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THE ATLANT'A SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1913.
THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY
TROUBLE AND DON’T KNOW IT
Weak and. unhealthy kidneys are prob
ably responsible for more sickness and
suffering than any other disease, there
fore, when through neglect or other
causes, kidney trouble is permitted to
continue, serious results are sure to fol
low.
Your other organs may need attention
—but your kidneys most, because they
do most and should have attention first.
If you feel that your kidneys are the
cause of your sickness or run down con
dition commence taking Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root, the great kidney, fiver and
bladder remedy, because as soon as your
kidneys begin to improve they will help
all the other organs to health.
Prevalency of Xidney Disease.
Most people do not realize the alarm
ing increase and remarkable prevalency
of kidney disease. While kidney dis
orders are the most common diseases
that prevail, they are almost the last
recognized by patient or physicians, who
usually content themselves with doc
toring the effects, while the original
disease constantly undermines the sys
tem.
A Trial Will Convince Anyone.
The mild and immediate effect of
Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and
bladder remedy, is soon realized. It
stands the highest for its remarkable
results in the most distressing cases.
Symptoms of Kidney Trouble.
Swamp-Root is not recommended for
everything but if you are obliged to
pass your water frequently night'and
day, smarting <\r irritation in passing,
brisk-dust or sediment in the urine,
headache, back ache, lame back, dizzi
ness, poor digestion, sleeplessness, nerv
ousness, heart disturbance due to bad
kidney trouble, skin eruptions from bad
blood, neuralgia, rheumatism, lumbago,
bloating, irritability, wornout feeling,
lack of ambition, may be loss of flesh,
sallow complexion, or Bright’s disease
may be stealing upon you, which is the
worse form of kidney trouble.
Swamp-Root is Pleasant to Take.
If you are already convinced that
Swamp-Root is what you need, you can
purchase the regular fifty-cent and one
dollar size bottles at all drug stores.
Sample Bottle Sent Free.
- KDXTORXAIi NOTICE—To prove the wonderful merits of Swamp-Root you
may have a sample bottle and a book of valuable information, both sent abso
lutely free by mail. The book contains many of the thousands of letters received
from*men and women who found Swamp-Root to be just the remedy they needed
The value and success of Swamp-Root is so well known that our readers are ad
vised to send for a sample bottle. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.,
be sure to say you read this generous offer in The Atlanta Semi-Weekly Jour
nal. The genuineness of this offer is g uaranteed.—(Advt.)
FORTY-FOUR GEORGIA POSTOFFICES
ARE READY FOR WILSON TQ FILL
Terms of.That Many Postmasterships Will Have Expired
by March 4-Salaries Average $1,680,87 Annually—List *of
All Postoffices and Salaries Attached
BY BAXi PH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—The post office department has prepared a state,
ment showing the number, the name and the rate of the expiration of
every presidential postoffice in Georgia, together with the salaries. There are
183 presidential offices in the state and the salaries aggregate is $307,100 an
nually. The average salary is $1,680.87. They range all the way from $1,100
a year for the small offices to $6,000 for the Atlanta office.
The Second congressional district, which is represented by Anderson S.
Roddenbery, of Thomasville, leads all the others in the number of presiden
tial offices. It has twenty such plums, and the total ■ salaries amount to
$33,900. The Third, Ninth and Twelfth districts each have eighteen presiden
tial offices, the first named leading with $29,900. There are only eleven pres
idential offices in the first and Fifth districts.
While it is not known what methods will be followed by the Wilson ad
ministration in parceling out the postofflee patronage, it is believed that the
present custom will be continued. While the appointments will he made by
the president on the recommendation and advice of the senators, the sen-
£S. in. turn, will in most instances, defer to wishes: of the respective con
gressmen in making their recommendations.
The Atlanta postoffice will be controlled by Serfator Smith, and the Ma
con office will be in the hands of Senator Bacon. It .has always been cus
tomary for the senators to make the nomination for the offices in their
home town without consulting the congressmen.
SCHLEY HOWARD'S PATRONAGE.
With the Atlanta office eliminated from the postoffice patronage of his
district. Congressman William Schley Howard will have less patronage at
his disposal than any other member of the delegation. He will have only ten
jobs to give away, with aggregate salaries of $14,600.
