of correspondence to pour in on Prof. Wil lis L. Moore, of the weather bureau. A young woman in a small town in Virginia wrote to inquire what the weather would be on tw T o certain days in April, expressing the hope that both would be bright and cheerful. She naively closed her letter with the state ment that she was to be married on the second, day. A youth in New York City wrote for a special forecast as to when there would be ice in the vicinity of his city. He said he had received a new pair of skates as a Christmas present and want ed to try them. Boys with Christmas sleds still un tried. impoverished coal dealers, plumb ers, idle through lack of bursted pipes, and nervous ice dealers who foresee a famine next summer, all are importuning the head of the weather bureau. Prof. Moore has his own troubles, however, for h e pointed out today that inaugura tion day is coming. EIGHT KILLED WHEN DIG STORE CDLLSPSES Store Crowded With Shoppers Crumbles-Fifteen of Injured Still Living (By Associated Press.) McKINNEY, Tex., Jan. 24.—The ruins of the department store which collapsed here late yesterday gave up no more bodies during the early hours of salvage work today. The death / list was eight and the injured fifteen. Searchers who examined the ruins said there could not possibly be more than two or three bodies stir, buried and the chances were there would be no more dead. The debris will be cleared late today. Several hours* inquiry about McKin ney, which is a small town, developed the fact that no one has been reported missing except those already in the list of dead and injured. Most of the injured escaped without either serious hurts or thrilling expe riences. How the exaggerated stories of scores cf women and children shoppers caught under the walls came to be believed so thoroughly by all the rescuers and by eye-witnesses who sturdily stood by these reports for hours until the ground had been cleared, is partly explained by the remarkable excitement which this disaster caused, not only in McKin ney, but in a large section of Texas. The fact that the store was filled with shoppers seems to be well established. What no one among the observers saw apparently was the rush of the shop pers out of doors and to safety when the walls crackled. Today there was a different version of the story of how H. A. Kistler res cued his little daughter, his wife and his mother-in-law. Kistler first dug out the little girl, a*s reported last night, and carried her across the street. The little girl then told him where she thought her mother and grandmother coilld be found. Kistler went back and by following the child’s directions, found the two elder women and released them. None of the Kistlers was seriously hurt. The manner in which the news of the disaster broke helped to react on McKinney and keep up the exagger ated reports. Within twenty minutes after the collapse leased press wires and frantic telephone calls had carried the news to every city in Texas. Immedi ately thousands of persons began wiring and telephoning McKinney, where the mayor and other well known men gave assurances that the death list was big. The mayor said he was sure it was thir ty-five. Other men with reputations for conservatism asserted it would be fifty or sixty. The immediate result was a tremen dous pressure of excitement converging on McKinney from all sections of Texas. Nearby towns sent special cars and trains. Hotels overflowed, restaurants ran out of food and private homes were opened to accommodate the crowds who came from other sections of the state to see or to help. Dr. J. E. Knight crawled under the ruins and by means of wet sponges and restoratives kept Miss Lula Searcy, a clerk, alive for an hour until a res cuing party reached her. She will re cover. Her sister, Eva, was killed. Fire broke out immediately after the building collapsed but was extin guished within an hour. The dead: ROSA WELCH. MISS KATIE MILLIGAN. MISS BESSIE WADE. RUSSELL HEIGHT, four years old. N. R. PRESLEY, clerk. MRS. MARY STIFF, clerk. MISS EVA SEARCY, clerk. The last two died after being removed from tlie wrecked building. DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOL MEET AT COLUMBUS (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) COLUMBUS, Ga„ Jan. 25.