Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1913.
a
-To Women-
Seeking Health and Strength
0
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TARIFF AGAIN
House Members Consider
Question of Dividing Tariff
. Bill Into Several Parts
* (By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, April 9.—House Dem
ocrats caucused again today on the
tariff bill, after the majority of the
ways and means committe had met to
formulate a tariff program for sub
mission. The house itself had ad
journed until ( tomorrow. The caucus
will, be succeeded by others, one each
day for several days and all will be se
cret. A fight, backed with the moral
support of President Wilson for an open
caucus was lost last night.
To an extent the house may be in
fluenced by the senate on the question
of dividing the bill for passage into
schedules. Some Democratic senators
favor this, so that separate votes may
be had on the sugar and wool proposi
tions. It is believed that President Wil
son is open to conviction on the point,
though he is thought to incline toward
Chairman Underwood’s idea of a single
bill.
Some Democratic senators believe the
effect of a schedule-by-schedule revision
already has been lost by the introduc
tion of the bill as a whole. Another
proposal was to group the schedules
and divide the bill into four measures.
Some of these questions the caucus
took up when it met today.
The ways and means committee ma
jority determined to hold meetings every
day while the tariff discussion is up in
the house. Several members of the
committee expressed the view that sena
tors would be disposed, for the sake of
harmony, to agree wit hthe house bill.
The sentiment of the majority favored
keeping up the fight for a single bill.
The caucus adopted the ways and
means committee recommendations for
the rules, accounts, mileage and enroll
ed bills committees. These, with the
ways and means committee also agreed
to, constitute the only committees to be
named at the outset of this session.
All the other committees, by unani
mous consent were left to the discretion
of Chairman Underwood and his col
leagues, which probably means that none
will be named until the tariff is out of
the way.
It was explained to the caucus that
the estimated revenue from the new
bill as computed by the ways and means
committee would be $267,412,000 as com
pared with $304,591,000 under the pres
ent law for one year. That is exclu-
eize of the income tax which it is fig
ured would, bring approximately $70,-
000,000.
The issue as to a single tariff bill or
a revision schedule by schedule was
brought up by Representative Hardwick.
Representative Underwood In a short
statement pointed out the sentiment of
his committee in favor of a schedule
tariff bill. When the committee took
a recession late in the afternoon the
question had not come to a vote, but the'
sentiment of the caucus apparently
favored a single bill.
MAIL SERVICE IN SOUTR
TO BE GREATLV IMPROVED
So Declares P, J, Schardt,
President of National Assn.
Railway Mail Clerks
In an address to the local Railway
,Mail Clerks’ association Monday night
P. J. Schardt, of Milwaukee, president
of the national association, declared that
the mall service in the south is to be
improved and the comfort of the postal
clerks considered.
President Schardt has recently held a
conference with Postmaster General
Burleson, and his promises are based
upon this conference. A portion of Pres
ident Schardt’s address follows:
“It took four years to demoralize the
railway mail service in the south by
the short-sighted policy of Hitchcock—
it will require some' time to restore its
efficiency, but this will be wone. The
public will get the service to which it
is entitled. The men who make the
service will get fair treatment.
“You must be patient a little while.
“Everything is not done in a day, but
as soon as mortal man can accomplish
it, the railway mail service will be put
back to its high standard. Long hours
and extra work without compensation
and needless nights from home, sleep
ing on mail sacks and car floors, cur
tailment of liberties, will come to an
end.
“Mail sacks will no longer be piled
high in depot rooms for lack of men
to sort them. The public will be satis
fied and the men will know as they
once did that the service is the finest
in the world.”
CONFERENCE URGES FORM
DF RURAL CREDIT SYSTEM
National Conference on Mar
keting and Farm Credits in
Session in Chicago
RAILROADS SCORED
BY DALTON VETERANS
MISSOURI OIL BILL
VETOED BY GOVERNOR
(By Associated Press.)
JEFFERSON CITY. April 9.—Gover
nor Major today vetoed the bill permit
ting the tSandard Oil company to con
tinue business in Missouri in spite of the
ouster decree of the state supreme court.
(Special Dispatch‘to The Journal.)
DALTON, Ga., April 10.—By a unani
mous vote Joseph E. Johnston camp,
U. C. V., in sesion at the court house
here at noon today passed a resolu
tion condemning the refusal of the rail
roads west of the Mississippi to grant
to veterans the 1-cent per mile rate
to the Chattanooga reunion.
