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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1913.
NOBQDY KNOWS A SINGLE MAN
CERTAIN OF CABINET POSITION
McCombs, McAdoo, Tumulty,
Malone, Bryan, Mrs. Wilson
and Daughters Admit That
It Is by Them
'Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
NEW YORK, Jan. 29—Here s the
res') positive truth about President
elect Wilson’s cabinet:
Chairman William McCombs doesn't
know who’s going to be it.
Vice Chairman W. G. McAdoo doesn’t
know.
. Joseph H. Tumulty, the. governor’s
secretary, doesn’t know.
. Dudley Field Malone, his closest per
sonal friend, doesn't know.
# United States SeTiator-elect Hughes
does not know.
W. J. Bryan doesn’t know.
Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, his wife,
doesn’t know.
Mici Margaret Wilson, his oldest
ui„ughter, don’t know.
Miss Jessie Wilson, his second daugh-
, ter; doesn’t know.
Miss jJlanore Wilson, his youngest
daughter, doesn’t know.
Not one of the men who will event
ually be in the cabinet knows. And
"Woodrow Wilson himself doesn’t know.
Within the last few days a personal
friend of the Wilson family spent the
evening at the Wilson home in Prince-
,ton. After Governor Wilson had left
tits parlor for a moment to answer the
telephone, Mrs. Wilson said to the vis
itor:
“Do you think Woodro\V is going to
put Mr. Bryan in the cabinet?”
Her real anxiety for definite informa
tion was shown by her words and ex
pression, which reflected clearly the
attitude of mind of Wilson’s own wife,
and daughters. They don’t know
---y are just as curious to find out
as anybody else.
Recently “Billy” Hughes, Wilson's
right-hand man in New Jersey, who haS
just been elected senator and who is
as close to Wilson as any other per
son in the world, visited Trenton for
tbe specific purpose of having Wilson
tell him at least who some of the im
probabilities were, so that he could re
lieve himself of the terrific pressure
that friends of cabinet candidates are
bringing to bear on him in the belief
that he is in Wilson’s confidence.
He left Trenton totally ignorant of
the names Governor Wilson is consider
ing.
“The’clamor of the numerous elements
in congress, who are after cabinet places
and the way they are bearing down on
me, can hardly be imagined,” said
Hughes. “If the governor would only
.Indicate to me the men for whom there
is not the slightest chance, I could head
off twenty candidates, but he won’t give
me a whisper.”
The fact that there has been no Demo-"
cratic cabinet to make up for so long
probably accentuates the persistency of
the efforts of groups of politicians to
get places* for their favorites and makes
the number of candidacies greater than
usual. •
There are prooablq thirty or forty
men whose friends are working night
and day to land them. They are almost
frantic to get some aefinite evidence
of success, but thus far not a single
individual has received any encourage
ment or has the remotest idea where he
stands. Wilson has sent for dozens
of big Democratic leaders and has drain-
" Thern'cTry of information and opinion
about every prominent Democrat they
know, but he has literally told $hem
nothing.
Time and again stories have been
published that Wilson has decided on
this man or that man. Time and again
Democratic leaders high In the confi
dence of the president-elect and in the
councils of the party have 'confidentially
told their friends they knew this or that
man was to be named.
Not a particle of foundation for such
^reports and statements exists. Wilson
saye:
“I have not arrived at any conclusion.
I am looking over the field of choice. I
am taking up one name, thinking it
over and then laying it aside * to take
up another. Any report that I have
reached any decisions is absolutely with
out foundation for tne simple reason
that I have not approached any decision
in my own mind.”
Every bit of evidence indicates that
this is the simple, literal truth. The
most convincing is this:
Not one of*.the persons who would
logically be expected to know who is
going in the cabinet has the remotest
idea, and everyone of them is zealously*
persistently trying to find out.
DUETT AND FARMERS
RAP MONETART STSTEM
7
IS
L
See if tongue is coated, stom
ach sour and bowels waste-
clogged
TO GET PROFITS OF
21
ALL YOU NEED IS A
CASCARET TONIGHT
Delegation From Farmers’ Un
ion Before Currency Re
form Committee
(By Associated Press. >
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.-Farmers’ op
position to the national monetary com
mission’s plan was voiced today by W.
