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THK ATLANTA SEMI-WJSHKLi'X JOURNAL, ATLANTA^ UA., iKIUAI, JfiliBltlJAltY 7, 1B13.
THOUSANDS HAVE KIDNEY
TROUBLE AND DON'T KNOW IT
Weak and unhealthy kidneys ore 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
oontlnue, 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 fee^ that your kidneys are the
cause of your sickness or run down con
dition commence taking Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Boot, the great kidney, liver and
bladder remedy, because as soon as your
kidneys begin to improve they will help
all the other organs to health.
XiDITORIAIi 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-ORoot 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 guaranteed.—(Advt.)
Prevalency of Kidney 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.
Tlie 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 or 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,
floating, 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 th^ regular fifty-cent and one-
dollar size bottles at all drug stores.
Sample Bottle Sent Free.
COUNTIES TO ORGANIZE
TO FIGHT BOLL WEEVIL
State Entomologist Announces
Schedule of Meetings for
February
Another tier of counties in the south
western section of the state will be or
ganized this month under the direction
of State Entomologist E. Lee Worsham,
for the purpose of eradicating black root
or wilt disease in cotton and preparing
for the coming of the boll weevil to
Georgia in the near future.
The organization and work in these
counties will be along similar lines to
that already conducted in the twenty-
five counties in the extreme southwest
ern section of the state, over against
the Alabama line, where the boll weevil
will strike first.
The meetings so far* as scheduled by
Entomologist Worsham will be held for
the purpose of effecting these organiza
tions, will be held as follows:
Valdosta, Monday, February 10, court
house, 10:30 a. m.
Nashville, Ga., Tuesday, February 11,
court house, 10:30 a. m.
Tifton, Wednesday, February 12, court
house, 10:30 a. m.
_^Ashbuyn, Wednesday, February 13,
court house, 10:30 a? m.
• Cordele, Friday, February 14, court
house, 10:30 a. m.
Fitzgerald, Saturday, February 15,
court house, 10:30 a. m.
Ocilla, Saturday, February 15, court
house, 3 p. m.
Vienna, Monday, February 17, court
house, 10:30 a. m.
Oglethorpe, Tuesday, February 18,
court house, 10:30 a. m.
, Butler, Wednesday, February 19,
court house, 10:30 a. m.
Addresses relative to the work in
l^md will be made at these meetings By
Mr. Worsham, A. C. Lewis, assistant
state entomologist, and Ira Williams, of
the United States demonstration bureau,
who is doing special work in co-opera
tion with the state board of ento
mology in the matter of breeding'long
staple upland cotton to me^t t boll weevil
conditions.
PASSENGERS IN PANIC
WHEN SHIP SINKS
(By Associated Press.)
GILLIPOLIS, Ohio, Feb. 5.4~Ramming
her bow into Bear Trap pier in the
darkness early today the packet steam
er City of Parkersburg, sank in deep
water in the Ohio river. Fifteen panic-*
stricken passengers and members of the
crewi managed to get to shore and kept
from freezing by fires built of drift
wood.
The boat, which is owned by the
Pittsburg and Cincinnati Packet com
pany, valued at $35,000, had a capacity
cargo.
Both boat and cargo, it’is feared, will
be a total loss.
SEED MAY SOON BE SENT
THROUGH PARCEL POST
Senator Smith Introduces an
Amendment to Act to
, Allow This
BY B&LPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 5.—Seed, bulbs,
cuttings, roots, plants, scions and books
will be admitted to the privileges of
the parcel post regulations If an amend
ment proposed today by Senator Smith
is adopted.
The original parcel post act excluded
these things from the special parcel
rate. Senator Smith thinks It Impor
tant that they be admitted, and will
press his amendment to the postoffice
appropriation bill.
“Seed, bulbs, cuttings, books, etc.,
were admitted under the provisions of
the parcel post bill as originally agreed
to In the senate,” explained the sena
tor, “but in conference between the two
houses they were excluded, and require
a higher rate than ordinary parcels. I
believe they are entitled to the lowest
rate.”
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
;,Irrltation 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
caffdnt, 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,
aiifl 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 did
not like Postum, it was so weak and
tasteless.