The statement issued by the postoffice department has been rearranged
according to congressional districts, by The Journal correspondent, and the
appended list gives the name, date o f expiration and salary of every presi
dential office in the state.
There are forty-four presidential offices in Georgia, the present terms
of which have already expired or will expire by March 4, when President
elect Wilson will be inaugurated. President Taft has made nominations for
a number of these offices, but they have all been held up in the senate. The
patronage will be claimed by the Democrats and distributed by President
Wilson.
The following are the offices whose terms have already expired or will
expire within the next two months: Bowdon, Canton, Carrollton, Cedar-
town, Chipley, College Park, Colquitt, Comer, Commerce, Concord, Cornelia,
Crawfordville, Cumming, Dublin, Eastman, Fayetteville, Gainesville, Green
ville, Hogansville, Jonesboro, Lithonia, Louisville, McDouough Manchester,
Mldville, Milltown, Milledgeville, Moultrie, Norcross, Oglethorpe, Palmetto,
Rochelle, Rome, Royston, Smithville, Social Circle, Stone Mountain, Toccoa,
Union Point, Vidalia, Waynesboro, West Point, Whigham, Winder and Wood
bury.
BARON ILKESTON DIES
AT THE AGE OF 73
LONDON, Jan. 31.—Baron Ilkeston, a
distinguished member of the Liberal
party in the house of lords, died today
at the age of seventy-three. Before be
ing created a peer he was well known
as Sir Walter Foster. He was- by pro
fession a physician and was the author
of numerous works on medicine, espe
cially in connection with heart disease.
COFFEE THRESHED HER
15 Long Years
“For over fifteen years,” writes a pa
tient, hopeful little Ills, woman, “while
a coffee drinker, I suffered from Spinal
Irritation and Nervous trouble. I was
treated by good physicians, but did not
get much relief.
“I never suspected that coffee might
be aggravating my condition. (Tea is
just as injurious, because it contains
caffeine, the same drug found in cof
fee.). I was down-hearted and discour
aged, but prayed daily that I might find
something to help me.
“Several years ago, while at a friend’s
house, I drank a cup of Postum and
thought I had never tasted anything
more delicious.
“From that'time on I used Postum in
stead of. coffee and soon began to im
prove in health, so that now I can walk
half a dozen blocks or more with ease,
aiiu do many other things that I never
thought I would be able to do again in
this world.
"My appetite is good, I sleep well and
find life is worth living, indeed. A
lady of my acquaintance said she dia
not like Postum, it was so weak and
tasteless.
“I explained > to her tne difference
when it is made right—boiled according
to directions. She was glad to know
this because coffee did not agree with
her. Now her folks say they expect to
use Postum the rest of their lives.”
Name given upon request. Read the
little book, “The Road to Wellvillc,” in
pkgs. “Tnere’s a Reason.”
Postum now comes in -concentrated,
pow’der 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 waste; and the flavour is always
uniform. Sold by grocers—45 to 5ti-cup
tin 30 cts., 90 to 100-cup tin 50 cts.
A 5-cup trial tin mailed for grocer’s
name and 2-cent stamp for postage.
Postum Gereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek,
Mich.—(Advt.J
MEXIC REBELS HOLDING
AMERICAN FOR RANSOM
Wealthy Robert Ward Is Kid
naped and Held for
$5,000
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—Kidnapped
by a score of armed Mexican rebels
near Farrell, Robert Ward, a wealthy
American mine owner, is held prisoner
in the mountains for a ransom of $5,000,
according to dispatches tonight frorri
Ambasador Wilson, at Mexico City,
The state department instructed Wil-
scfn to inform President Madero’s min
ister of foreign affairs that Ward’s
release must be secured immediately. -
A later report from the American
consul at Chihuahua’ said that a fed
eral force of 150' men had been sent to
attack Ward’s captors.
The consul, at Durango reported that
rebel activities in the nprthern part of
San Lucas appeared to be increasing
and that on Friday six bridges on the
international railroad between Durango
and Torreon were burned.