T. Creasy, master of the Pennsylvania
state grande, before the house currency
reform committee. Mr. Creasy told the
committee that Pennsylvania farmers,
and he believed farmers in general, were
“bitterly opposed to the Aldrich scheme.”
“We believe,” he said, “that the big
financiers are much more interested in
yaining control of the curency for them
selves than they are in any effort to se
cure its elasticity.”
Charles S. Barret, of Union City, Ga.,
president of the National Farmers’ union,
with branches in twenty-one states and
over 3,000,000 members, appeared, heading
a delegation including A. C. Davis, Rog
ers, Ark.; Peter Radford, Fort Worth,
Tex., president of the Texas State union;
R. L. Barnett, Paducah, Ky., secretary-
treasurer of Kentucky State union; A. F.
Swift, Baker, Ore., Oregon State union,
and Prof. T. J. Brooks, professor of
markets and economics, Mississippi State
Agricultural and Mechanical college.
Prof. Brooks, spokesman for the Farm
ers’ union delegation, said the farmers
objected to the present monetary sys
tem, because, he said, it led to concen
tration and undue speculation. He sug
gested a system of incorporated clearing
houses.
Farmers need long term loans, Prof.
Brooks said, in order that they may be
come owners instead of tenants. To meet
this need, he proposed that postage sav-.
ings bank depo its be made available
for loans on farm lands, and outlined a
system of landing banks to be operated
entirely separate ffom commercial banks.
SAVANNAH‘TO BUILD
MONUMENT TO HEROES
SAVANNAH, Ga., Jan. 29.—Savanna,h
Chapter D. A. R. has decided to erect
a granite arch at the corner of Ogle
thorpe avenue and Abercorn street—one
of the entrances to the Colonial ceme
tery—in honor of the revolutionary dead
that are buried in the cemetery. The
plan for the memorial has been adopted
and it is expected work will begin on f t
in a short time.
MAN WANTED TO BORROW
$3,000 FROM UNCLE 5AM
(By Associated Press.)
"WASHINGTON, Jan. 29.—“Please
lend me $3,000,” was the modest request
received today by the United States
treasury, in a letter from a-man of
Scottsburg, Va., who was willing to
pledge his lands and all as security. “I
won’t give j'ou any trouble in getting
it back at the proper time,” he added.
The treasury vaults did not swing open,
however.
REPUBLICANS TRY TO
FORCE CONFIRMATIONS
Senate in Executive Session
Over Held-Up Taft Nom
inations
BT RALPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON. Jan. 28.—Tne fight in
the senate over President Taft’s nomi
nations is on in earnest. Immediately
after the senate was called tb order to
day Senator Cullen moved an executive
session which the entire Republican
membership supported. The Democrats
made practically no resistance, but will
confine their efforts to dilatory tactics
in the secret meeting. They are confi
dent they can successfully resist all
efforts to confirm any of the president’s
nominations save those relating to the
army and navy.
The fight was precipitate® today fol
lowing a harmonious caucus of the Re
publicans. This caucus decided to
make a last stand to save the Republi
cans who have been nominated for of
fice by Mr. Taft.
The plan agreed upon is to keep the
senate In executive session continuous
ly, if / possible, until the Democrats
yield or offer a satisfactory Compro
mise. N
The motion Tor an executive sessioii
will be made every morning immediate
ly • the senate meets.
Senator Hoke, a member of the Dem
ocratic patronage committee, probably
reflects the attitude of the minority in
regard to the patronage fight. He iti
not greatly concerned over the outcome.
“It will be necessary for tne Repub
licans to keep a quorum at all times,
otherwise we will hold open sessions
or adjourn the senate,” said Smith to
day. “There is no disposition among
the Democrats to obstruct legislation,
but if tyie Republicans are willing to
assume the responsibility in their de
sire to perpetuate thousands of Repuc-
licans in office under a Democratic ad
ministration we can not help it.”
Children dearly love to take delicious
“Syrup qf- 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,
breath bad, they don’t eat or rest well;
they become feverish, cross, irritable
and don’t want to play. Listen, 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 Ifcive 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, dogged-
up waste and poisons, without causing
cramps or griping.
With Syrup of Figs you are not drug
ging or. injuring your children. Being
compose! 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.)