The camp will send a large delega
tion to Chattanooga and a special com
mittee was appointed to make an ef
fort to get the Western and Atlantic
road to put on a special train to oper
ate daily trips to Chattanooga, enab
ling local people to make daily trips to
Chattanooga, returning home at night.
Delegates will be named at next meet
ing.
HUNGARIAN PARLIAMENT
MEMBERS SENT TO JAIL
(By Associated Press.)
BUDAPEST, Hungary, April 10—Sev
eral members of the lower house of the
Hungarian parliament w^re sentenced
today to iterms of imprisonment and
fines for causing disturbances during
the session.
Deputy Zacharias was condemned to
thirty. days in jail and $100 fine for
bombarding the premier and the minis
ter of agriculture with ink stands dur
ing a rictft in the house some months ago.
Deputies Hoffman and Beck were sen-
fine of $60 each for a similar offense,
tenced to fourteen days in jail and a
Four other deputies were acquitted.
immm The Ever Welcome Smoke
Ever see a man who wasn’t
glad to get a pipeful of
TM2
—IOOTH
TOBACCO
If he doesn’t already know Velvet,
he soon learns that it is the best
tobacco anyone can ask for.
His face will light up with pleasure
when he lights up a pipeful of this
refreshing lT no-bite” Velvet.
You want the best tobacco going—
something you will en
joy and be proud of.
So slip a tin of Velvet
into your pocket today.
Your dealer keeps it.
ui&taoo dor.
CHICAGO. April 10—Railroad and col
lege men were the principal speakers
in the second day’s session of the First
National conference on marketing and
farm credits here.
■B. F. Yoakum chairman of the board
of directors of the Frisco lines; Louis
W. Hill, chairman of the board of direc
tors of the Great Northern railroad;
President Harry Pratt .Tudson of the
University of Chicago; C. W. Thomp
son, of Minneapolis, director of the bu
reau of economic research of the Uni
versity of Minnesota, and Congressman
Hutton W. Summers of Texas, were
among the prominent men on the pro
gram.
Speaking on “Relations of the Gov
ernment, Agriculture and the Railroads
and Their Bearing on Better Market
ing,” Mr. Yoakum said in part:
“Agriculture and transportation have
laid the foundation which has made this
the greatest and most powerful nation
of the world.
MORE MILES OF RAILROADS.
“There are now not more than 1,000
miles of new railroad under construc
tion. It would require the construction
of 165,000 miles of* additional railroad
to furnish the same transportation fa
cilities west of the Mississippi river
that there are east of it, <?n the basis
of area. That great area of rich coun
try cannot grow as it should on 1,000
miles per annum of newly built rail
roads.
“Our public men as a rule have not
realized what confronts us in the way of
agriculture development. The produc
tion of farm foods supply and its move
ment to the market and its relations
to the consumer requires the same in
telligent consideration as do raw mate
rial to the manufacturer and its rela
tions to the consumer, in readjusting
our present tariff schedules.”
Mr. Yoakum declared that if congress
should wipe out the entire tariff on ev
ery article that is brought into this
country, on last year’s connections it
would amount only to $326,000,000, while
the waste of production farms of the
nation means an annual loss of over
five times that amount.
MILLIONS IN WASTE.
The speaker gave figures showing that
$35,000,000 worth of fru*t and vegetables
rot in the fields every year; $250,000,000
loss from cornstalks, rice, flax and, other
grain, straw burned in the field and
$1,500,000,000 additional which the farm
ers could receive by co-operation, if
they knew when and where to sell, their
products to the best advantage.
President Judson presented at the
round table discussion while the sub
ject, “why is the farmer not effective
ly organized?” was discussed. Arthur
Capper, editor of a farm paper, of To
peka, Kas., J. H. R. Page, of Arkansas,
and B. Youngblood, director of the Tex
as experiment stations, discussed the
subject from various standpoints.
“What may be expected from the fed
eral government was discusserf by W. J.
•Spillman, special representative of Sec
retary of Agriculture Houston.
Mr. Spillman said in part.
“It is becoming more and more ap
parent that increased production will
not of itself meet the needs either of
the farmer or of the city consumer.
The present movement 'for cheapening
distribution is timely. I believe it will
have vastly more effect on the cost of
living than any other movement relat
ing to agriculture.”
