Newspaper Page Text
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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1913.
PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN
ENDS INDIGESTION.
Time It! No sour, gassy stom
ach or Dyspepsia in
five minutes.
FARMERS OF GEORGIA
ARE HELPED BY TRIS BILL
Senator Hoke Smith Delighted
Over Report on Agricul
tural Bill
You don’t want a slow remedy when
your stomach Is bad—or an uncertain
one—or a harmful one—your stomach is
too valuable; you mustn’t Injure it with
drastic drugs.
Pape’s Diapepsin is noted for its
speed in giving relief; its harmlessness;
its certain unfailing action in regulat
ing sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its
millions of cures in indigestion, dys
pepsia. gastritis and other stomach
trouble has made It famous the world
over.
Keep this perfect stomach doctor in
your home—keep it handy—get a large
fifty-cent case from any drug store and
tnen if anyone should eat something
which doesn’t agree with them; if what
they feat lays like lead, ferments and
sours Ad forms gas; causes headache,
dizziness and nausea; eructations of
ikcid and undigested food—remember as
soon as Pape’s Diapepsin comes in con
tact with the stomach all such distress
vanishes. Its promptness, certainty
and ease in overcoming the worst stom
ach disorders is a revelation to those
who try it.—(Advt.)
WASHINGTON IS GAY IN
APPEARANGE FOR MARCH 4
Down Town Buildings'Already
Decorating in National
Colors
(By Associated Press. - )
WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Although
the inauguration pf President-elect
Woodrow Wilson is still ten days away,
the city already is assuming a gay ap
pearance.
Buildings in the downtown section
and along the line of march have been
decorated with the national colors, as
well as white and green', the official
inaugural color 1 scheme. Nearly all
public buildings have received a dress
of bunting and flags.
Beginning Monday,, the finishing
touches will be put on all the reviewing
slands. The president’s stand, the cen
tral feature of the court of honor in
front of the White House, practically
is completed.
During the coming week, the last
leetings of the*various subcommittees
15f the inaugural committee will be held
to go over the completed plans for the
various features of the inauguration.
Then will follow tfhe last meeting of
he general ’ committee, at yrhich the
arious committee heads will make, their
final report to Cfiairman Eustls and to
receive final instructions to carry out
successfully the plan as. prepared in
every detail.
Millions of Americans will see this
year for the first time moving pictures
of the actual administration of the oath
to the president of* the United States.
The strict r*ules w^iich havfe heretofore
limited occupation of the “battery
stands” facing the inaugural platform to
photographers representing large news
papers have been suspended by the
congressional inaugural committee and
an addition built at each end of the plat
form to accommodate operators from
eight motion picture concerns. The con
cession to the “movies” was made on
recommendation of Superintendent
•lames D. Preston, of the senate press
gallery after conferences with members
of the committee.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Senator
Hoke Smith believes that the agricul
tural appropriation bill as reported to
the senate carries many new items and
provisions of interest to the farmers
of Georgia and the south.
’/’he senatqr, who is a member of the
committee on agriculture, has given
much time to the work of preparing
the bill. He is familiar with all of its
details and their relation to the farm
ers.
‘‘The bill carries many new provisions
of interest to Georgia,” said the senator
today. “I regard the amendment for
the investigation of ginning, grading
and baling of cotton, together with the
establishment of standards for differ
ent grades, as of great importance. An
other new feature of the bill provides
for the study of rice cultivation and
another relates to an inquiry for the
cause of the rapid decay of Irish pota
toes, the purpose being to determine the
causes which prevent potatoes raised in
the south Atlantic states withstanding
exposure to the air.” ^
Senator Smith is of course delighted
with the success of his plan for the cre
ation of a market bureau in the depart
ment of agriculture. More than twelve
months ago Senator Smith introduced
a bill to create a division of markets,
the duty of which was to investigate
systems of marketing farm products
and collecting data with reference to
them and distribute it to the farmers,
farmers’ organizations and consumers.
At the last session of congress this
bill passed the senate. It has since
attracted great attention all over the
United States, universally receiving fa
vorable comment.
After a full investigation the house
committee on agriculture reported in
favor of the measure and it is now
pending in the house.
The report of the committee on ag
riculture which has Just been filed
in the seriate carries this bill in full,
and the work of the division of markets
will begin next July.
Another provision in which Senator
Smith is much interested provides for
the creation by the president of a com
mission to investigate the operation of
co-operative land mortgage companies
and rural credit unions. The commis
sion is required to submit a report to
congress as early as practicable em
bodying recommendations as to how a
system of land mortgage companies and
rufal vredit unions may be best adapted
to the requirements of the people of
the United States.