“I explained to her toe 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. Bead the
little book, "The Road to Wellvllle,” in
pkgs. “Tnere’s a Reason."
Postum now comes In concentrated,
powder form, called Instant PosCUm.
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 SU-cup
tin 30 ct»., 80 to 100-oup tin 50 ct»,
A 5-cup trial tin mailed for grocer's
name and 2-cent stamp for postage,
Postum Cereal Co., Ltd,, Battle Creek,
Mich.—(Advt.)
ASKS FOR REPEAL OF
FIFTEENTH_AMENDMENT
Ever since our great Democratic tri
umph in November I have waited, I can’t
say patiently, for an expression from
someone through the press in reference
to the repeal of the fifteenth amend
ment of our national constitution, but
so far as I know “mum” has been the
word.
A few days ago I saw where the
South Carolina legislature had raised
the question and would push it, and I
trust gain a repeal for that state.
I feLt hopeful then that our state
would follow suit, but each week I
have scanned the columns in my fruit
less search. I *
Several times recently I have seen
the woman’s suffrage movement in Geor
gia mentioned and in the last issue of
The Atlanta Journal is a picture of the
“Girl With the Green Plumd,” and quite
a long piece about her as the leader of
the suffrage movement in Georgia.
When I read it carefully I felt I could
iremain silent no longer. Is it possible
that the women of Georgia and the
south care to vote before the fifteenth
amendment is repealed? I am going to
answer, No! A thousand times, No!
And I believe every true and loyal
southern woman will echo assent.
Furthermore, we do not need Miss
Evelyn Nora-Gon or any other north
ern woman to come and tell us when
we need the ballot. It seems she would
thrust that upon us just as the north
thrust the free negro upon us—totally
unprepared. And the pity is, I am
ashamed to say, she has found some few
followers. Doubtless they never stopped
to think that for every vote cast by
a white woman there would be many
cast by negro women, who would rub
elbows with her at the polls. However,\
this would be the case and at the next
election what kind of a victory would
we see*? A Republican one, most as
suredly, for there is nothing so cheap
as negro votes, and would not they be
multiplied many times by the addition
of the negro woman’s vote? Indeed they
would.
Don’t think for one moment that Miss
NoraGon is ignorant of this fact, I have
no idea she reckoned without her host.
I see she would have the country to
know that the Georgia women have
awakened dnd so would I have her
know that they are not all so fast
asleep as her followers. I am sure we
have some who think she should have
paid her visit to Washington before
coming - to Georgia and asked for the
repeal of the fifteenth amendment and
then she might have come to wage a
woman’s suffrage campaign here and
received the “glad-hand,” for we south
ern women feel and know there is much
! good in the movement, but we do not
want it along with the negro and until
that blot of shame is removed from
these southern states we refuse it, em
phatically.
Some may make the plea that the
“grandfather” clause is enough and is
in force in some southern states. I
deny thsit it is enough even if we had
it in Gedrgia, for it is not worth a pin.
Stop and think how long it Will bar the
negro vote. Some of them for this
generation only. The next can say, and
truthfully, that their grandfather’s
could read and write and there the law
would end.
Nothing can satisfy the south ex
cept the repeal of the law that saddled
this indignity upon her. So I would
say to Miss NoraGon as Editor Gray
did to Mr. Roosevelt, “Go back home,”
we are not ready for the vote, oh, no!
Not yet.’
MRS. S. P. MYRICK.
Meriwether, Ga,
KEEP BOYS ON THE FARM
SAYS CHARLES S. BARRETT
Increased Number of Boys Go
ing to Cities, Cause of
Farming Decay
I heard a man say a while ago that
he had made a careful investigation of
the men who had achieved success in a
large southern city, arid that 90 per
cent of them had been bred 6n farms.
To him it was a matter of pride and
gratification, but 1 will confess frankly
that the statement shocked and sadden
ed me. I knew in a general way that
our cities were absorbing too many
country boys, but the thought that the
brains, energy and power of a great
city had been achieved at the expense
of the farms was startling. In it, I
saw one of the main reasons why farm
ing was falling into decay, and farm
lands were in alien hands.