CONFEDERATE VETS DON’T
ENTHUSE OVER SICKLES
Mrs, Longstreet’s Offer Arous
es Them to Say He Is a
South-Hater.
Little, if any, encouragement has been
'accorded by the Confederate Veterans in
Atlanta to Mrs. Helen D. Longstreet, in
her announced intention to go out among
the ‘ragged and * maimed followers of
Lee” and raise the $23,476’ which is re
quired to save General Daniel E. Sickles,
the aged Union soldier from the New
York jail.
A Confederate veteran Wednesday
mornnig stated that General Sickles al
ways has been and is now the unrelent
ing foe of the south. This veteran said
that the old general continually nurses
his bitterness against this section, and
neevr loses an opportunity to give unkind
utterance to hostile sentiments. It was
pointed out that in the recent presiden
tial campaign Theodore Roosevelt, the
candidate of the Progressive party, felt
called upon to apologize * for General
Sickles’ bitter comment on Woodrow
Wilson, which remarks were based on
the fact that Governor Wilson was a
southerner.
Captain W. H. Harrison, adjutant of
Atlanta camp, No. 159, United Confeder
ate Veterans, offers the following sugges
tion for relieving General Sickles’ serious
embarrassment:
‘‘‘Inasmuch as the people of the south,
including the Confederate veterans, have
contributed to the support and relief of
the veterans of the north as much, or
more, than $60,000,000 for army in pensions
since 1866 why not take from the $160,-
000,000 appropriated for 1913 the small sum
needed* to make good General Sicklbs’
shortage with the state of New York?
“By takingGt from this fund the entire
south will contribute to his relief. Some
of the veterans are doubtless willing to
aid in this movement, but they are not
selfish and quite willing to allow their
fellow citizens of the north to share the
honor.”
Beginning Jan, 1, All Earnings
From Big Business of H, Z,
Duke in Texas Will Be tong
to Religious Cause
BOOTBLACKS WORK
WAY THROUGH COLLEGE
(By Associated Press.)
PRINCETON, N. J., Jan. 29.—Boot
blacking is the latest venture of Prince
ton students for earning money to put
themselves through college. Three stu
dents have opened a “shine shop” in
one of the university office buildings
and although the college boys them
selves have engaged foreign boys to do
the actual shining, they will manage
the business and collect and deliver the
students’, footwear. One of the man
agers is M. C. Culelias, who was a boot-
black before entering Princeton. The
enterprise has the sanction of the uni
versity authorities who provided the
room.
H. Z. Duke, who went west from
Carroll county to grow up with the
country, has covenanted to devote his
twenty-one nickel stores to God.
He and his wife agreed with their
consciences three years ago to turn
the earnings of his stores to the uses
of Christianity when his savings should
amount to $100,000. He then had $50,000.
Within a year he had $75,000; within
another year his savings were little
short of $100,000; last year the sum he
named was completed, and on the first
day of this year he entered upon his
covenant.
As he explained Wednesday morning
at the home of his brother-in-law, A. P.
Morgan, at Oakland City, he will conduct
the twenty-one nickel stores during the
remainder of his life, purely in the in
terest of God.
EVERY PENNY FOR CHURCH.
Every pjenny earned from the candies,
the toys, the thousand and one things
of a nickel store, will be used in the
Christian church. These stores will sup
port missionaries, they will pay the sal
aries of ministers, they will comfort
the needy, they will furnish the lessons
of Christianity to the untaught. The
nickel stores scattered through Texas
will spread a Christian influence
throughout the state** and to foreign
lands.
Mr. Duk e married in Carroll county
years ago, and set forth for the west to
find a young man’s country. With $700
he entered business. His one-room store
was the size of a close-in modern flat
and his stock in trade would furnish one
counter of the smallest of his twenty-
one nickel stores.
HOW HE PROSPERED.
But even then he gave a tenth of his
earnings to Christian work. Bit by bit
the store grew, and finally other nickel
stores of H. Z. Duke's appeared in oth
er western towns. They seemed to meet
with instant success. Wherever he es
tablished a nickel store he prospered.
And as he prospered he increased his
gifts to the church.
“I believe,” he said Wednesday morn
ing, “that these gifts were the secret of
my success. They taught me many
things. They impressed upon me the
value of money; they convinced me of
the necessity of method and system in all
things; they showed me how essential it
is to have more than petty interests.