Brigadier General E. Z. Steever,
commanding the troops near the border,
reported to the secretary of war that
additional federal troops Had arrived at
Juare^ and that there was now no dan>»
ger of rebel attack.
Salazar, said Steever’s dispatch,
“has gone south but his movements are
riot ascertainable. I have now and
have had for months the international
j border well patrolled and guarded. There
are two battalions of infantry along the
j Hio Grande from Smelter to El Paso
, and several troops of cavalry in New
Mexico.
“The recent advanc^ of Salazar dem
onstrated the necessity of maintaining
j troops in this section until peace in
; Mexico has been restored and main-
! tained for a considerable period.”
Conditions in Vera Cruz have again
become tranquil and the gunboat Wheel
ing will leave that city tomorrow for
j Mobile.
$250,000 IS LEFT
BY DEAD UNKNOWNS
Many Found Dead in New York
Left Estates Yet
Unclaimed
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—More than
$250,000 has been left unclaimed by
relatives in the cases of persons found
dead under unusual circumstances in
New York during the past year.
The public administrator’s report just
made public recites tragic stories of
hardship or loneliness in the maelstrom
of a great city, told in recovery of
bodies picked from under trains and
street cars, dragged from rivers and
ponds, discovered as suicides in hall,
bed rooms and hotel suties, or revealed
in desolate places as the victims of
mysterious murders.
. The unclaimed estates left range from
1 cent to $14,735. The “penny estate”
was that of Frank Dohm and notwith
standing its insignificance legal tomes
were made out to administer. The larger
amount was that left by Alfred Bulling,
a baker, born in England.
V. Smith Remarries
Girl Father Forced
Him to Divorce
FROM PRISON TO JAIL
THIS UNFORTUNATE GOES
As soon as John McGuffey emerged
from the federal prison Thursday, after
completing a sentence of one year and
a day, he was rearrested on a federal
warrant issued by a commissioner at
Annison, Ala.
McGuffey is fifty years old. He was
sent to Atlanta from Albany, Ga., for
having violated the postal laws. He is
wanted in Anniston for a similar offense.
r
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Feb. 1.—Eluding, at
Louisville, Ky„ E. G. Smith, a wealthy
manufacturer residing at Jacksonville,
Fla., his son, Vern Smith, hurried to St.
Louis and by appointment met his di
vorced wife, formerly a telephone girl,
the mother of his two children* Marjo
rie, eight, and Clarice, four, and took
her ip a taxi-cab to Clayton, Mo., where
they were re-married todky.
Although he Is thirty-two and she is
twenty-seven, they admitted afterwards
that their haste to retie the knot, untied
to please .the elder Smith, was due to
fear that the latter might devise some
way to upset their plans.
The two children played around the
reunited couple as they told at 5991
Minerva avenue, where they are stay
ing, how their home had been broken up
eighteen months ago when Smith’s fa
ther caused his income to be cut off.
“More than ten years ago. I fell in
love with my present wife, who was
then Violet Harmon, a telephone oper--
ator.”
“Against my father’s wishes. I mar
ried her. He objected to the marriage
because, he said, my wife did not be
long to my social set.”
Get Wise, It’s All
Done for the Movies
(By Associated Press.)
SEABRIGHT, N. J., Feb. 1.—A young
man with his face dramatically set, and
a woman with her hair flying wildly,
sped through the streets on a motor
cycle here yesterdsfc, heedless of the
warnings that the drawbridge over the
Shrewsbury river, just ahead of them,
was open. Neither seemed to hear, and
in an instant the motocycle was turning
a somersault in the air and the man
and girl went into the water.
Hundreds of persons ran up, excited at
the news that a crazy man had driven a
girl and himself into the river, only to
find that a motorboat had picked them
up safely.
Some women who witnessed the affair
were almost fainting, when boys In the
crowd shouted:
“Get wise; it was all done for the
‘movies!’ See the man with the cam
era over there!”