We hear and read a vast deal these
days about conservation, but to my'tnind
the most vital things in America to
day is the conservation of our young
men on the soil. It is old and trite to
say that a nation’s prosperity is meas
ured by its agriculture, but it is. pro
foundly true nevertheless.
There are a thousand isses over which
our statesmen concern themselves and
with which they whip the people into
frenzies of political fervor. But they
are not striking at the heart and soul
of the most vital problem of the' day.
These questions are largely political,
while the greatest economic isfeue of
this country is to create such conditions
and to so educate our boys as to make
them love, prosper on and stick to our
farms.
When statesmen big enough and broad
enough fill our lawmaking halls to
sense this fact, and seek the remedy,
then we shall have a new era.
Here are just a few random facts
tending to show our farihs have been
and ace being drained of its best blood.
Eixty-six per cent of the tillers of the
soil in the United States are non-land
owners. | %
In Georgia only 34 per cent of the
farmers own the land which they till;
in Alabama and South Carolina 37 per
cent, while in other southern states
conditions are as serious. Similar con
ditions probably prevail nation-wi£e.
This farm ownership by those who do
not cultivate the land is becoming one
of the gravest problems of the day,
and I believe much of it is due to the
boys leaving the farm for the city. .This
alien land ownership must be serious
when Mississippi finds it expedient to
imss a law regulating ifc
We must face this problem and find
th e remedy. Unless this movement
away from soil < is checked our na
tional prosperity and greatness is sure
to crumble. Agricultural schools, ru
ral delivery, rural telephones, wider
and more general dissemiiTktion of in
formation on ifiiproved farming and now
the parcel post are helpful factors and
beacon lights along th© way, but much
more is to be done to accomplish real
results.
Much depends on the farmer—farther.
They must treat their boys right; teach
him how to love the farm and let him
share in the profits of its toil. - The
Boys’ Corn clubs ave demonstrated very
clearly what they can and will do if
offered the right stimulus, tfre hope of
reward. Closer and better community
interest and ■ intercourse, accurate
knowledge of the soil and the things
that be^t grow on it—all these form
part at least, of a generai upward
movement for the future farmers <?T
this country.
Are we to have conditions here in
the south and in /he west as one may
find them in many of the New England
states—miles of abandoned farms and
houses vacant and falling into decay?
I fear so unless we can check the flow
8f boys from th© farms to the cities.
In the south particularly, where the
negro farm help is even more pro
nounced in its tendency to leave tne
country and congest -in the cities, the
farmer must learn, how to hold his
boys, or go to smash.
I am not an alarmist—normally and
naturally I am an optimist and beflieve
most men are struggling toward t*he
light and better conditions. But I
would be foolish to blind myself to
the conditions outlined, and which any
observant man may see. Good schools
and broader educational advantages will
go far as a remedy.
This is a real and great problem of
CAS, SOURNESS ANO
11
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; fiead 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 all 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 ba$k.
It’s worth its weight In gold to men
and women who can’t get their stomach’s
regtilated. 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.)
Dynamite Blows
Off Boy’s Hand
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
DALLAS, Ga., Feb. 4.—Sammie Sta-
tem, a ten-year-old boy, In an effort to
extract the contents of a dynamite cap
with a nail, had his hand blown off, at
the home of his grandfather, in Facto
ry Town, this morning.
9 ne disadvantage which the music-
'lover of today often feels is .the high
price of instruments, especially of
pianos and organs. The mttsic-lover who
longs for a piano or organ- and hesi
tates to pay the exorbitant prices of the
average dealer, has a distinct friend in
the famous Cornish Company of Wash
ington, N. J. In fact, it is doubtful if a
mor’e liberal offer has ever been made
by a national advertiser than by the
Cornish Company. They make the most
liberal terms, allow the longest free
trial, and give a legal bond which com
pels them to return the purchaser’s
money in case of dissatisfaction.
Suppose you write a letter to the
Cornish Company, Washington, |N. J.,
saying you read this little story in The
Semi-Weekly Journal, and asking for
their new Cornish Book of pianos and
organs. They will send it free to you,
showing you many beautiful and artistic
styles from which tor choose. Then or
der a piano on your own terms—one
year’s credit, or two if needed—and
very shortly the" Cornish Company will
Ship you the piano you select, together
with a solid wood, circular-seated ad
justable piano stool with brass claws
and crystal foundation, a handsome silk
scarf, and a piano instruction book and
course of music lessons.