OMNIBUS OR MANY BILLS
IS ONLY TARIFF PROBLEM
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, April 10.—How to
steer the new tariff bill through con
gress to the statute books is the ques
tion now confronting Democratic lead
ers of the administration. Early today
the Democratis met in caucus, but im
mediately adjourned to await the mes
sage of President Wilson. After pro
viding for working committees of the
extra session, they will consider the
tariff bill as introduced by the ways and
means committee.
The principal problem confronting the
house leaders who are listening to mem
bers of the senate for the sake of har
mony, is whether the bill should be re
ported in the house in its entirety or
schedule by schedule. Democratic sen
ators who oppose the sugar schedule
with its provision for free sugar in
three years, object to consideration of
the tariff as one bill.
LITTLE BOY DROWNS
AS MOTHER FISHES
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MOULTRIE, Ga., April 10—The store
received here today of the drowning of
the little three-year-old son of Mrs. Mel-
lie Rogers, in Brooks county. The
mother, who is a widow and had but one
child, went fishing in the afternoon, tak
ing the child. The little boy was left
playing on the banks of the stream
while the mother was angling further
down, the two being separated by a
cluster of bushes.
After a few minutes’ separation the
mother returned to where she left the
child, to find that he had fallen over
into thq shallow water and had drowned.
The child was subject to epilepsy, and it
is believed that it was during an attack
that he fell into the stream.
REPEAL OF CANAL TOLLS
AGAIN BEFORE CONGRESS
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, April 10.—The Pana
ma canal toll has reappeared in con
gress. Senator Root has reintroduced
his bill of last session for repeal of
that provision of the new Panama ca
nal law'which would permit American
coastwise ships to enjoy freedom from
toll charges.
The measure has been referred to the
committee now headed by Senator
O’Gorman of New York, who led the
fight in the last congress against the
Root proposal. It is expected that the
tolls question will be forced upon the
attention of congress at an early date in
an effort to once more try to repeal the
free toll provision before the canal is
opened for traffic.
OJEDA’S ARTILLERY KEEPS
MEXICAN REBELS AT BAY
(By Associated Press.)
NACO, April 8.—Desperate fighting be
tween Ojeda’s federals and state troops
opened at 5:20 this morning. The scene
of the battle was less than a mile be
low Naco, Sonora.
Bullets fell on the American side of
the line and two American soldiers
on border patrol were wounded, one in
the shoulder and one in the hand.
Ojeda again used his artillery effec
tively and held the state troops at a
.distance in spite of their supernor num
bers.
The residents of Naco, Ariz., are con
gregated in buildings as far from the
range of bullets as possible.
OFFICE IN CAPITOL
Goes to Senate Conference
Rather Than Make Them
Come to White House
0.1 J.
EXPERIMENT
BY RALPH SMITH
WASHINGTON, April 10.—Treading
lightly over the bridge that he himself
has constructed as a means of bringing
the legislative and executive branches
of the government together, President
Wilson opened his office at the capitol
this afternoon, for a conference with
the Democratic members of the senate
finance committee on the tariff.
The plan was announced at the White
House this morning, and while it creat
ed some surprise the astonishment was
nothing as compared to the innovation
of yesterday when the president in per
son read his message to congress. There
was a decided absence of adverse crit
icism of the president’s second depart
ure, and it was conceded generally that
he “would get away wtih It” quite as
well as he did yesterday.
President Wilson feels that with con
gress in session, the senate Is busy And
the time of the senators well occupied.
He sees no more reason why he should
not visit the capitol to confer with sen
ators than there is that senators should
quit their duties to visit him at the
White House. His move will expedite
business, it is believed, and tend to
bring the legislative and executive
branches of the nation more closely to
gether.
Although a nice office is set apart at
the capitol for the president, it has
never been used except at the ad
journments of congress. When the pres
ident has desired to confer with a sen
ator or a committee or congress it has
been the custom for him to dispatch a
messenger to the capitol for him. The
call amounted to a “royal summons” and
senators and congressmen felt impelled
to lay aside all matters and trip it down
to the White House.
WILSON’S Il5EA.
President Wilson has a different idea,
as he indicated yesterday. He is in
tensely human, and wants to be regard
ed not as a “department of the govern
ment, hailing from some isolated island
of jealous power.” He wants to co-oper
ate to the extent of his ability with oth
er human beings—senators and con
gressmen—in a common service to the
people of the nation.