As Soon as “Pape’s Diapepsin”
Gets in Stomach all Dis
tress Is Gone
“Really does” put bad stomachs in or
der—“really does” overcome indigestion,
dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness
in five minutes—that—just that—makes
Pape’s Diapepsin the largest selling
stomach regulator in the world. If
what you eat ferments into stubborn
lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour,
undigested food and acid; head is dizzy
and aches; breath foul; tongue coated;
your insides filled with bile and indi
gestible waste, remember the moment
Diapepsin comes in contact with the
stomach a^l such distress vanishes. It’s
truly astonishing—almost marvelous,
and the joy is its harmless.
A large fifty-cent case of Pape’s Dia
pepsin will give you a hundred dollars’
worth of satisfaction or your druggist
hands you your money back.
It’s worth its weight in gold to men
and women who can’t get their stomach’s
regulated. It belongs in your home
should always be kept handy in case of
a sick, sour, upset stomach during the
day or at night. It’s the quickest, surest
and most harmless stomach doctor in
the world.—(Advt.)
GRIDIRON CLUB GIVES
BRYAN MANY PLACES
Newspaper Men of Washing
ton Introduce Wilson’s
Counterpart 1
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—Woodrow
Wilson, president-elect of the United
States, received pertinent suggestions
for his coming administration tonight,
while national politics past, present and
future were burlesqued in true satirical
style before the most distinguished as
semblage of the nation. It *as the sec
ond dinner of the season of the Gridiron
club, Washington’s famous newspaper
organization.
No sooner had the banquet guests, in
cluding President Taft, his cabinet, sen
ators, representatives and other noted
men, assembled in the spacious hall of
the New Willard hotel, than it was no
ticed that the Yale bulldog and Yale
blue were features of the dinner. Menu
cards thus marked and dinner souvenirs
of inkwells in the shape of “mortar
board” caps reminded the guests that
the retiring president of the United
States was leaving officer to become a
professor at Yale, while the incoming
president was an ex-presideijt of
Princeton university.
SENATE VOTES FOR
A SIX-YEAR TERM
Works' Amedment Receives
Necessary Two-Thirds
Vote
' (By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—A constitu
tional amendment which would restrict
the president and vice president of the
United States to a single term of six
j yoars and would bar Woodrow Wilson,
! Theodore Roosevelt and William H. Taft
j trom again seeking election, was ap-
i proved by the senate today by the nar-
| row majority of one vote,
j After a three-day fight in which the
i Progressives joined with many Repub-
! licans in opposing the restricted presi-
I dential term, the senate adopted the
original Works resolution by a vote of
j 47 to 23. The language which it is pro-
j posed to insert in the legislation in
| place of the first paragraph of article 2
is as follows:
“The executive power shall be vested
in a president of the United tSates of
America. The term of president shall be
six years, and no person who has held
the office by election, or discharged its
powers or duties, or acted as president
under the legislation and laws made in
pursuance thereof, shall be eligible to
hold again the office by election. The
president, together with a vice president
chosen for the same term, shall be elect
ed as follows:”
UP TO HOUSE NOW,
The resolution proposing the legisla-
tional amendment goes to the house for
its approval. If ratified by a two-
thirds vote it will be submitted to the
legislatures of the states and will be
come effective when three-fourths of
the forty-eight states of the union have
officially approved it.
The adoption of the resolution ckm%
at the close of a three-days’ fight in
which repeated attempts were made so
to .change it that it would not affect
past presidents or the president in the
office when it may finally be ratified
by the states. All these efforts failed.
Two votes taken today again demon
strated that the senate did not care to
extmpt any person from the operation
of the single term provision. An amend
ment by Senator Hitchcock that would
have exempted past presidents and made
the new provision take effect March 4,
1917, was voted down, 42 to 27, and/4n
amendment by Senator Sutherland' to
exempt the president i nthe office when
the legislational constitutional amend
ment may be ratified was defeated,
38 to 29.
ADLER’S FAMOUS
No Money Down
FREE TRIAL OFFER
$30,000,000 DAMAGE
TO CALIFORNIA FRUIT
LOS ANGELc/S, Jan. 30.—Thirty mil
lion dollars is the estimate of the dam
age to citrus fruits by the recent cold
weather in this state, according to a
bulletin issued by State Horticulturist
Cook.
He says that “from one of the ablest
citrus experts, I learn that not more
than 20 per cent of the crop was
saved.”