—The high school executive committee of the Fourth Congressional district is hold ing an important meeting in Columbus this afternoon, with representatives from all sections present. The main business of the session is the arrange ment of contests for literary, music, spelling and athletics. The general dis cussing of high school courses, methods of teaching, etc., and other matters per taining to the schools will be in order and much interest is felt in the gath ering. PRISONERS ESCAPE FROM JAIL HOSPITAL (By Associated Press.) MOBILE, Ala., Jan. 25.—Eleven of fourteen prisoners, confined in the hos pital section of the Mobile county jail, escaped at an early hour this morning by breaking a padlock on the grating of a window and sliding to the ground by aid of a rope improvised from bedding. Two were recaptured almost immedi ately and a systematic search is being conducted by deputy sheriffs ’for the other nine. 7 SGDLD CROSS, See if tongue is coated, stom ach sour and bowels waste- clogged Children dearly love to take delicious “Syrup of Figs” and nothing else cleans and regulates their tender little stom achs, liver and 30 feet of bowels so promptly and thoroughly. Children get bilious and constipated just like grown-ups. Then they get sick, the tongue is coated, stomach sour, breatL bad, they don’t cat o;* rcat well; they become feverish, cross, irritable and don’t want to play. L*sten, Moth ers—for your child’s sake, don’t force the little one to swallow nauseating cas tor oil, violent calomel or harsh irri tants like Cathartic pills. A teaspoon ful of Syrup of Figs will have' your child 'smiling and happy again in just a few hours. Syrup of Figs will gently clean, sweeten and regulate the stomach, make the liver active and move on and out of the bowels all the constipated matter, the sour bile, the foul, clogged- up waste and poisons, without causing cramps or griping. With Syrup of Figs you are not drug ging or injuring your children. Being compose 1 entirely of luscious figs, senna and aromatics it can not be harmful. Full directions for children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the package. Ask your druggist for the full name “Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna,” prepared by the California Fig Syrup Co. This is the delicious tasting, gen uine old reliable. Refuse anything else offered.—(Advt.) - FIVE WIDE TIPPERS IRE INDICTED IN CHICAGO Indictments Came After Judge Landis Had Called Story a "Frame Up” CHICAGO, Jan. 24.—Five men, alleg ed to be wiretappers and confidence men, involved in the defense of the Kirby Savings bank scandal, were in dicted yesterday by the grand jury. The indictments against the men who Dr. William T. Kirby, head of the defunct 'private institution, sa+d swin dled him out of $20,000 of the missing funds, came as a climax to many sen sations brought out in the United States district court. Judge K. M. Landis adjudged Dr. Kirby and his wife, Mrs. Margaret L. Kirby, guilty of contempt, gave them an indeterminate sentence in jail and pronounced the “wiretapper” story a “frame up,” and the entire defense a “mess of perjury.” Those indicted were: Daniel F. Kinnally, cigar dealer; Charles Kissell, alleged to have brought Dr. Kirby to a “pool room in Michigan avenue;” John H. Strosnider, represent ed by the defense as the “wiretapper;” John Snorley, represented as the “door man” to the pool room,' and Patrick Kane, reported as the man who rented the “pool room.” FALSE FIRE ALARMS KEEP QUITMAN BUSY QUITMAN, Ga., Jan. 25.—Mayor Jelks is offering a reward of $10 for informa tion as to who turns in the false fire alarms that have kept the new fire de partment on the run all this week, and has announced that the offenders when caught will be given thirty days on the streets without the option of paying a fine. The new automobile fire truck and the paid fire department have been in existence a month, and in that time there has not been a fire, but almost every night an alarm is turned in from some quarter and the department re sponds in quick order only to find that a joke has been played. It is believed a band of young white boys are guilty of this mischief. MOST OF PHILIPPINE PRINTERS ARE NATIVES WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.