Of course, there are many provisions
in the bill carrying old lines of work
of the agricultural department, but
these are just a few new measures in
which Senator Smith has taken especial
interest.
CASCARETS SURELY
YOU OUT
No Headache, Biliousness,
Lazy Liver or Constipated
Bowels by Morning
Are you keeping your bowels, liver
and stomach clean, pure and fresh with
Cascarets, or merely forcing a passage
way through these alimentary or drain
age organs every few days with Salts,
Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative
Waters.
Stop haying a bowels wash-day. Let
Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and regu
late the stomach, remove the undigested,
sour and fermenting food and foul gases,
take the excess bile from the liver and
carry out of the system all the decom
posed waste matter and poisons in the
intestines and bowels.
A Cascaret tonight will make you feel
great by morning. They work while you
sleep—never gripe, sicken or cause any
inconvenience, and cost only 10 cents
a box from your druggist. Millions of
men and women take a Cascaret now
and then and never have Headache, Bil
iousness, coated tongue, Indigestion; Sour
Stomach or Constipated Bowels. Casca
rets belong in every household. Children
just love to take them.—(Advt.)
RAILROADS IN GEORGIA
EARNED LESS LAST YEAR
New York Sees First
Real Quaker Wedding
In Seventeen Years
CASTRO SAILS SUDDENLY
FROM NEW YORK TO CUBA
Venezuelan Says, However,
That His Trip Is Merely
for Pleasure
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Feb. 22.-General Cip-
riano Castro, ei-president of Venezuela,
left New- York suddenly today for Cuba
on the Ward liner, Saratoga. He said
there was. nothing secret about his trip,
that it was'merely for pleasure and that
he would return to New York some time
in March.
The general said he felt confident that
in would defeat the government in its
: ppeal to the supreme court from the
♦cderal district court decision allowing
him to enter this country.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Jf£b. 21.—For the first
time in seventeen years there was a
wedding last night in the little Quaker
meeting house in Cramercy Park, over
which quaint edinfice fashionable apart
ment bouses now tower.
It is the home of the only congrega
tion of orthodox Friends in New York.
It had been so long since the 300 mem
bers of the congregation saw a wed-
iding, that practically all of them came
from far and near to see the marriage
of Benjamin Harvey Doane, a clerk In
the appellate division of the supreme
court, # and Miss Alice Howes Underhill.
With no minister and with no music,
the couple marched up the aisle of the
church and standing before the meet
ing they’clasped hands and repeated the
simple marriage vows to be loving and
dutiful, with God’s aid. v
They signed a certificate testifying to
the fact that they had laid their inten
tions of marriage before two previous
meetings of the congregation without
having heard objection to them.
Fifty years ago, * when the little
meeting house was new, all of the
front rows usually were filled with
women in the Quaker dress, but- last
night ony one woman appeared in that
sober garb.
10,000 SLAIN IN
BATTLE AT SCUTARI
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Six thou
sand Montenegrins and four thousand
Servians perished at Scutari fn the last
battle between the allied troops and the
Ottoman forces, according to an offi
cial dispatch from Constantinople re
ceived at the Turkish embassy tonight.
Bowels Get Weak ;
As Age Advances
The First Necessity is to
Keep the' Bowels Gently
Open With a Mild
Laxative- Tonic
Healthy old age is so absolutely de
pendent upon the condition of the bow
els that great care should be taken to
fiPe that they act regularly. The fact is
that as age advances the stomach mus
cles become weak and inactive &n<T the
liver does not store up the juices that
are necessary ’to prompt*digestion.
Sortie help can be obtained by eating
easily digested foods and by plenty of
exercise, but this latter is irksome to
most* elderly people. One thing is cer
tain, that a state of constipation^should
always be avoided as it is dangerous
to life arid health. The best plan is to
taka a mild laxative as often as is
deemed necessary. But with equal cer
tainty it is suggested that cathartics,
purgatives, physics, salts and pills be
avoided, as they do but temporary good
a r.d are so harsh as to be a shock to a
delicate system.
A much better plan, and one that
thousands of elderly people are follow
ing, is to take a gentle lax*ative-tonic
like Dr. Caldwell’s Syfiip Pepsin, which
acts as nearly,like nature as Is possi
ble. In fact, the tendency of this rem
edy is to strengthen the stomach and
bowel muscles and so train them to act
naturally again, when medicine^ of all
kinds can usually be dispensed with.