The bulletin says that where oil pot
smudges wfire used, an average of 85
per cent of the fruit escaped injury.
Dr. MaryWalker’s
Male Attire Causes
Arrest in Chicago
(By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, Feb. 1.—pr. Mary Walker,
of Washington, 'D. C., was arrested by a
policeman here today _ because she was
dressed In male clothing.
Dr. Walker has worn masculine at
tire for many years. At the police sta
tion she exhibited permission, said to
be from the United States congress for
her to wear men’s trousers. She was
then allowed to depart. No charge was
entered against her.
MORGAN TEACHERS
MEET AT RUTLEDGE
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
RUTLEDGE. Ga.. Feb. 1.—The Mor
gan county teachers are holding their
regular monthly institute here today.
Prof. E. S. Bird, the supervisor of the
county schools and Miss Parish, of At
lanta, have charge of the program.
This is the first time the institute
has been held in Rutledge.
The ladles of the Civic league pre
pared lunch for the teachers.
I Will Trust
YOU.
—and
There’s Nothing
to Pay For but Quality
My Original Direct-from-Factory-
to-Home—Not One Cent In Advance
—Free 30 Days’Trial—Nothing to Pay
for but Quality—Easy Payment Plan—
Absolutely Wipes Out Middlemen—Ban
ishes ALL Competition.
I am the man who made the “Adler" a household
r word; over 85.000 of these famous organs are now in
^the homes of tne people—and when I say there’s fioth-
, ing to pay for but quality when you buy my World
Famed Adler Organs—winners of highest prize at the
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I Save You all In-Between Profit
. I will save you $48.75 because I 6ell direct from the
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,egal Guarantee Bond, backed by the Adler Capital and Resources of over $1,000,000.
WILSON AIDS CHILD
TO TAKE HIS PICTURE
PRINCETON. N. J., Feb. 1—Presi
dent-elect Wilson arrived here from
New York this afternoon. While he was
standing on the station platform at
Newark, a little girl was observed mak
ing efforts to photograph him. but con
ditions were not just as she wanted
them.
"Wait a minute and I’ll get out in the
sun,” said the president-elect. Then the
camera was snapped and the twelve-
year-old miss thanked him and went
away happy.
Ruptured People—
Get This On 60 Days Trial
You know you can’t possibly tell anything about a truss
or anything else for rupture merely by trying It on, for a
truss or so-called "appliance’’ may seem allright at first
and afterward prove utterly worthless.
But here is something you can try sixty days — Just as
a test — without haring to risk a single cent.
Away With Leg-Strap
and Spring Trusses
Start Your Baby
With Sound Health
Regular Bowel Movement
from Childhood on Fore-
stallsFuture Serious
Diseases
We cannot all start life with the ad
vantages of money, but every child born
is entitled to the heritage of good
health. Through unfortunate ignorance
or carelessness in the feeding of a baby
its tiny stomach may become deranged.
The disorder spreads to the bowels and
before the mother realizes it the two
chief organs on which the infant’s com
fort and health defend are causing it
great suffering. If the condition is al
lowed to continue grave ailments often
result. ^ \
There is, however, no occasion for
alarm, and the sensible things to do—
but ft should be done instantly—is to
give the baby a small dose of a mild
laxative-tonic. In the opinion of a great
many people, among them such well-
known persons as the parents of Dixie
Dudley, Magnolia, .Ark., the proper rem
edy is Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Mrs.
Earl Dudley writes: “Dr. Qaldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin is the best medicine I
ever used. It cured my baby of flatu
lency colic when the doctors failed; it
cured my husband of constipation. My
home shall never be without Syrup Pep
sin.” It is a pleasant-tasting laxative,
which every person likes. It is mild,
non-griping, and contains that most ex
cellent of all digestants, pepsin.
This remedy is especially intended for
Infants, children, women, old people and
all others l\o whom harsh cathartics, salt
waters, pills, etc., are distressing. In
fact, in the common disorders of life,
such as constipation, liver trouble, indi
gestion; biliousness, headaches, and the
DIXIE ASKEW DUDLEY.
various other disorders of the stomach,
liver and bowels nothing is more suit
able than this mild laxative-tonic, Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin.