“At last I decided that I had earned
enough, and I told my wife that what
ever else I earned should be given to the
church and work of the church. She
agreed that when I had $100,000 I should
stop earning money for myself or for
anyone but God, and we made a cove
nant of that sort. I am now keep
ing it.
“Last year I made sometning over
$24,000, and I think that by increasing the
number of my stores I can increase these
earnings to $30,000 or $40,000 a year, all of
which shall be used as I have agreed.
“I am a member of the First Baptist
church of Dallas. I am sixty years old
and I joined the church at the age of
thirty-five years. During a large part of
my life I have devoted, a part of my
means to the church.
“When I first went west I met a man
a lawyer, named R. L. Rudy, who gave
a tenth of his income to church work. He
gave with such little effort and got such
good from his giving that my pastor, Mr.
McConnell, and myself decided we would
do the same thing. We were not will
ing to let anyone else get more out of
religion than we did. So We also began
tithing, and I found that this giving to
God was the greatest experience of my
life. No man, no matter what his con
dition, what his responsibilities, should
give less than one-tenth to the church
Only then can h e know the full benefits
of religion.
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-
earet now and then and never know the
misery caused by a lazy liver, clogged
bowels or an upset stomach.
Don’t put in another day of distress.
Let Cascaiets 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 flean, healthy liver and
bowel action for months. Children love
to take Cascarets because they taste
good—never gripe or sicken.—(Advertise
ment.)—(Advt.)
BREEDERS ASK CHANGE
IN IMMIGRATION LAW
(By Associated Press.)
COLUMBIA, S. C., Jan. 28.—At the
closing of the National Breeders’ as
sociation convention here today, a res
olution was passed declaring that in
the opinion of the association the de
cision that minor children of natural
ized aliens are exempt from the opera
tion of immigration laws should be at
once reversed.
Officers for the association were
elected as follows: President, Dr. Da
vid Fairchild, Washington; vice presi
dent, Dr. W. E. Castle, Harvard univer
sity; secretary, Willet M. Hayes, Wash
ington. ^
CORN SHOW OBSERVES
SOUTH CAROLINA DAY
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
COLUMBIA, S. C., Jan. 28.—“South
Carolina day” was celebrated at the
Fifth National Corn show here today;
the feature being a civic and military
parade, comprising twenty-nine sections.
At the exposition grounds speeches were
made by Governor Blease and other statu
officials and Mayor T. C. Thompson, of
Chattanooga.
In the afternoon the South Carolina
poultry show was opened in connection
v/ith the corn exposition. Thursday has
been set aside as Farmers’ union day
at which time the mid-winter meeting
of the organization will be held here. •
1,100 REFUGEES
CROWD HILL TOP
TO ESCAPE FLOOD
Without Shelter or Food Men,
Women and Children Are
Found on Hill in Green River
District
(By Associated Press.)
EVANSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 28.—Captain
William JSlliott, from St. Louis, late last
night reported here h'j had found 1.100
flood refugees without shelter or food
in the Green River district near Cal
houn, Ky. He was sent out yesterday
from the United States quartermaster’s
office at St. Louis to investigate condi
tions in the Green River district.
Captain Elliot ordered a boatload of
provisions from Evansville and chartered
a steamer to take them to Calhoun. The
ljlood sufferers are encamped on hills and
the officers report that the villages
nearby are unable to provide for them.
Crevasse Can’t Be Mended
Until Low Water Months
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28.—Army en
gineers concluded today that they are
practically powerless to contend with
the gre^t Beulah crevasse in the Mis
sissippi river levee system near Green
ville. Miss. They can “tie” the ends
of the broken levee by the familiar
process of driving piling deep into the
soft soil and filling in with rock and
brush, so as to preevent further ero
sion of the levee, but it is believed to
be quite impossible to close the gap
before low water next summer. Mean
time, according to General Bixby, chief
of engineers, who is personally familiar
.with the Yazoo country, no less than
1,000 square miles of good cotton and
corn land probably will be under water
until April at least.
bread. All the bakers in the city this!
morning joined the general strike of]
factory employes and other workmen,j
which began early in January.
Stops Tobacco Habit!
la One Cay
Sanitarium Publishes Tree Book Show-
\
ing How Tobacco Habit Can Be
Banished in From One to
Five Bays at Home.