This is the opinion of many people of
different ages, j among them Mr. O. P.
Miller, Barodaj Mich., who writes: “J
mu 80 years old and have been consti
pated for many years. Since receiving
your sample bottle I have procured two
;,0c bottles and find that it is the best
romfuiv J ftvnr used and does iust what
Gross Earnings Were Greater,
but Expenses Were More
So, Says R, R, Board
Gross earnings of railroads in Geor
gia for the fiscal year ending June 30,
1912, were $50,813,552.22, as against
$47,262,459.27 for the previous year.
Notwithstanding the gross earnings
of the railroads increased $3,551,090.95,
the net earnings decreased $158,714.65.
This condition of affairs is due to the
increased operating expenses. For the
year ending June 30, 1912, the oper
ating expenses amounted to $36,651,-
962.56, while for the year previous they
were but $32,980,674.28, a difference of
$3,671,288.28.
Total net earnings for the year end
ing June 30, . danecodqaeti n-iRdyarn
as compared to $14,353,954.19 for the
former year. Thus the roads' actual
net earnings were $158,741.65 greater
for the year ending June 30, 1911.
FROM OFFICIAL DATA.
These facts are shown by the data
which has been compiled by the state
railroad commission for its fortieth
annual report now in process of prep
aration. They were obtained from the
sworn annual reports made to the com
mission by the various railroads.
Out of the net earnings such fixed
charges as taxes, interest on bonded in
debtedness, and improvements and div
idends, if any, must be paid.
In 1911 'peorgia railroads paid for
operating expenses 69.78 cents out of
every 100 cents received as revenue,
while in 1912 they paid for operating
71.73 cents out of every 100 cents rev
enue.
INCREASE INVESTIGATED.
The rather remarkable increase in
operating expenses has prompted the
commission to make an Investigation.
For some time members of the com
mission, assisted by the rate experts
have been making a study and analysis
of these operating expenses in an effort
to account for the increases and deter
mine if they were reasonable or neces
sary.
In order to ascertain causes, which
might not be temporary, the commis
sion has gone back to 1908 in its in
vestigations, covering a perior qf five
years. The largest items in operating
expenses are “wages” and "maintenance
and equipment,” the last account cover
ing the upkeep of the road and rolling
stock.
In 1908 the ( railroads operating in Geor
gia employed in Georgia 34,809 people.
In 1912 they employed 39,691 people.
Mother Calls Postal
Clerk for H inching
Posted. Babe Roughly
(Special Dispatch to The Journal,)
NEW YORK, Feb. 22.—Taking a lit
tle bundle from a ragged woman at the
window and tossing it carelessly on the
scales the parcel post clerk at the main
postoiffice was startled today »to hear
the woman exclaim;
“Don’t toss that bundle around.
That’s my baby.”
The clerk looked at the bundle of
soft cloth and saw it Indeed contained
a wriggling little infant about five
days old. Upon inquiry the clerk
learned that the woman, Mrs. Abra
Mowitz, lived in a tenement; that the
baby was sick and she hoped to save
its life by sending it parcel post to her
sister in the country.
Gently the clerk explained that Un-
sle Sam could not undertake to trans
port the infant through the mail and
the woman took her little wiggling
bundle and moved slowly away, weep
ing.
J. D. Pays $1,000,000
To Keep Skyscraper
Away From Residence
SMITH GETS 142,000
%
B '
MR. O. F. MILLER.
you claim for it to the very letter. I
can not recommend it too highly.”
A tyottle can be bought of any drug
gist at fifty cents or one dollar. People
usually buy the fifty cent size first,
and then, having convinced themselves
of its merits they buy the dollar size,
which is more economical. Results are
always guaranteed or money- will be re
funded. Any elderly person can follow
these suggestions with safety and the
assurance of good results.
]f no member of your family has ever
used S’.*rup Pepsin and you would like
to ’ a personal trial of it beforq
it in the regular way of a drug-
;• '1 vour address—a postal will
. :. W1B. Caldwell, 425 Washing
ton street, IVKnticello, Ill., and a free
sample bottle Mull be mailed you.
Senate Adds Improvements to
Georgia Postoffices in
the Bill
BY RALPH SMITH.
V.^SHINGTON, Feb. 22.—The senate
public buildings committee has incor
porated the following additional Geor
gia items in the omnibus public build
ing bill: For the Elberton postoffice
building, an increase of $30,000; for the
purchase of sites for public buildings
at Thomson, Madison, Forsyth and
Waynesboro, $6,500; for the purchase of
building sites at Monroe and Eatonton,
$5,000.