If within a ^ear you decide to #teturn
It, the instrument, the Cornish Company
will refund £o you any money that you
have paid them, ^together with 6 per
cent interest. .
Furthermore, every instrument sent
out by this company is guaranteed for
twenty-five years and the price asked is
actually a third less than other makers
ask for pianos and organs of similar
quality. /
'Whether you buy an instrument or
not, you should have the Cornish book
because It tells many things that you
ought to know about music and musical
goods. It also explains the Cornish way
of doing business^ gjves the names $nd
addresses of many satisfied customers.
Be sure to mention The. Semi-Weekly
Journal when l^ou write your letter to
The Cornish Company, Washington, N.
J. We urge every 4iusic~iover to write
for the free bqlok today.—„(Advt.)
the day as I see it. Unless it is solved
w e shall Inevitably decay and vanish
as the most powerful, nation on earth.
C. 8. BARRETT.
Union City, Ga., Feb. 5, 1913.
Start Your Baby
With Sound Health
Regular Bowel Movement
from Childhood on Fore
stalls Future 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 depend 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 it 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. Caldwell'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 ho 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 milti 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 atjfifty 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 youf* 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
1 will be mailed you.
CONFESSION CLEARS ’
6IC BOMB MYSTERY
Servant Who Sent the Bomb
Which Killed Mrs, Herre-
. ra Sunday Confesses
ADLER’S FAMOUS
- No Money Down
FREE TRIAL OFFER
I Will Trust
(Vfy Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Feb. 6.—John * Paul
Farrell, a janitor, confessed today that
he sent to Bernard Herrera last Sunday
the bomb, which resulted in the death
of Mrs. Herrera and serious injury to
Herrera and Mis Fughtman, a boarder.
Then Farrell astonished the police by
calmly reciting that he sent the bomb'
which killed Mrs. Helen Taylor, a year
ago, adding that Mrs. Taylor was his
daughter. Next, Farrell solved the mys
tery of the sending of a bomb, last year
to Judge Otto Rosalsky. Finally, he
explained the death of “Kid” Walker,
slain in 1887.
GIVES HIS REASON'S.
.He slew Mrs. Taylor, he said, be
cause she was his daughter, and had
gone wrong. “Kid” Walker was killed,
he declared, by a nam named Lest'range,
because Walker has* caused Mrs. Tay
lor’s downfall.
The attempt on Judge Rosalsky’s life,
he added, wafe made because the judge
had sentenced a criminal, unnamed, to
twenty years’ Imprisonment.
The bomb was sent to the judge by
a man known to Farrell only as
“Tony.”
Herrera’s life was sought, Farrell
said, because he had ' said he would
discharge him from his job as janitor.
Farrell was employed at the apartment
house where^Herrera is superintendent.
" ^
Liners Will Break
Hoodoo by Sailing
Away on Fridays
—and
There’s Nothing
to Pay For but Quality
My Original Direct-from-Factory-
to-Home—Not One Cent In Advance
—Free 30 Day** 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 "Adter’* a household
r word; over 85.000 of these famous organs are flow in
the homes of the people—and when I say there’s noth-
I Save You all In-Between Profit
, I will save you $48.76 because I sell direct from the ... . . _ .
$600,000 Adler Organ Factory (greatest inexistence) at lowest wholesale factory prices. The AdleJ
t>i«„ tv.~t.i n wrecks organ prices, absolutely sponging out all “in-between,’’ middlemen I
rgans. Every World Famed Adlor Organ sold is accompanied by our 50yea?
B Bond, backed by the Adler Capital and Resources of over Sl.OOO.OOO.
FREE 30 Days* Trial
I will ship yon any World Famed Adler Organ you may select from my nt
an absolutely free playing test—keep it a wh'-le month free—\t it does not do all .
it back to me—I will pay freight both wayr*nd your txialdoesn’tcost you asingle penny.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, gfeb. 4.—The tradition
al superstition about starting an oce^tn
voyage on Friday is to be broken by.
one of the trans-Atlantic lines here for
the first time. Beginning April 4, tlie
steamers Philadelphia, St. Louis, New
York and St. Paul, of the American
line will* sail on Friday morning ln-
steq^ of Saturday as at present.