-The evolu tion of the personnel of the bureau of printing of the Philippines, from an all-American force in 1902 to one con taining 94 per cent of Filipinos, is the basis of a report by John S. Leech, di rector of the institution. Of this na tive element, apprentices constitute 63.63 per cent. Mr. Leech says the shop is grading workmen who would be a credit to their trade in any country. By a system of instruction in.office organiza tion and management the more promis ing apprentices are being fitted for po sitions requiring administrative and ex ecutive ability. Send us a tridt order NOW for JIf HAYNER BOTTLED-IN-BOND WHISKEY ft HpHIS is the ideal whiskey for the home ^ —rich, pure, delicious—guaranteed to please in every way—or your money hack. FtJLL$> QUARTS < Insist On Bottled-in-Bond Be particular in your selectionavoid blends and compounds — and remember there is only one way you can be SURE of .getting absolutely pure, straight whis key and that is to insist on BOTTLED- IN-BOND. That’s What We Offer You Hayner fine, old Private Stock Bottled-in- Bond Whiskey—shipped in strong, sealed case—direct from distillery to you—and all it costs you is $3.20 for FOUR full quarts—express paid by us. There Is No Question — about a whiskey like this—you KNOW it is good and pure—the U. S. Government’s official Green Stamp over the cork is your assurance that it is bottled-in-bond, fully aged, full 100% proof and full measure. Nowhere Else Can You Do So Well Blends and compounds can be had any- where and at any price—but when it comes to BOTTLED-IN-BOND—Hayner Whiskey has no equal. How Can We Do It? We sell our entire product direct from Distillery to Consumer—thus saving you all the profit of the middleman and dealer —and giving you this fine old whiskey at the distiller’s price. Send Us Your Order— Try this whiskey—at our risk and on our guarantee—you will find it as fine a whis key as you ever tasted and the best value- you ever bought—or you may send it back at our expense and we will return your money without a word. You Take No Chances Our guarantee is fair and square — it means what it says—we must send you a quality that will strike you as rich, pure, delicious—pleasing in every way—and we will do it No letter isjnettessary— Cut Out and -Use This Coupon and address our nearest office pimniuiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiitfimiiitimititiiiiiiiu THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY | Enclosed find 13.20 for which send me FOUR full | quart bottles of Hayner Private Stock Bottled-ln- g Bond Whiskey—express paid—as per your offer It 5 Is understood that if this whiskey Is not found as S represented and satisfactory to me In every way. It § may be returned at your expense—and my 83.20 1$to ? be promptly refunded. Name.. M-26 Address No oi dors filled for less than 4 quarts. ■iiinrnmu ADDRESS OUR NEAREST OFFICE laytOB, 0. Boston, Hass. Distillery at Troy, Ohio Orders for Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada. New Mexico. Oregon. Utah. Washington or Wyo- mlng must be on the basis of 4 Quarts for 84.00 by Express Prepaid or 20 Quarts for 815.20 by Freight Prepaid. 13-N '//tfglliii ,,, Kwfcniiiiiii lliiliii lirrMtoni UHHfuuHiinitviairnu n 1111111111111 GUARANTEED UNDER THE FOOO AMO DRUGS ACT JUNE 30 1906 SERIAL NO. KOI ffAYNBb 1 f>RIVATESl«CK v WHISKEY bottled in BOND THe hayner DISTILLING COMPANY D|s TILIERY KO.3 IU DISTRICT. TROY, OHIO- Sr 0fncts m SHIPPING OCPOTJ** BOSTON, r p.,?*** C| TY. HO. JACKSONVlUt.f 1 ^ DAYTON. OHIO. NtWOHU^L THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO., Dept. M-26 St. Louis, Mo. Kansas City, Mo. St. Paul, Minn. ESTABLISHED 1866 New Orleans, La. Jacksonville, Fla# Capital $500,000.00 Full Paid PANIC CAUSED Bf TDD Y BUS, SAYS SCHIFF N, Y, Banker Writes Letter to Pujo—Rockefeller to Tes tify Soon (By Associated Prow.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 24.—To refute the contention that a group of 180 men in the world of finance, tnrough inter locking directorates, control corpora tion assets aggregating $25,000,000,000/ Henry P. Davison, partner of J. P. Morgan, today offered to tfie house money trust investigating committee *- long prepared statement calculated to controvert statistics prepared by the committee’s accountants and put into the record for the purpose of showing such a condition. , Mr. Davison offered his statement at the conclusion of his testimony and the committee decided to deliberate wheth er to admit it. The document reviews the inferences drawn from the commit tee’s tables and says in part. CONTROL DOES’NT EXIST. “No such control exists and no such deduction can be properly made from these tables. Those who have made such deductions have fallen into sev eral obvious