The president sent word early today
by Secretary Tumulty to the members
of the committee that he would like to
meet them at 3 o’clock. The pivot of
tariff reform, it is generally recognized,
will be the senate, where the Demo
cratic margin is small and where oppo
sition to certain schedules already is
apparent.
When Mr. Wilson last discussed with
the senate Democrats of the finance
committee the method of tariff reform
they argued as a unit for splitting the
bill into separate schedules, assuring
him that wider attention would be
focused on each schedule and that
agreements among senators might be
eliminated.
HOKE SMITH EXPLAINS CONFER
ENCE.
President Wilson’s visit to the cap
itol was explained by members of the
finance committee to be a continua
tion of the conference begun Monday at
the White House. Members of the com
mittee desire another opportunity to
present their views of changes needed
in the tariff bill.
“The Democratic senate finance com
mittee asked for a conference with the
president and we met him at the White
House Monday morning,” said Senator
Hoke Smith. “That conference adjourn
ed to meet again. Now the president
renews the conference and intsead of
requiring the nine members of the fin
ance committe to come to him, he has
came to them.”
PRESIDENT COMMENDED.
Other members commended the action
of the president; in arranging to meet
the finance committee at a point more
convenient to senators.
Many changes in the Underwood meas
ures advocated by Democratic senators
will be i pressed upon the president for
further consideration. These include
not only of splitting the tariff into sep
arate bills, but the change of many du
ties. In cases where raw materials have
been subjected to tariff and manufac
tured products put on the free list,
such as wheat and 'flour, the president
will be urged to recommend changes
that will balance these duties.
JAPAN MAY REFUSE TO
RECOGNIZE NEW CHINA
(By Associated Press.)
TOKIO, April 10—Recognition of the
Chinese republic by the United States
and the progress of the bill pending in
the California legislature to prevent
Japanese from owning property in that
state are absorbing topics in the Japan
ese public press.
The former matter is receiving the
more prominent discussion for the rea
son that it is generally believed that
Japan will join Great Britain and the
continental powers in declining to rec
ognize the new republic until a stable
government is proven and capacity
shown to govern. In some of the papers
it is pointed out that failure to recog
nize the republic indicates a lack of de
sire to assist China.
Former Director Calvin Is Ex
onerated by Unanimous Vote
of Committee
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
EXPERIMENT STATION, Ga., April
9.—Prof. R. A. DeLoach. head of the
cotton industry department of the Geor
gia School of agriculture, was elected
director of the state experiment sta
tion, succeeding Martin V. Calvin, at a
meeting*of the trustees Wednesday.
Director DeLoach defeated Ira Wil
liams by a vote of 8 to 7, arid his elec
tion was afterward made unanimous.
The election of Director DeLoach was
predicted exclusively by The Journal in
its issue of Monday of this week.
The trustees unanimously adopted a
resolution exonerating former Director
Calvin from charges of inefficiency
brought by qissastants of the station.
The trustees also adopted a resolution,
discharging the investigating committee
from any further work.
The other members of the station staff
will be named by the trustees at a meet
ing to be held May 6.
Every Home Needs
This Fine Remedy
CONNECTICUT MAKES
THE THIRTY-SIXTH STATE
HARTFORD, Conn., April 9.—The
proposed amendment to the federal
onstitution providing for popular elec
tion of the United States senators was
ratified by the general assembly to
day. It was approved in the house,
150 to 77, and passed the senate unan
imously.
FACE A SIGHT
WITH PIMPLES
AND BLACKHEADS
Don’t Stand It Another Day!
Resinol Will Clear Your Skin
Pimples and blackheads disappear, un
sightly complexions become clean, clear
and velvety, and hair health and beauty
are made certain by the regular use of
Resinol Soap and an occasional applica
tion of Resinol Ointment. These sooth
ing, healing preparations do their work
easily, quickly and at little cost, when
even the most expensive and compli
cated “beauty treatments” utterly fail.
The nearest drug store is sure to have
Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment.
Why not get some today? You can’t
begin too soon to get rid of those ugly,
embarrassing complexion blemishes. The
Resinol medication is so gentle, yet so
effective, that it can be used freely on
the tenderest skin. Doctors throughout
the country have prescribed Resinol for
eighteen years. You can test it free by
writing to Dept. 101-L, Resinol, Balti
more, Md., for a generous trial.—(Advt.)