The Elders Sanitarum, located at 640 Malni
St., St. Joseph, Mo., has published a free book
showing the deadly effect of the tobacco habtti
and how it can be banished in from one to five
days at home.
Men who have used tobacco for more than]
fifty years have tried this method and say ttl
Is entirely successful, and in addition to banish-'
Ing the desire for tobacco has improved their:
the
health wonderfully. This method banishes
desire for tobacco, no matter whether it Is smok-i
ing, chewing, cigarettes or snuff dipping.
As this book is being distributed free, anyonel i
wanting a copy should send their name and' a I
address at once.—(Advt.)
PERUVIAN CAPITOL
IS WITHOUT BREAD
> (By Associated Press.)
LIMA, Leru, Jan. 28.—The Jeruvian
capital was today practically without
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Recorder Reopens Their Case
at Attorney's Request..
Must Leave Town
At the request of their attorney, Law-
ton Nalley, Recorder Broyles reopened
the cases of Leopold Seeds and George
Millsaps Wednesday morning and fined
both men upon their agreement to leave
town within twenty-four hours after
paying the fines. Millsap*drew a penal
ty of $100, and Seeds was fined $50. Both
paid their fines and were released. The
charges against them grew out of a lot
of stage money, fake certificates and
foreign paper currency, which they had
in their possession.
Both men had been bound over from
the recorder’s court to the city court
Tuesday afternoon on charges of va
grancy and of being common cheats and
swindlers. They preferred not to wait,
and the recorder gave them their'pref
erence.
Seeds introduced evidence in court to
prove that he is, as he claimed to be;
a Michigan farmer, and that the former
actress who had accompanied him to At
lanta is his lawfully wedded w'ife. But
the recorder construed those facts as
having no bearing upon the charge
against Seeds. Millsaps has been a
stock dealer in Chicago. Both men were
arrested Saturday afternoon, following a
series of bitter complaints from boarding
house keepers and others who, it is
claimed, had been “stung” by the fake
money. A quantity of it, showing fig
ures amounting to more than $40,000
(had it been real), was taken from
them when they were arrested.
ONE KILLED IN FIGHT
OF PITTSBURG STRIKERS
(By Associated Press.)
PITTSBURG, Jan. 29.—Quiet pre
vailed this morning at the Rankin plant
of the American Steel and Wire compa
ny, where last night one man was killed
and a dozen wounded in a fight between
mill guards and strikers. All of the 1
men and women wounded were reported j
as improved.
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We furnish full directions how to do any job.
and just now we are making a surprisingly liberal
offer. Write at once and get this greotpaint offer,
free shade samples, strong testimonials and valu
able paint information. Just 6ay “Send me your
latest paint offer.” Address
.CROSBY-FRANK & CO., 5S0 Peoria St., Chicago. ID.
FREE THE RUPTURED!
TRIAL OF PLAPAO
Awarded Gold Medal and Diploma Overi
All Competitors, International Expo-'
sltlon, Rome, and Grand Prlx. Parle.!
BTUAOT’S PLAPaO-PADS aro a wonderful!
treatment for rupture, curing aa they do the 1
worst forms In the privacy of the home with
out hindrance from work and at slight expense.
RUPTURECURED
by STUART’S PLAPAO-PADS mean*
that you can throw away the painful truss
altogether, as the Plapao-Pads are made to
cure rupture and not simply to hold it; but
as they are made 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 be
held by a truss. NO 8TRAPS, BUCKLES OB
SPRINGS. Soft as Velvet—Easy to Apply,
Plapao Laboratories, Block 137 St. Louis, Mo. #
is sending FREE trial Plapao to all who write.
$3.50 Recipe Free
For Weak Men
Send Name and Address
Today—You Can Have
It Free and Be
Strong and Vig
orous.
I nave In my possession a prescription fot
nervous debility, lack of vigor, weakened man
hood, falling memory and lamo back, brought
on by excesses, unnatural drains, or the fol
lies of youth, that hag 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 his
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.
In a plain, ordinary sealed envelope, to any
man who will write us for It.
This prescription comeg from a physician who
has made a special study of men, and I am
convinced It is the surest-acting combination
for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor
failure ever put together.