errors. “They failed to observe, first, that of the total number of directors In these particular corporations this ‘group’ repres’ents only about one-quarter. “Second, that, upon this assumption, these men, in order to exercise ‘control* must act and vote in every instance as a unit although they come’rrom differ ent parts of the country and represent diverse and frequently conflicting in terests. “Third, that, upon this assumption, the directors outside of this ‘group* must be mere dummies, with no voice or opinion of their own, who, in almost every instance, are overruled' by a mi nority. f inally, that this mim of $25,000,- 000,000 is not actual cash or liquid as sets, the fact of course, being that the great bulk of this enormous sum is, and for many years has been, tied up in the form of rights-of-way, rails, ties, equipment, factories, plants, tools, man ufactured "goods and other forms of corporate property necessary for car rying on railroad and industrial busi ness in the country. REGRET ABLE AN» HARMFUL. “It is most regretable and harmful that either congress or the country at large should gain the wholly errone ous impression that these great re sources are at the disposal of a small group of men or that the corporations themselves are controlled by a minori ty of their various boards. “The great accumulation of money and credits in New York, is due in part to purely economic conditions and In part to the defects of our banking sys tem. If this country possesed a proper and scientific banking system, such as is possessed by almost every other civ ilized nation, interior banks would no longer be obliged to concentrate their ‘reserves’ in New York.” " s “In this connection it is right to note that, according to authoritative statistics, the country as a whole has been growing so rapidly that, whereas in 1900 New York City banks repre sented 23.2 per cent of the banking re sources of the United States now they represent only 18.9 per cent of such re sources. “As to the concentration and co-opera tion of banking Institutions, which has been noted in New, York and in only less degree in Chicago and other financial centers, this has taken place chiefly since 1907. ALL YOU NEED IS II CASGARET TONIGHT No Headache, Bilious Stom ach or Constipated Bowels by Morning Turn the rascals out—the headache, the biliousness, the indigestion, the sick, sour stomach and foul gases—turn them out tonight and keep them out with Cas- carets. Millions of men and women take a Cas- caret now and then and never know the misery caused by a lazy liver, clogged bowels 6r an upset stomach. Don’t put in another day of distress. Let Cascarets cleanse and regulate your stomach; remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and that misery-making gas; take the excess bile from your liver and carry out of the system all the con stipated waste matter and poison In the intestines and bowels. Then you will feel great. A Cascaret tonight will surely straight en you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from any drug store means a clear heda, sweet stomach and clean, healthy liver and bowel action for months. Children love to take Cascarets because they taste good—never gnjpe or sicken.—(Advertise ment.) — (Advt.') Pelted With Eggs He Tried to Steal As His Penalty (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Jan. 25.— Unusual punishment k was meted out by four grown nien to dtto Richter this morning when he was caught in the act of stealing eggs from a pail in the St. Petersburg milk depot. Instead of having Richter arrested, the owner and his manager and two helpers made him stand out in the middle of the floor and pelted him with eggs till he was in a pitiful plight. They said that they did not care to push the case in the courts, but wanted to fix him so that he would have to go home to his wife. His wife knew that something was wrong and she made him tell her. Richter is a well known furniture dealer and well fixed. He has inserted an ad in the paper announcing a closing out sale, and says that he will leave the city as soon as possible. The n>en in the depot have suspected that he was stealing eggs for some time. IE This Means the Election of a Republican United States Senator (By Associated Press.) CHEYENNE, Wyo.. Jan. 25.