Two generations of people are using it
today, and thousands of families keep it
constantly in the house, for every mem
ber of the family can use it. It can be
obtained of any druggist at fifty cents
■or one dollar a bottle, the latter being
the size bought by families who already
know its value. Results are always
guaranteed or money will be refunded.
If no member of your family has ever
used Syrup Pepsin and you would like
to make a personal trial of it before buy
ing it in the regular way of a druggist,
send your address—a postal will do—to
W. B. Caldwell, 425 Washington St.,
Monticello, Ill., and a free sample bottle
• will be mailed you.
So far as we know, our guaranteed
rupture holder is the only thing of
any kind for rupture that you oan get
on 60 days trial—the only thing we
know of crood enough to stand such a long and thorough test.
It’s the famous Clutlie Automatic Massaging Truss—made on
*n absolutely new principle—has is patented features. Self-
adjusting. Does away with the misery of wearing belts, leg-
straps and springs Guaranteed to hold at ail times—includ
ing when you are working, taking a batb, etc. Has cured
in case after case that seemed hopeless.
Writs far Fraa Book af Atlvlca—Cloth-bound, 104 pages.
Explains the dangers of operation. Shows lust what’s wrong
with elastic and spring trusses, and why drugstores should
no mora be allowed to fit trusses than to oerforra operations.
Exposes the humbugs—shows how old-fashioned worthless
trusses are sold under false and misleading names. Tells all
about the care and attention we give you. Endorsements
from over 6000 people, including physicians. Write to-day
—find out how you can prove ©very word we say by making
a 60 day test without risking a penny.
Box 672, Cluthe Co., 125 E. 23rd St., New
York City.
FREE 30 Days* Trial
I will ship yon any World Famed Adler Organ you may select from my new, big organ book, for)
an absolutely free playing test—keep it a whole month free—if it does not do all I claim—just ship’
it back to me—I will pay freight both ways and your trial doesn't cost you a single peony.
And Then A 36S Days' Approval Test
—and yonr money back if my World Famed Adler Organ has not held up to every claim I make
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better my World Famed Prize Winning Adler Organs are than the ordinary made-to-sell organa. 1
Just fill m the coupon below and mail it to me. 1 do not ask you to bind yourself in any way.
•Send No Money In Advance
. My World Famed Adler Organ must sell itself after afree trial in your home. You’re tha'
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Easy Payments—No Burden To You
Two or three years’ time if you tvish—no collectors. Ajk about our Fall Payment Platt
for the benefit of alt who depend upon the harvest for income. *
My Celebrated Adler Piano Offer
My Celebrated Adler Piano is better than pianos that sell for double the money. 1
let you have the piano on exactly the same terms as an Adler Organ—30 days’ free trial-
oil the time you want to pay—money back at end of year if piano is not as represented.
25 Year Guarantee for “ ,a ^
Fill In and Mall Coupon Today
□ I wantyour
Piano Book
Cyrus L. Adler, Pre*. •.
Adler Mfg. Co., 500b W. Chestnut St., Louisville, Ky.
Make a cross in the square for organ or piano book.
■ 'I Piano I
NAME
Address
County - miimim** 9 Jj
“BIGGER! BETTER!?
| FREE
More Liberal
Than Ever
Is Our Offer to Agents this Season
WeWantYou to Be
Our Agent
Our offer to agents this
season is new and better
than ever. It makes
order getting easy.
If you want our samples,
if you want to be our
agent, if ypu want the
swellest clothes in the world
FREE, put your name on
a postal care* and mail to
us. We’ll do the rest.
Wt Prepay Eiprtss on Evaryttln,.
American Woolen Mills Co.
Dept. 806, CHICAGO
ECZEMA:
MAKE
$15
PAY
Read This Lelter
l write today for an appointment
a position that will nay'you just as
icb as we are paying Mr. Horton.
Texas, 1912.
I P. W. Goodman,'Pres. Regal Tailoring Co.
Here's a picture of tny store, showing you the
new front f just had put in. It will be two yean
next month that 1 started.with
Free Sample Suit *iur our cap
- - ■ ■■■ - ital and expe
rience. You start making money at once—
$15 the first day. Work al 1 or spare ti me
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tem-full instructions. We want
Agents, Salesmen, Genera! A rents—
quick. Send your name and address on
a postal card today—investisata. Act
I no mediately.