TO EDUCATE VOTERS
THROUGH LECTURES
- . - , i
WASHINGTON. Feb. 5.—General ed
ucation of the young voters of the na
tion is to be Vindertaken by the wom
en’s National Democratic association, it
was announced today. The Democratic
women of the District of Columbia are
to be given opportunity to study the
Democratic idea* of government through
a series of lectures by noted Demo
crats.
Capitalists See Anniston
ANNISTON, Ala., Feb. 4.—Accom
panied by M. Webb Offutt. assistant to
President Freeman, of the (Alabama In
terstate Power company, a party of Eng
lish capitalists, headed by G. Mackey
Edger and Sir George I^uscott, of Spear
ing St Co v the great English backing
house, visited Anniston Sunday alfter-
$2,500 Policy FREE
■‘“•I* -MONEY FOR Y0D!
\
select from my new, bir organ book, foi
■ee— if it does not do all I claim—juat shit
me—I will pay freight both wayr ind your trial doesn’t cost you a single
And Then A 363 Days' Approval Test
—and your money back if my World Famed Adler Organ has not held up to every ciaim 1 maui
for it. Ian’t this the squarest offer you ever heard ofT It costs you nothing to flfid out how muc»
better my World Famed Prize Winning Adler Organs are than the ordinary made-to-sell organs*
Just fill in 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 A dler Organ must sell itself after a free trial in your home. You’re thi
judge, because it is your money and I cannot afford to have a single dissatisfied customer.
Easy Payments—No Burden To You
Two or three years’ time if you uHsh—no collectors. A~k about our Fall Payment Pto*
for the benefit of alt who depend upon the harvest for income.
My Celebrated Adler Piano Offer*
My Celebrated Adler Plano is better than pianos that sell for double the money, i
ou hive the piano on exactly the same terms as an Adler Organ—SO days’ free trial-}
let
all
you hive the piano on exactly the same terms as an Adler Organ—SO days’ free trial-
the time you want to pay—money back at end of year if piano is not as represented, j
25 Year Guarantee twof'llMDtiary—25 years. * ^
Fill In and Mall Coupon Today
Cyrus I— Adler. Pres. „
Adler Mfs. Co., 5MS W. Chestnut St., LouurUIe, Ky.
Make a cross in the square for organ or piano book.
□
I want s
Organ f
| I want
I Piano
byour
Book
NAME,..
Address..
County...
BIGGER! BETTER!!
More liberal
Than Evqr
Is Our Offir to Agents this Season
We Want You to Bo
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 you want the
swellest clothes in the world
FREE, put your name on
a postal card and mail to
d'lijius. We’ll do the rest.
[ We Prepay Exprese on Everything.
nan mm. mm mm AlMtlCftll WOOlBB MIIIS CO.
rSfEE ®«Pt* 205, CHICAGO
ECZEMA
Orders
See her*! We are one of
the oldest firms in business.
Supremo tailoring means
•best tailoring. Our reputation
will land orders for you and big
money Your spare time spent
showing the Supreme line of
men’s fine all wool fabrics and
up-to-the-minute styles will
make you more in a day than
you can make in a week.
Build a big profitable busi-
inesa of your own. No
canvassing and no ex
perience needed.
Our $2,500 POLICY
FREE
H.!,< To« Maks
$10to$20
a OAT and UP
With every suit or overcoat we
are going to give a Genuine
Leather poeketbook and $2,500
transferable accident policyin one
of the biggest Coinpapies in Amer
ica. It’ a a whirlwind order bringer.
We will send you absolutely Free.
d f our big line of adl wool fabrics and
styles is suitB_and coats, tape measure, order blanks, etc.
Styles and pneea suiting every*.taste and pocketbook
Show this to oar regular customer! and your friends—
show them the $2,500 policy fend watch the dollars roll In.