—Voting over contested seats in the lower’ house of the Wyoming legislature today re sulted in a victory for Representative Fisher, a Republican. Two seats remain to be voted upon. Right of Republicans to these seats have been favorably re ported by a majority of the elections committee. Adoption of this report would mean the retention of a Republican majority on joint ballot and the almost certain re-election of United States Senator F. E. Warren. WITH SINGLETREE IN FIGHTOVER DEBT Justice of Peace C, H, Wal ker, of Meansville District, Fractures Skull of W- R- Heard, a Farmer (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) MEANSVILL3, Ga.. Jan. 25.—Brand,-, lshing a heavy singletree, which he grabbed from a wagon nearby, Judge C. H. Walker, Justice of the peace of District No. 551, and a prominent cit izen of this county, fractured the skull of W. R. Heard, a farmer, in ''a fight yesterday afternoon, over a small ac count. Heard died Saturday morning at 7 o’clock. Judge Walker was arrested this morning and placed in jail. He will be given a commitment trial Saturday afternoon or Monday morn ing, and will probably be allowed bail. Judge Walker claims self-defense. He says that Heard was advancing on him with a wedge. He told him to stop, and Heard hurled the wedge at him, barely missing him. When Heard continued to advance, Walker seized the singletree and struck Heard over the head twice, fracturing his skull both tiThes. Heard lived about three miles from Meansville. return there in a few days. Whether Mr. Rockefeller intended to; return north to be examined by repre sentatives of the Pujo committee could not be ascertained. Stops Tobacco Habit In One Hay Sanitarium Publishes Tree Book Show ing How Tobacco Habit Can Be Banished in From One to Five Days at Home. The Elders Sanltarum, located at 640 Main 1 Rt., St. Joseph, Mo., has published a free bookj showing the deadly effect of the tobacco habit I and how It can be banished in from one to flvef days at home. M<V who have used, tobacco for more than fifty years have tried this method and say It is entirely successful, and in addition to banish ing the degiro for tobacco has improved their health wonderfully. Tills method banishes the desire for tobacco, no matter whether It Is smok ing, chewing, cigarettes or snuff dipping. As this book Is being distributed free, anyone want ng a copy should send their name and address at once.—(Advt.) ROCKEFELLER AGAIN CONCEALS WHEREABOUTS BRUNSWICK, Ga., Jan. 24.—After a visit of only a day at Jekyl island, to inspect his winter home which is being remodeled William Rockefeller and party left late yesterday afternoon. It is understood his destination was Palm Beach, Fla., although officials on the island claimed he was expected to FREE THE RUPTURED! TRIAL OF PLAPAO Awarded Gold Medal and Diploma Over All Competitors, International Expo- sitlon, Home, and Grand Prix, Paris.' STUART’S PLAPAO-PADS are a -wonderful! treatment for rupture, curing as they do the! worst forms in the privacy of the home with- , out hindrance from work and at slight expense. RUPTUREGURED by STUART’S PLAPAO • PADS means i that you can throw away the painful truss, altogether, as the Plapao-Pads are made toj euro rupture and not simply to hold it; but! as they are made self-adhesive, and when i adhering closely to the body slipping is im possible, therefore, they are also an important! factor in retaining rupture that cannot bo held bv a truss. NO STRAPS, BUCKLES OR[ SPRINGS. Soft as Velvet—Easy to Apply. Plapao Laboratories, Block 137 St. Louis, Mo.,i Is sending FREE trial Plapao to all who write.' 101 KEGS OF GOLD COINS SHIPPED TO BUENOS AYRES, S.A. (By Associated Press.) NEW YORK, Jan. 25.—The largest shipment of gold ever made to South America on one steamer is said to be that leaving today on the steamship Verdi, whose cargo included 101 kegs, each about eighteen inches long and twelve inches in diameter, filled with half eagles, eagles and double eagles. Fifteen armed guards were stationed about the ship while the cargo was be ing loaded. The total amount of the shipment is $l>,050,000. tc was said that this shipment completes a total of $300,000,000 in gold to South Amer ica. The present consignment goes to Buenos Ayres and Rio Janeiro. FREE TO THE RUPTURED A Simple Home Method that Anyone Can Use Without Operation, Pain, Danger or Loss of Time. DON’T SEND ANY MONEY You don’t want to jjo through life continually harassed and chafed by trusses. You want to be fr«ed from the evei present danger of strangulation. What you want is a cure that will