REGAL TAILORING CO.
439 Regal Bldg., Chicago, III.
Also called Tetter, Salt Rheum, Pruritus, Milk.
Crust, Weeping Skin, Etc.
ECZEMA CAN BE CURED TO STAY, and
when I say cured, 1 mean Just what I say—
C-U-U-E-D, and not merely patched! up for
awhile, to return worse toau before. Remember
I make this broad statement after putting
twelve years of my time on this one disease
and handling In the meantime nearly half of a
million case of this dreadful disease. Now,
I do not care what all you have used, nor how
many doctors have told you toot you could not
be cured—all I ask is just a chance to show
you that I know what I am talking about.
If you will write me TODAY, I will send you
a FREE TRIAL of my mild, soothing, guaran
teed cure that will convince you more In a
day than I or anyone else could in a month’s
time. If you ore disgusted and discouraged,
i dare you to give me a chance to prove my
claims. By writing me today you will enjoy
more real comfort than you nnd ever thought
nils world holds tor you. Just try* it and you
will see I am telling you the truth.
Ur. J. E. Cann&day, 824 Court Block, Eedalla, Mo.
References: Third National Bank, Hedalla, Mo.
Could you do a better act than to send this no
tice to some poor sufferer of Eczema?—(Advt.)
Paint Without Oil
Remarkable Discovery That Cuts Down
the Cost of Faint Sevsnty-
Five Per Cent.
m
m
j
98 cents
To advertise oar business, make now friends and Introduce oar (real eat*
logue of Elgin watches we will send thia elegant watch to any eddreea by
mail poetpaid for Only 98 cents. Regular gentlemen a atee, open face,
full engraved, high grade gold plate finish, Arabic or Roman dial, lovar e«-
caparaent, stem wind and atem set, a marvelously correct timekeeper and
ally Guaranteed far 5 Years. Send this advertisement to ua with your
namo and address and 98 cents and watch will be sent by return mall post*
aid. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Remember. 98 cents is poiif
tlvely an you have to pay for this wonderful watch. Send 58 cents today. Address
R. E. CHALMERS & CO. 888 So. Dearborn St. CHICACO
Low
On the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays
of each month the fares are
extra low—and allow stop
overs free and 25 days time—
via Cotton Belt Route to
Arkansas
& Texas
The Cotton Belt Route is the
direct line from Memphis to
Texas, through Arkansas —
two splendid trains daily, with
through sleepers,chair cars and
parlor-cafe cars. Trains from
all parts of the Southeast make
direct connection at Memphis
with Cotton Belt Route trains
to the Southwest.
Write to me today
I will tell you exact fare
from your town, sched
ule, and send you splen
did illustrated books of
farm facts about Arkan
sas and Texas.
L. ?. SMITH,
Traveling Passenger Agent
2028 First Avenue
Birmingham. Ala.
OUR SPECIAL* 0 -
Suit Made to Order
tunings Guaranteed for Two Years
Made to your individual measure
—>y the only
system in the world, which insures
perfect fit. and are not approached
in price, variety of style, quality of
materials, trimmings and workman
ship by any other house. Wo save
you half on any clothes you buy.
AMAZING AGENCY OFFER
Write us and wo will Bend you abso
lately froe, complete sample outfit, and *
large selection of cloth samples, latest ,
fashion illustrations, order blanks, tape
measure, complete Instructions how to I
takemeasurenicnts. We will show you how 1
easy it is to get Into well paying business. 1
Hundreds of our agents are making $5 to $15 a
a day. You need no money or experience— J
we famish you everything to start. You can \
make good money using spare time only.
Profit on two orders pays for your own suit. .
THE CAPITOL TAILORS®
306 * Conroe & Market Sts, Chicago £
A Free Trial Package is Mailed to Everyone
. Who Writes.
A. h. Rice, a prominent manufacturer of
i Adams, N. Y., lias discovered a process of
j making a new kind of paint without the use
J of oil. He calls it i’owdrpalnt. It comes m
the form of a dry powder and all that la
required Is cold water to make a paint weather
proof, firo proof and ns durable as oil paint.