I think I owe it to my fellowman to send
them a copy In confidence so that any man
anywhere who Is weak and discouraged with
repeated failures may stop drugging himself
with harmful patent medicines, secure what I
relieve I* the quickest acting restorative, up-
fmlldlng, SPOT-TOUCHING remed." ever de
vised, and so cure himself at home quietly
and quickly. Just drop tne a line like this.
Dr. A. E. Robinson, 3771 Luck Building, De
troit, Mich., and I will send you a copy of
this splendid recipe in a plain ordinary en
velope, free of charge. A great many doctor*
would charge $3.00 to $5.00 for merely writing
out a prescript Ion* like this—but I send it en
tirely free.—(Advt.)
Age
How long Ruptured?
Cut this out. or copy and j
mail to-day and tbe pack
age will be sent you at once.
W. S. Rica, 310-AB Main Si.. Adams, N. Y.
^ Order
Ksntucky’s Great Whiskey
from Distiller to You
on trial
2 Gallons for $5.
t
GETS LIFE SENTENCE
FOR FATHER’S MURDER
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
GRIFFIN, Ga., Jan. 29.—Nobe Moore,
a young white man of this county, was
convicted in the superior court yester
day of the murder of his father last
September, and was sentenced to life im
prisonment in the penitentiary.
Ed Adams, colored, was aiso convict
ed of the murder of his wife, and was
given a life sentence.
Will Fuller, a negro, was convicted
of criminally assaulting a negro woman,
and sentenced to ten years.
Jim Cloud was sent up for five years
for assault with intent to murder, and
Ben Jones was given four years for
stealing a horset. Both parties are ne
groes. \
The time of the court is being taken
up today in the? trial of J. M. Bassett
and W. T. Jonqs, who are charged with
the murder of\ a negro last fall, who
was -shot to death, it is alleged, by fi
mob of white ’men who called him to
Ws door late at »night and killed him.
« . \
3 tor 17.60 or 1 tor $3, choleo
ofRy», Bourbon or Corn
Express Prepaid
Myere P»t«nt East of Mont., Wyo., Colo. A N. Mex.
To prove Fulton Straight Whiskey is best
you need send no money. We ship on 30 days
credit, if you have your merchant or bank
guarantee your account. Return if not sat-
MStcOMPANY
Warehouse No. 130 Covtnrfton. Ky. ,1
Write foi Book. A Yair Customer, Sealed.
YOUR HEART
Does it Flutter, Palpitate
or Skip Beats? Have you
iShortness of l»reath,Ten*
iderness,Numbness or Fain
In left side, Dizziness*
Fainting Spells. Spots be
fore eyes, Sudden Starting
in sleep, N e r v o uaneas, !
Nightmare. Hunary or
Weak Spells* Oppressed Feeling in,chest,
Choking Sensation in throat, Painful to
lie on left side, Cold Hands or Feet, Difl^
cult Breathing, Dropsy, Swelling of feet
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fall to use Dr. Kinsman’s Guaranteed Heart
Tablets. Not a secret or “patent medicine. It ,
Is said that one out of every four has a weak or j
diseased heart. Thi ee-fourths of these do not
know It, and hundreds hare died after wrongfully
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Dr. Kinsman’s Heart Tablets are within
your reach. 1000 endorseioents^urnlshetL_^^
EXCELSIOR WONDER KNIFE
Worth Its Weight in Gold to Every
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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 reamer^
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,
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The EXCELSIOR WONDER KNIFE is built for
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is taken to make the knife sufficiently strong for
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men. It is no more clumsy or awkward to carry
in the pocket than an ordinary three-hladed knife.
The Leather Punch will be found indispensable
for making various sized holes in leather for
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The Leather Punch acts as a swedging awl or
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This knife is a marvel of mechanical ingenuity,
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By special arrangements with the manufac
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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.
Semi-Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
Enclosed find one dollar. Please send me
The Semi-Weekly Journal one year and mail me
postpaid your EXCELSIOR WONDER KNIFE as a
premium.
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
| name and P. O. Address, to Dr. F. G. Kins-
I man, Box8«4. Augusta. Maine, willre-
ceive a box ot Hen rt Tablets for trial by return
mail, postpaid, free of charge. Don’t risk
death by delay. Write at once—to-day.
R. F. D. No
State.
A