end all danger, embarrassment and expense from rupture for the rest of your life and this Is the purpose ol my remarkable free offer to ruptured people. I have a new Method I want you to try at my expense Fill out and mail the coupon below TO-DAY. My free and generous offer includes a full brochure with proof treatment and other essentials, together with valuable information proving that rupture is curable WITHOUT OPERATION. No matter whether you have single, double or navel rup ture or one following an operation, you should mail the coupon below with full address to-day. No matter how old you are or how hard you work, do not delay accepting my free offer. No matter whether you are a man, woman or child, this Is the one offer and opportunity you must not neglect. No matter even if you consider your case hopeless, it is your duty to yourself and family to find out how much my free offer and Method can do for you. WE PAY THE FREIGHT Direct from the Manufacturer A Wonderful Paint Offer If any of your buildings need painting, write at once for our free paint sample offer. We sell the best ready mixed paint in the world at lowest prices ever heard of—65/ a ? allon for the best Barn Paint, $1.15 a gallon or the finest House Paint in quantities. We pay the freight charges. Guaranteed For Ten Year# We furnish full directions how to do any job. and just now vre are making a surprisingly liberal offer. Write at once and get this great paint offer, free shade samples, strong testimonials and valu able paint information. Just say “Send me your latest paint offer.” Address L CROSBY-FRANK & CO., 550 Peon* St., Chica,o. III. $3.50 Recipe Free For Weak Mein Send Name and Address! Today—You Can Have It Free and Be Strong and Vig- I nave In my possession . a prescription fop nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened .man hood, failing memory and la.inr back, brought on by excesses, unnatural drains, of the fol lies of youth, that has cured so many worn and nervous men right in their own homes— without any additional help or medicine—that I think every man who wishes to regain Ills manly power and virility, quickly and quietly,! should have a copy. So I have determined to : send a copy of the preparation free of charge, j In a plain, ordinary sealed envelope, to any; man who will write us for It. This prescription comes from a physician who has made a special stndy of men, and I am convinced It Is the surest-acting combination for the cur© of deficient manhood and vigor failure ever put together. I think I owe it to my fellowman to send them a copy In cofifidonce so that any innn anywhere who Is weak and discouraged with repeated failures may stop drugging himself . with harmful patent mcdlqjnes, secure what l >elleve Is the. quickest acting restorative, up- ' miildlng. SPOT-TOUCHING remedy ever do-1 vised, and so cure himself at home quietly and quickly. Just drop me a line like this. Dr. A. K. Robinson, .'1771 Luck Building, De troit, Mich., and I will send you a copy of ^ this splendid recipe In a plain ordinary on- * velope, free of charge. A great many doctor* would charge $3.00 to $5.00 for merely writing out a prescription like this—but I send It en tirely free.—(Advt.) SHERMAN LAW WILL B.E TWICE AMENDED (By Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, Jan. 24.—Recom mendations In favor or several amend ments to the Sherman anti-trust law were practically decided upon today at an executive meeting of the senate in terstate commerce committee, held to discuss a report on the hearings dur ing 1911 and 1912. The commitee re quested Senator Cummins, of Iowa, to prepare its report. The discussion indicated the members were in substantial agreement for an amendment looking to the maintenance of the principle of competition rather than the regulation of monopoly. Practically unanimous opinion sup ported the contention that the present, law as a whole should not be disturbed but that hearings should be in the form of supplemental action. This is inter preted as meaning that all combina tions interferring with competition should be held to be illegal. Differences of opinion arose in con nection with the discussion of the su preme court’s Interpretation to the '‘ef fect that the word “reasonable” should be considered in the law. Mark location of FREE COUPON i Where is Rupture? Ate How long Ruptured? Cut this out. or copy and mail to-day and the pack age will be sent youat once. W. S. Rico, 310-AB Main St., Adam«, N. Y. / •Order HIXLVDQ By ^ Mall Kentucky’s Great Whiskey from Distiller to You on tHal 2 Gallons for $5. 