It adheres to any surface, wood, stone or
brick, spreads and looks like oil paint and
costs about one»tourth as much.
Write to Mr. A. L. Bice, Manuf'r, 25 North
St., Adams, N. Y., and ho wilt send you a free
trial package, also. color curd and full infor
mation showing you how you can save a good
many dollars. Write today.—(Advt.)
m
DftWFRPill AIR RIFS C Length 32 inch**. Work-
rUnCnrUL Kin nlrLLingparteofthebesUrades
of ;teel. The stock is finely polished walnut. Shoots small game. Power- ^
ful, accurate, durable. You can have this air rifle for distributing only 8 of oar fast
selling art pictures at 25 cents on our special offer. Everybody will take one.
IT COSTS YOU NOTHING to try, as we take back those you can t dispose of.
Send no money just your namo and address. M. Os 8EITZ«U>70 CHICAGO*
FREE
All year Tounet
Ticket*' also on
sale Daily to cer
tain pointainTex*
U. 90-day a limit*
F‘ LJ*I_ QUART
Yellow Seal Corn
WHISKEY FREE
Return this adv. and
$5, the wholesale distil
lery price for 8 full
quart bottles of Yellow
Seal Corn Whiskey, and
we will send one ruii
quart free, or 9 bottles
in all. EXPRESS PRE
PAID. Test the whiskey
any way you like, and
If not satisfied that
Yellow Seal Cora VVhla-
■ . key is the best whis-
‘‘•’Ii.'mK key you ever tasted
' •$, I’fcAurn the 8 bottles
(!S fflPljffllllli.'n at our «kpen.vo an:!
‘''"k''' 1 keep the one quart
bottle and your $5
— will be returned to
- : tsn*' Ilf, you.
ellciv Senl Corn
key Is fully ma-
d. It Is so pure
you can add an much
water again as
whiskey and then
have better whiskey
thkn most of the
cheap brands offered
by mail order houses,
jin case you wish
some other quantity,
we ship to points
■ ramTnpM ....iii;- Tl preached by Adams or
Anoo&a, t * ^"Southern Express
Ztl
’dhmtmsu&zszm win
tin you.
350
EXPRESSED
SPECIAL 30-DAY CUT PRICE ON OUK
STRAIGHT WHISKEY
Made to Secure 5,000 New Customers.
Bond for 2 gallons of this whiskey at
the cut price of $3.50, Express Paid, and
Compare tne quality with 2 gallons of any
other kind advertised in this paper at $3.60,
$4.00 or $5.00 foj 2 gallons, and If our
Straight Whiskey Is not better— you be
the judSo—■send ours back on first -train
and we will return your money and a dollar
bill extra to pay for your time.
The above ia an iron-clad agreement never
printed before in any paper by any whiskey
house—so it’s up to you to test It out! Re
turn this ad with remittance and ad
dress your letter plainly as below—we will
do the vest and pack big Sample Jug and
nice Calendar Free with the 2 gallons.
We refer to Atlantic National Bank,
Jacksonville, Fla., one of the largest Banks
in Florida.
ATLANTIC COAST DISTILLING CO.
JachsouviUe, Fla.
EXPRESS PRSPfllB
4 Fu!l S^.50 5*4,
Quarto FirL fc
;• von resolve tills fine corn
- from distillery dtre<* to you
\‘T j,„t ti ora a cheap mail order
,‘vuscr. 'tv. must Please you or your
ioney back.
ClaaiStanooga Mstillery
.opriotors Distillery No. 115. District of Tena.
265 Slain St., CHATTANOOGA, TBNN.
COOPER’S SPECIAL
CORN WHISKEY
1 full gallon $2.25
4 full gallons
12 full quarts
8.00
6.50
24 full pints 7.00
Return Lids ad with an order for 4
(ials.. 12 ijuartri or 24 1‘int*, and we
"ill give von one pint our Siieci&l Rye
FREE. Take advantage of this.
Address ud orders to
J. C. COOPER
436 E. Bay St. (P. O. Box 1112.
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.