For the purchase of a site at San-
dersvi^le an increase of $1,500 over the
amount allowed by the house.
These items were accepted yesterday
afternoon by the committee at the in
stance of Senator Hoke Smith, who had
previously conferred with the Georgia
congressmen about the bill.
When/ Senator Smith learned that
other states were being treated gener
ously in the matter of public buildings
and that the seante had added $20,000,-
000 in amendments' to the house bill,
he busied himself in protecting the in
terests of Georgia. He claimed for his
state treatment similar to that being
extended to other states, and the adop
tion of the foregoing items was the
result of his activity.
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK(, Feb. 21.—Approximate
ly $1,000,000 is the price paid by John
D. Rockefeller to block business inva
sion, which he might regard As undesir
able on the Fifth avenue corner adjoin
ing his residence on West Fifty-fourth
street, it was learned today.
The prpperty which the oil magnate
bought included the residence ot Dr.
and Mrs. W. Y. Webb, and has been
advertised for lease for business pur
poses. Mrs. Webb is a daughter of the
William H. Vanderbilt.
Mr. Rockefeller will come Into pos
session of the property May 1, and it is
said he will tear down the Webt} home
and erect a mercantile house, so/low in
height as not to cut off light and air
on the easterly side of his own house
and adjoining a new home site of John
D. Rockefeller, Jr.
DEATH CLAIMS CHINA'S
El
Bulgar Aeroplane
Felled By Shells
From Turkish Fort
(By Associated Press.?
CONSTANTINOPLE, Feb. 22.—A Bul
garian military aeroplane while recon-
noitering over the fortreSte of Adrian-
ople today was riit by a Turkish shell
and fell inside the lines. It was piloted
by a Russian officer, Lieutenant Niko
las, who wa^ made a prisoner by the
Turks. The wireless report from the
Turkish commandeV does not state
whether Nikolas was injured.
Ye Ho Na La, III Only Short
Time, Dies—Report of Sui
cide Discredited
(By Associated Press.)
PEKIN, Feb. 22.—Ye Ho Na La, em
press dowager of China, died at 2:30
o’clock this morning. She was the widow
of Emperor Kwangsu, who died Novem
ber 13, 1908. I
The empress had been ill only a few
days. The aotual cause of the death
is unknown but is said the symptoms
of her ailment resembled appendicitis.
She was attended only by a Chinese
doctor.
The former imperial family was about
to remove to the inner portion of
the Forbidden City to make room for
the government in the eastern portion.
Mrs. W. J. Calhoun, wife of the Amer
ican minister to China, visited the
dowager empress February 14. She was
slightly ailing then. It appears that
the dowager recently showed symptoms
of oedema with occasional periods of an
acute illness resembling appendicitis.
The government considering the dow
ager’s condition serious, telegraphed for
the emperor’s guardian, who arrived in
Pekin Friday morning.
That afternoon the dowager became
seriously ill, suffering from vomiting
and fever. Later#«he became delirious.
At 2 o’clock she-.was unconscious and
died peacefully at 2:30 o’clock.
MACVEAGH CLAIMS RIGHT
TO TREASURY ORDER 5
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Secretary
MacVeagh today informed the senate
that under “the excellent and progres
sive law of March 4, 1907,” he had the
authority to issue “treasury order
5,” requiring customs receipts to be de
posited in national banks. The secre
tary’s statement was in answer to Sena
tor Poindexter’s resolution questioning
his authority for issuance of such an
order.
“Why the law was not taken advan
tage of before I don’t know,” wrote the
secretary. He transmitted a long ex
planation to refute the charge that the
operation of the order will unduly con
centrate government funds in national
banks. '•
A WARNING TO MANY
Few people realize to what extent
their health depends upon the condition
of the kidneys.
The physician in nearly all cases of
serious illness, makes a chemical ^analy
sis of the patient’s urine. He knows
that unless the kidneys are doing their
work properly, the other organs cannot
oe brought back to health and strength.
When the kidneys are neglected or
abused in any way, serious results are
sure to follow. According to health
statistics, Bright’s disease which is
really an advanced form of kidney trou
ble, caused nearly ten thousand deaths
In 1910, in the state of New York alone.
Therefore, it behooves us to pay more
attention to the health of these most
Important organs.
An Ideal herbal compound that has
had remarkable success as a kidney
remedy is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root,
the great Kidney, Liver and Bladder
Remedy.