3 for $7.60 or 1 tor $3, chole, ot Rye, Bourbon or Corn Express Prepaid Mjer. Patent lut of Mont., Vr,o„ 0.1o. * N. Vex. To prove Fulton Straight Whiskey is best you need send no money. We ship on 30 days credit, if yon have your merchant or bank guarantee your account. Return if not sat- isfied; if paid for, all mosw refunded. MYERS a COMPANY l Warehouse No. 130 Covington, Ky. m Write foi Book, A Tair Customer, Sealed, Zr MILLEDGEVILLE DUMMY TO CARRY PASSENGERS (■Special Dispatch to The. Journal.) MILLEDGEVILLE. Ga., Jan. 24.— The famous dummy line of Milledge- ville, known legally as the Milledge- ville Railway company, will soon install a regular passenger service over Its lines, according to authentic informa tion now* in circulation. The railway has about eight or ten miles of track and petition has been made to the railroad commission to force passenger service in connection with its freight traffic. The commis sion has advised the officials of the pe tition and they have replied that they would put on service as soon as equip ment could be secured. The commission will wait a reason able time for compliance before issu ing a ruling. The service will virtual ly amount to street car service in the city and passenger service to the state sanitarium. YOUR HEART ^Does it Flutter, Palpitate 1 for Skip Beats? Have you ^Shortness of Breath,Ten- Merncss,Numbness or Pain finji In ,ef8l de,. Dizziness, * Fainting Spoils-Spots be-' fore eyes, Sudeten Starting in sleep, Nervousness, Nightmare, Hungry or Weak Spells, Oppressed Feeling in chest. Choking Sensation in throat, Painful tu lle on left side. Cold Hands or Feet, Diflf-- cult Breathing, Dropsy, Swelling of feet or ankles, or Neuralgia around heart ? «if you have one or more of the above symptoms, don’t failtouseDr. Kinsman’s Guaranteed Heart Tablets, Not a secret or “patent” medicine, lb is said that one out of every four has a weak or diseased heart. Thiee-fourths of these do nob know it, and hundreds hare died after wrongfully treating themselves for the Stomach, Lungs, Kidneys or Nerves, Don’t drop dead when Dr. Kinsman’s Heart Tablets are within your reach. 1000 endorsements furnished. ! FREE TREATMENT COUPON J Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their name and P. O, Address, to Dr, F. G« Kins- | man, Box8u4, Augusta, Maine, will re ceive a box or Heart Tablets for trial by return mail, postpaid, free of charge. Don’t risk death by delay. Write at once—to-day. EXCELSIOR WONDER KNIFE Worth Its Weight in Gold to Every Farmer, Stockman and Sportsman Every Knife Guaranteed This is the handiest and best knife ever manufactured. The illustration shows exact size of the knife. Besides the large blade, which is two and three-fourths inches long, this knife has a smaller punch or reamerl blade two and one-eighth inches long, and cuts round hole, any size, in leather, with ease. Both blades are of finest tempered tool steel, finely ground and polished. You have paid $1.00 or $1.50 for a knife not as good as this one. The EXCELSIOR WONDER KNIFE is built for practical use, not filled with Nic-Nacs, as is the case with most combination knives. Especial care is taken to make the knife sufficiently strong for use of Farmers, Stockmen, Teamsters and Sports men. It is no more clumsy or awkward to carry in the pocket than an ordinary three-bladed knife. The Leather Punch will be found indispensable for making various sized holes in leather for buckles, rivets, belt lacing, etc. The Leather Punch acts as a swedging awl or marlin spike when turned to the left; especially adapted fpr use in lacing belts, untying knots, etc. This knife is a marvel of mechanical ingenuity, embodying every essential element, 'ftz: Simplici ty, Convenience, Durability, Smoothness and Strength. By special arrangements with the manufac turers we are getting this Knife at a price 'where by we can give you one with one yearly sub scription to THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. This is the best bargain of the year. USE THE COUPON BELOW. ;Yl' * J V- ” rajfrawS I Semi-Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga. Enclosed find one dollar. Please send mo The,Semi-Weekly Journal Qne year and mail me postpaid your EXCELSIOR WONDER KNIFE as a premium. Name P. 0. E. F. D. No. State.