SUPREME TAILORING CO., Dtpi. F. Chicago, III,
Express Pr
styles ia suits
RISK A CENT
We Want
More Men
At $15.00
A Day
. And *rlte today for an appointment
to a position that will pay'you just as
much as wg are paying Mr. Horton.
7 Texas. 1912.
P. W. Goodman, Pres. Regal Tailoring Co.
Here’s a picture of my store, showing yon the
new front I Just ftad put in. It will betwo vears
next month that I started with you. Whenl left
m my old position I was earnin« $12 a week. Tbinra
r are different now If 1 .don't raakeSlIj a day 1
think businoee is bad.—RALPH N, HORTON.
Free Sample Suit
. i.—■!-- .a mi — ital and expe-
You start making money at once—
the first day. Work all or spare ti me
at home or traveling. V\e fur
nish everything—fred—complete
outfit—samples—measuring ays-
tem—full instructions. We want
Agents, Salesmen, General Agent*—
quick. Send your name and address on
a postal card today—investigate. Act
immediately.
REGAL TAILORING CO.
439 Regal Bldg., Chicago, III.
! rience.
$15 •
Also called Tetter, Salt Rheum, Pruritus, Milk-'
Crust, Weeping Skin, E$c.
ECZEMA CAN BE CUBED TO STAY, and'
when I eay cured, l mean Just what I say—
C- # U-K-E-D, and not merely patched op for
awhile, to return worse tnan before. Ilemeiyber
1 make this broad statement After putting
twelve years.'of my time <in this onei disease
and handling in the meantime nearly half of a
million case of this dreadful disease. Npw.
I do not care what all you have used, notf how
many doctors have told you tnat yop could not
be cured—all I aak is Just a chance to show
yori 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’**
time. If you are disgusted and discouraged,
I dare you to give mo a chance to prove my
claims. By v/rltlng me today you will enjoy|
more real comfort than you nad ever thought
this world holds for you. Just try It and you
will see I am telling you the truth,
ilr. J. £. Cannaday, 524 Court Block, Eedallg, Mo.
Keterehces: Third National Bank, Sedalla, Mo.i 1
Could you do a fetter act than to send this no- I
tiee to some poor sufferer of Eczema?— (Advt.)
Low
98 cents
To advertise our business, make new friends and Introduce our great calm
logua of Elgin watches we will send this elegant watch to any address bp
mail postpaid for Only 98 oenta. Regular gentlemen s size, open face,
full engraved, high grade gold plate finish, Arabic or Roman dial, lever es-
, capement, stem wind and stem set, a marvelously correct timekeeper and
, fully Guaranteed for S Years. Send this advertisement to us with your
name and address and B8 cents and watch will be sent by return mall post
paid. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Remember, 98 cents is posi-
rely all yon have to pay for this wonderful watch. 8$nd 98 cente today. Addresa
. E. CHALMERS & CO. 638 So. Dearborn St. CHICAGO
On the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays
of each month the fares are
txtra low—and allow stop
orers free and 25 days time—
via Cotton Belt Route, to
Arkansas
& Texas
The Cotton Belt Route is th.
dirtet 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 Routetrains
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.
Drainage Meet Put Off
CHICAGO, Fob , i.‘—Announcement
was mods lien# today of the postpone
ment of the third annual meeting of the
National Drainage congress at 8t.
LouJe, Mq,, frqm February 20-28 to May
X, 2 and 3,
POWERFUL AIR RIFLE ing parts of th«b«rtgr»dfes""
of steel. The stock is finely polished walnut. Shoots small game. Power
ful, accurate, durable. You can have this air rifle for distributing only 8 of our t
selling art pictures at 25 cents on our special offer. Everybody will take one.
IT COSTS YOU NOTHING to try, «« take bark those you can t dispoeo of^
bend po money just your name and address. M. O. SEITZtiD70
FREE
All year Tourist
Tickote also on
•ale Daily to cer-
tatapointnInTes-
M. 90-day* limit.
Weekly Salary for You
Send your name and address today for
our new, big weekly salary offer—You’ve long been
waiting for a regular, guaranteed weekly salary—it hap come at
•sst—a real genuine offer. But it took the good old reliable
Knickerbocker Talfonntr Company to start these “big doings. ’ ’
Now boys, this means the ash-pile for the old tailoring proposi
tion. Hitch up with the new salary plan. We not only pay you
a regular weekly salary, but you get a
Free Suit and English Slip-On Raincoat
—the biggest cash profits on each sale and theswell-
cst b!g Sample Outfit you ever nato. Everything eert FREE and
prepaid Be the first to write from your town—we’ll put you on
our weekly pay roll without delay. A poetal will everything.