The mild and healing influence of this
preparation is soon realized. It stands
the highest for its remarkable record
of cures.
If you feel that your kidneys require
attention, and wish a sample bottle,'
write to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton,
N. Y. Mention this paper and they will
gladly forward it # to you absolutely free,
by mail.
Swarrtp-Roo^ is sold by every druggist
in bqttles of two sizes—50c. and $1.00.
(Advt.)
YOUR HEART
.Does it Flutter* PalpltatS
lor Skip Beats? Have you
'Shortness of Breath.Ten-
IdernesS'N umbness or Pain
in left side, Dizziness*
‘Fainting Spells- Spots be
fore eyes, Sudden Starting
in sleep, Nervousness,
- -^=. r —- Nightmare. Hungry or
Weak Spells, Oppressed Feeling in chest.
Choking Sensation In throat. Painful to
lie on left side, Cold Hands or Feet, Dim*
cult Breathing, Dropsy, Swelling of feet
pr ankles, or Neuralgia around heart? If
Ir ttUHICBl Ul ■■ - ■ --
you have one or more of the above symptoms, don 6
fall to use Dr. Kinsman’s Guaranteed Heart
IIUI lA) us« ilfi # miuBinau U, “ .. j/ 7 tI
Tablets. Not a secret or “patent” medicine. It
is said that one out of every four has a weak or
diseased heart. Thtee-fourths of these do not
know it, and hundreds have died after wrongfully
treating themselves for the Stomach, Lungs,
Kidneys or Nerves. Don’t drop dead when
Dr. Kinsman’s Heart Tablets axe within
your reach. 1000 endorsements furnished.
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
name and P. Q. Address, to Dr. F• G. Kins*
man, Box804, Augusta, Maine, win re
ceive a box of Heart Tablets for trial by return
mail, postpaid, free of charge. Don’t risk
death by delay. Write at once—to-day.
T
This homely muslin sack is
a familiar sight the world over—
because “Bull” Durham Tobac
co is sold and smoked in every
corner of the globe! It has been
the standard smoking tobacco of
the world for three generations.
-'“Bull” Durham comes to you in this plain, muslin
sack because the quality is all in the tobacco—where it be
longs. There are no “premiums” given with “Bull”
Durham—the tobacco is a premium in itself—and more mil
lions of smokers are discovering this every year. The
sales for the last year have been greater than during any
other year in the fifty-three years “Bull’Durham has
been on the market.
genuine:
’Bull’ Durham
SMOKING TOBACCO
(Forty “rolling*” in each S-cent muslin tack)
“Bull” Durham is the cheapest luxury in the world
—and the most universal. In pipe and cigarette it is the
one luxury of millions of workers of all kinds—the favor
ite luxury of hundreds of millionaires—because this pure,
honest, thoroughly good tobacco affords a degree of enjoy
ment and satisfaction not found in any other tobacco/
No matter where you are, you can always get “Bull” Dur
ham—and get it fresh. It is sold by more dealers through
out the world than any other single article of commerce!
A book of papers” free with each5-cent muslin sack.
/:
V
There’s No Joy to
Defeated Ones, as
Inaugural Nears
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 22.—The
exodus is beginning.
The house and senate office buildings’
corridors are littered with heavy boxes;
there’s burlap and excelsior and lots of
franking envelopes piled helter-skelter
about the offices and the statesmen who
did not have ,the most votes last Novem
ber are getting ready to go back home.
There’%no joy for them in the glitter
ing preparations that are being made
for the triumphal entry of the Democrats
a week from Tuesday. The clatter of
the hammer, and the skeleton-like frames
of the grandstands seats are spelling the
departure of the defeated for their native
roosts
Lots of the new members are arriving,
and they are nearly all Democrats. Ev
ery day defeated senators and represent
atives, wearing a smile expressive of in
tense internal agony, has to drag a suc
cessful opponent about the floor of the
senate or house and introduce him to his
colleagues as th e successor “elect.”
And while the city is undergoing a tem
porary rebuilding that gives it it an ap
pearance of Mexico City during the re
habitation period, government architects
ar e completing plans for the remodeling
of the house floor to accommodate the
ninety-odd new representatives who will
champ about its surface from now on.
There’s more activity in the real estate
business here than there has been in
years. Apartments are commanding high
figurs.