BALANCE 1913 PENSIONS
WILL NOW BE PAID
State Treasurer Speer
Mail Out Checks at
Once
Sufficient fuqds were in the state
treasury Wednesday morning to pay the
balance due on the 1913 pensions and
within the next day or two State Treas
urer W. J. Speer will begin mailing out
the checks to the ordinaries of the twen
ty-one unpaid counties.
The balance j due' pensioners is $156,-
000. The original appropriation was
$1,180,000. Those counties which have
not yet been paid but which will be
cared for within the next few days
are: Banks, Butts, Carroll, Clinch, Craw
ford, Franklin, Gilmer, Grady, Greene,
Hart, Heard, Jenkins, Johnson, Lincoln,
Lumpkin, Taliaferro, Towns, Walker and
Wilkinson.
Payment of these last pensions has
been possible by the receipt of $38,371.50
from Fulton county, which represents
special taxes collected January, Febru
ary and March.
Woman Fighting for
Divorce Finds She
Never Was Married
(By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, April 9.—The divorce ac
tion brought by William M. Marshall, a
wealthy owner and exhibitor of driving
and riding horses, against Mrs. Blanche
T. Marshall, ended abruptly today when
Judge Petit declared the two had never
been married. Mrs. Marshall, who is
the mother of a two-year-old son, was
overcome at the pronouncement.
“There is a child of this union,” Mrs.
Marshall’s attorney exclaimed.
“The fact that it affects the status of
a child cannot alter the law of the
state,” replied Judge Petit. “Mrs.
Blanch Mullins was divorced from Rob
ert H. Mullins March 13, 1907. Six days
later she married Marshall, in Michi
gan. Being married again within less
than one year of her divorce, the mar
riage is a nullity. We have been trying
a case without merit here for two days.”
Judge Petit's decision was given after
he had made a personal investigation. It
is the first case involving a child in
which a recent decision of the Illinois
supreme court invalidating such a mar
riage has been invoked.
The Best Tonic
For Spring Use
A Mild, Reliable Laxative-
tonic is something No
Family Should be
Without.
No well-regulated home should be
without a laxative for there is scarcely
a day in a family of several persons
that someone doesn’t complain of a
heaflache, of sleeplessness, or show the
first signs of a cold.
A laxative then becomes a necessity
or what was a trifling congestion at the
beginning may run into a serious cold
or fever. No harsh remedy is needed,
but simply a mild laxative-tonic that
will make the liver active and stir up
the bowels. People who have tried a
great many things, and are themselves
heads of families who have seen the
little ills run to big ones, will tell you
that there is nothing better than Dr.
Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, which you can
obtain at any drug store for fifty cents
or one dollar a bottle, the latter being
the family size.
Amon gthe great believers in Syrup
Pepsin for constipation in old or young,
and as a general household emergency
remedy, is Mrs. J. W. Anderson, Osa-
watomie, Kans., who writes after using
one sample bottle and two dollar bottles
of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin: "On
the plea of the duty that every one
owes to fellow sufferers, I appeal to all
such who arc "bowed in spirit, broken in
health and discouraged with life, not to
give up until they have given Dr. Cald
well's Syrup Pepsin a fair trial.” Syrup
Pepsin is scientifically compounded and
its purity is vouched for. Mothers give
it to tiny babies, and grown people, tak-
%
\ j '»
t ^
MRS. J. W. ANDERSON
ing a litle larger amount, find it equally
effective. It is mild and gentle, pleas-
ant-tasting and free from griping.
It does not hide behind a high sound
ing name and is absolutely free from
anj r prohibited ingredient. Families
who once use Syrup Pepsin forever
after avoid cathartics, salts, pills and
other harsh medicines, for these only
do temporary good, are nauseous and a
shock to any delicate system. Such
things should never be given to chil
dren.
If no member of your family has ever
used Syrup Pepsin and you would like
to make a personal trial of it before
buying it in the regular way of a drug
gist, send your address—a postal will
do—to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 425 Wash
ington St., Monticello, Ill., and a free
sample bottle will be mailed you.
$5,000 REWARD OFFERED
FOR ARREST OF LACY
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
MONTGOMERY, Ala., April 9.—With
out rendering a written report to the
court the Montgomery county grand
jury yesterday afternoon was recessed
by Judge Armstead Brown, of the crim
inal court, following the return of thir
teen indictments, the nature of which
officials refused to disclose. Within
thirty minutes after the body had ad
journed, Governor O’Neal raised the re
ward offered for the arrest of Theo.