Knickerbocker Tailoring Co„ Dept. 336 Chicago
T
4‘SSEREE
Bend your utme and .ddreia and
we wt!l send you 1 if Beautiful
Oriental Rloga to sell at 10omits
each. All the rage In New York.
When s«ld return ue $LS0 and
ret these four Beautiful Actress
Rings Free, a’«o big premium
list of nearlr 60 premiums andl
now to get them.
HOWARD k CO.,
106 Rose HU, Palmyra, Pa,
Paint Without Oil
Remarkable Dikcovery Tbat Cnt* Down
the Coat of Paint Seventy-
Fiye Per Cent.
A Free Trial Package is Mailed te Everyone
. Who Writ^i.
A. Tj, Rice, a prominent manufacturer of
Adams, N. Y., has discovered a process of
making a new kind of paint without the use
of oil. He calls it l’owdrpaint.“ It comes in
the form of a dry powder and all that »e
required Is cold water to make a paint weather
proof,' fire proof and as durable as oil paint.
It adheres to any surface, wood, stone or
brick, spreads and looks like oil paint and
costs about dne-rourtb as much.
Write to Mr. A. L. Rice, Manuf’r, 25 North
St., Adams, N. Y., and he will send you a„freo
trial package, also color card and full Infor
mation showing you how you can «ave a good
many dollars. Write today. — (Advt.)
F-VJL-L. 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 Whlnkey, and
we will send one i.
quart free, or 9 bottles
in all. EXPRESS PIIK-
PAID. Test the whiskey
any way you like, and
if not satisfied that
Yellow Seal Corn Whis
key is the best w>»is-
key you ever tasted
return the 8 bottles
at our expense *
keep the one quart
bottle and your $6
will be returned to
you. I
Yellow Seal Corn
Whiskey Is fully ma
tured. It is so pure
you can add an much
water again as
whiskey arid then
have better whiskey
than most of the
cheap brands offered
by mail order houses.
In case you wisn
some other quantity,
we ship to points
reached by Adams or
Southern Express
EXPR -S3 PREPAID
24 a $ 7 oa
Remember you receive this fine corn
v his key from distillery direct to you
and not from a cheap mail order
house. We must please you or your
money back.
Cbatf sioora Distillery
Proprietors Distillery No. 115. District of Term.
865 Mein St., CHATTANOOGA, TEN*.
4 Full
Quarts
SPECIAL 30-DAY CUT PRICE ON OUR
STRAIGHT WHISKEY
Made to Secure 5,000 New Customers.
Send for 2 gallons of this whiekey at
the out price of $13.60, Expre*# Paid, and
compare tne quality with 2 gallons of any
other kind advertised In this paper at $3.00,
$4.00 or $5.00 for 2 gallons, and if our
Straight Whiskey is not better— you be
the judge—send ours back on first train
and we will return your money and a dollar
bill extra to pay for your time.
The above ic an iron-olad agreement never
printed before in any paper by any whiskey
house—so It’s up to you to test It out I Re
turn this ad with remittance and ad
dress your letter plainly as below—we will
do the rest Ind pack big Sample Jug and
nice Calendar Free with the 2 gallons.
1 We refer to Atlantic National Bank,
Jacksonville, Fla., one of the largest Banks
in Florida.
ATLANTIC COAST DISTILLING CO.
Jacksonville, Fla.
COOPER’S SPECIAL
CORN WHISKEY
1 full gallon $2-25
4 full gallons 8.00
12 full quarts 6.50
24 full pints 7.00
Return this ad with an order for 4
Gals., 12 Quarts or 24 Finis, and wg
wlU give you one pint our Special By#
FUEE. Take advantage of this.
Address ull orders to
J. C. COOPER
436 E. Da -J St. (P, 0. Box 1118.
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
)