TAFT MAY LEAVE TO
WILSON REORGANIZATION
WASHINGTONN, Feb. 21.—President
Taft today took up the treasury de
partment’s plan for reorganizing the
customs service. Collector Loeb, of
New York, who went over the subject
with him, is understood to have urged
the president not to leave the ques
tion for President Wilson because de
lay would nullify the law under which
congress granted authority for the re
form.
\ $5 ^An Hour Easy
Any Day
v You
We have agents that c flV
easily clean up $5 an hour *
with-our wonderful complete SO
FSu
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and pick up $5 an hour with our swell line of
lade-to-Measure Hand-Tailored Clothes —
uits $9.50 op. Pants $2.50 op.
Your Suit FREE <
SENATE PAYS TRIBUTE
T° DEPARTED MEMBERS
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 22.—Notwith
standing the pressure of legislative
business, the senate today halted in its
work and paid tribute to the memory of
one of its members, the late Senator
Isidor Raynor, of Maryland, and two
members of the lower house, the late
Representative George H. Utter, of
Rhode Island, and W. W. Wedemeyer, of
Michigan.
Eulogistic addresses were made on
Senator Rayner by Senators Smith and
Jackson, of Maryland; Swanson, of Vir
ginia; O’Gorman, of New York, and
Clapp, of Minnesota, and on Representa
tives Utter and Wedemeyer by the
senators from their states.
Sunday the house of representatives
will pay tribute to four of its members
who have died recently, and to two
members of the senate. Eulogies will
be given on the late Representatives
Robert C. Wickllffe, of Louisiana; Carl
C. Anderson, of Ohio; Sylvester C.
Smith, of California, and George S.
Legare, of South Carolina, and the late
Senators W. B. Heyburn, of Idaho, and
Jeff Davis, of Arkansas.
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advertising for us to do it!
Send No Money!,
Your name brings everything,
shipped- Express Prepaid—
L absolutely free. We’ve got the
JK real'‘goods.”Everything guar-
W6 anteed perfect or money back.
p. v Nfek. ELK TAILORING CO.,
£” 752 jackeon Blvd.
Expres^Jih^chic.ijo
Charges
joa
One Full Quart Rye
WHISKEY FREE!
IS.
Wee
Hi
Dept. 582, Chicago
CHICAGO SLEET CAUSES
DAMAGE OF $1.000,000
(By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, Feb. 22.—Damage caused
by the sleet storm which gripped Chi
cago for thirty hours was today esti
mated at $1,000,000.
Although the fall of rain and sleet
stopped early today, the City still prac
tically is isolated from the outside
world, as nearly all telegraph wires are
down and it will be twenty-four hours
before repair* can be made. ,
Wkf *
mm
nttniifni r
LADIES. send us your name and address, plainly
written, and we will mail you postpaid, on credit, 12
boxes Thompson’s Toilet and Complexion
Cream to dispose of among friends at 25 cents a bca.
When sold remit us the three dollars and we will
promptly send you for your trouble Six (three pair)
Nottingham Lace Curtains, nearly three yards
Ions. Ladies, write us at once for theta boxes Cream
CHAS. B. THOMPSON
Lace Curtain Dot 220 ^ridqewater, Cohn.
Return this adv. and |l
and we will ship at ones,!
direct from distillery SIX-
PRESS PREPAID, l fulll
quart bottles of our famous
Stonewall Rye Whiskey,
and an additional full
quart FREE for Trial Pur
poses (total 9 quarts).
After sampling; If you
l are not satisfied that yoUj
have reoelved the bast rye
whiskey obtainable at any
price, keep the Free hot-'
tie, for your trouble,
pack remainder ofi
shipment, return at
our expense and we<
will at one# oheer-'
fully refund the VS
paid ue.
In oaee you wish to
use some other quan-|
tity we ship to
point, reached by,
Adams or Southern 1
Express
EXPRESS PREPAID
4 Si* *2“
24 sa. *7"
48
run $«7.5i
w». /
Remember, you receive this fine rye
whisktey from distillery, direct to you, .
and not fr^m a cheap mail order 1
house. We must please you or your
money hack.
Chattanooga Distillery
Proprietors Distillery "No. llfi, District of Tana.
305 Main St., CHATTANOOGA. TEN N. 1
fOO
PROOF
WHISKEY
I CORN
1 2 Full Gallons
4 Full Gallons
12 Full Quarts .
16 Fu J Pints ..
24 Full P.nls ..
One Pint Old Rye FREE
with first order for 4 gallons or 24 pints.
Address all Orders to
WESTERN N. C. DISTILLING CO.
Jacksonville, Pin.
$4.30
$8.26
$7.00
$6.50
$8.00