Lacj', former chief clerk of the convict
department, from $1,500 to $5,000.
When the grand jury filed into the
court room a large crowd of spectators
were on hand, expecting to learn some
news regarding possible indictments of
persona connected with the state con
vict bureau, but no name of any person
ordered held by the body was mentioned
during the presentation to Judge Brown.
YOUR HEART
I Does it Flutter, Palpitate
[or Skip Beats? Have you
IlShortness of Breath,Ten*
Iderncss,Numbness or Pain
,ln left side, Dizziness*
Fulntins: Spells. Spots be
foreeyes, Sudden Starting
in sleep, Nervousness,
Nightmare, Iliiiicry or
Weak Spells, Oppressed Feeling in chest,
Choking Sensation in throat, Painful to
lie on left side. Cold Hands or Feet, Dtflb-
cult Breathing, Dropsy, Swelling of feet
or ankles, or Neuralgia around heart? If
? ou have one or more of the above symptoms, don’t
all to use Dr. Kinsnian’sGuaranteed Heart
Tablets. Not a secret or “patent ” medicine. It
is said that one out of every four has a weak cu*
diseased heart. Thiee-fourths of these do not
know it, and hundreds hare died after wrongfully
treating themselves for the 8toniach, Lungs,
Kidneys or Nerves. Don’t drop dead when
Dr. Kinsman’s Heart Tablets are within
your reach. 1000 endorsements furnished.
TENNESSEE S0L0NS FEAR
GUNMEN LURK NEARBY
NASHVILLE, Tenn., April 10—-A res
olution was introduced' in the senate
yesterday by Senator Fisher, of Shel
by county directing the sergeant-at-
arms to search persoiys entering the
senate chamber for firearms. The res
olution directs the speaker to deny any
person admission to the halls of the
senate who is armed. The resolution
under the rules lies over.
c/'rwv
S/ut
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
| name and P, O. Address, to Dr. F. G. Kins
man, BoxSt>4, Augusta, Maine, will re-
| ceive a box of Heart Tablets for trial by return
mall, postpaid, free of charge. Don’t risk
death by delay. Write at once—to-day.
(The Home Doctor.)
“To best cleanse the system and rid
the blood of those impurities which
cause drowsiness, spring fever, sluggish
action of the liver and general spring
sickness, there Is nothing quite so»good
as a home-made kardene-tonic, prepared
as follows: Get from any drug store 1-2
pint alcohol and one ounce kardene; mix
these with 1-2 cupful sugar, then add hot
water to make a quart.
“No matter how lacking in strength
and energy or how run-down one may
be, a tablespoonful of this splendid
tonic taken before meals will soon puri
fy the blood, fill one with energy and
the feeling of perfect health, and remove
all pimples or sallowness. This simple,
inexpensive system-tonic is a perfect
liver-regulator and will do wonders as a
family medicine in preventing sickness.”
(Advt.)
To Women
Who Dread
Motherhood
Information How Yhoy May Give Birth to
Happy, Healthy Children Absolutely With
out Fear of pain. Sent free
No woman need any long
er dread the pains of
childbirth. Dr. J. H.
Dye devoted his life
to relieving the sor
rows of women. He has
proven that the pain at
ihildbirth need no longer j
be feared by womanand we
will gladly tell youhowitmay j
be done absolutely free of charge. Send your
name and address to Dr. J. H. Dye Medical
Institute, 810 Lewis Block, Buffalo, N. Y. and
we will send you, postpaid, his v onderful book
which tells how to give birth to happy, healthy
children, absolutely without fear of pain, also
now to become a mother. Do not delay but
*rite TO-DAY.
made to /f your measure, in the
latest IF style, would you be wdl-
1 n gr to keep and wear it, show
it to your friends and let them Bee our
beautiful samples and dashing new
styles?
Could you use $5.00 a day for a little
spare time? Perhaps I can offer you
a steady job. If you will write me a
letter or a postal at once and say:
Send me your special offer," I will
send you samples and styles to pick
from and my surprising liberal .liar.
Address : L E. ASHER, President
BANNER TAILORING CO.
Oept. 241i Chicago. III.
FREETO’. rIE
RUPTURED
A Simple Home Method that
Anyone Can Use Without
Operation, Pain, Danger i
or Loss of Time.
DON'T SEND ANY MONEY
You don’t want to go through life continually harassed
and chafed by trusses. You want to be freed from the evei
present danger of strangulation. What you want is » cure
that will end all danger, embarrassment and expense from
rupture for the rest of your life and this it the purpose d
my remarkable free offer to ruptured people.
1 have a new Method I want you to try at my expense
Fill out and mail the coupon below TO-DAY.
My free and generous offer includes a full brochure with
proof treatment and other essentials, together with valuabl*
information prosing that rupture is curable WITHOUT
OPERATION.
No matter whether you have single, double or navel nip.
ture or one following an operation, you should mail tbs
coupon below with full address to-day. No matter bow old
you are or how hard you work, do not delay accepting my
free offer. No matter whether you are a man. woman oi
child, this is the one offer and opportunity you must noi
neglect. No matter even if you consider your case hopeless,
it is your duty to yourself and family to Hud out how much
n.y free offer and Method can do for you.
FREE COUPON
Where is Rupture!
Age
Bow long Ruptured!
Right
Cut this out. or copy and 1 <
mail to-day and the pack- J
age will be sent you at once.
W. 8. Rloe, 310-AB Main SI., Adam,, N. Y.|
We will send you a full quart of this fine old
HAYNER
BOTTLED-IN-BOND
WHISKEY
For Only 80 Cents—Express Charges Paid By Us.
This is a special introductory offer we are making to NEW customers only—
and if YOU have never tried Hayner Whiskey—we want you to try it NOW.
We Want To Show You
We want to place some of our fine old whiskey
before you so you may know how rich, pure
and delicious it really is—and here’s the great
est offer you ever heard of—
Send Us 80 Cent.—That’s All
And we will send you a full quart bottle of
our fine old HAYNER PRIVATE STOCK
BOTTLED-IN-BOND WHISKEY—in a strong,
sealed case—and we will pay express charges.
Remember—It’, Bottied-in-Bond
And every bottle sealed with the Govern
ment’s official Green Stamp over the cork—
your assurance that it is fully aged, full 100%
proof and full measure—as good and pure as
it is possible to produce.
A Wonderful Offer
No one else offers a BOTTLED-IN-BOND
whiskey at our price of 80 cents a quart—
no one else would pay the express charges
on a one quart shipment as we are doing.
We Stand The Lou
Shipping one quart, express paid, means a loss
to us—but we want your trade—and we know
when you have tried this whiskey, you will be
eo pleased with it, that you will send us your
future orders for four quarts or more.
Take U, Up
On this offer—order this whiskey—try it—use:
all you want—and if you don’t find it all we
claim—the finest you ever tasted and the
greatest value you ever saw—we will return
your money without a word.
You Take No Chance.— - *
Our guarantee is fair and square—it means
what it says—we must send you a quality that
will please you in every way—and we will do it
Now, Rush Your Order
Cut out this coupon—fill it in—and mail it to us
with 80 cents in stamps, coin or money order—
and the full quart of fine old BOTTLED-IN-
BOND whiskey will go forward by first express.
THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY
Enclosed find 80 cents for which send me ONE full Quart
bottle of Hayner Private Htock Bottle-1 n-Bond Whiskey-
express paid—as per your offer. It Is understood that If this
whiskey Is not found as represented and pleasing to me in
every way—my 80 cents Is to be promptly refunded. This
Is my first order. R-26
Name
Address
immmHwy
•UAftANTUh UNDER THE FCOO AMTOJUJSS Ml
UUNC 30 1900 SERIAL NO. 1401.
HAYNER
1 PRIVATE STOnt'’
WHISKEY
BOTTLED IN BOND
THE HAYNER OISTILUNO COMRM*
'•"WRY NO.} IU [HSTRICT.IKKG*
*“*>4’*
O^COAifipflPPW DffCTI
DAYTON. OHIO.
IMHnitllllllllMtliliminiHMIHIIIIIMII
Orders from Arts.. Wyo.. Colo., Mont, and all states West
thereof must call for 11.00 for one Quart—express paid. 14-1?
"Distillery
it Troy, Ohio
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO., Department R-26
Address Our
Nearest Office
Dayton, Ohio
Toledo, Ohio
St Lonls. Ho.
Kansas City, Mo.
Boston, Hass.
St Paul, Minn.
New Orleans, La.
Jacksonville, f la.
[ Capital
0500,000.00 Full Paid!