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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, MAY 20, 1913.
3
PUBLIC TARIFF HEARINGS
[[
He and His Colleagues Reiter
ated Today That Hearings
Are Open to Press
(By Associated Press. - '
TVASHINTOX, May 19.—Announce
ment today by Chairman Simmons of
the finance committee that sub-commit
tees considering the Underwood tariff
bill had determined to grant more time
to protesting manufacturers than at
first was intended, aroused considerable
interest at the capitol.
Although the effort of senate Repub
licans to force public hearings was
defeats, minority leaders see in the
changed tactics of the Democrats a
concession which they claim resulted in
the denunciation of secret considera
tion of the bill. Another interesting
development was the determination of
Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, a mem
ber of the sub-committee consjdering
the cotton and chemical schedules, to
have the private hearings conducted by
him reported by a senate stenographer
This is an innovation which the Repub
licans assert was brought about through
the insistence of Senators LaFollette
and Bristow, who urged that the pri
vate hearings be published for the ben
efit of senators not on the finance com
mittee. It also has been agreed that the
finance committee will send to manufac
turers the list of questions on costs and
production proposed by Senator LaFol
lette.
Still another liberalizing feature re
sulting from the debate from the Pen-
rose-LaFollette public hearing amend
ment. was the reiteration 'by Senator
Hoke Smith and some of his colleagues
that members of'the press could attend
the private hearings. Today Senator
Smith conferred with other members
of the committee and found they were
agreeable to admitting newspaper rep
resentatives.
None of the tariff bill sub-committees
held hearings today except Senator
Williams* committee which gave a brief
hearing to Assistant Secretary of the
Treasury Curtis and Assistant Attorney
General Denison on the administration
features of the bill.
“We will try to have the bill ready
for the senate by June,” said Senator
Simmons today, “but it probably will
be a little later than that owing to the
fact that the sub-committees have
agreed to give a little more time to the
manufacturers who are protesting
against the rates in the Underwood bill.
They have decided to do this owing to
the insistence and persistence of some
of the interests affected by the bill. We
already have lost a whole week because
of the prolonged debate on the reference
motions but the work will be pushed
as rapidly as possible.”
TH GEORGIA OPPOSES
A NEW FEDERAL COURT
Grand Juries of Southern Dis
trict Memorialize Senators
and Congressmen ’
BY RALPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, May 19.—Senators
and congressmen have been memorial
ized by the feedral grand juries of the
southern district of Georgia not to cre
ate an additional federal circuit in the
state. The memorial was submitted by
Cook Clayton, of Macon, clerk of Judge
Emory Speer’s court. It contains reso
lutions adopted by the grand jury of
the several divisions of the southern
jurisdiction. The resolutions are highly
laudatory in their references to Judge
Emory Speer, whose popularity was
unavoidably brought into a recent con
sideration of this question by the Geor
gia congressional delegation.
Coinsidoring that much of the clamor
for another circuit, if possible, but an
other judge at all costs, comes from the
city of Savannah and adjacent territory,
the declaration of the grand jury for the
eastern division carrie as a surprise to
the members of congress.
“The faithful, fearless and able serv
ice rendered your state and country has
attracted attention far and‘’wide,” reads
the resolution of the eastern division
grand jury, which resolution of course
was directed to Judge Speer. It con
tinues:
“No judge has rendered nobler serv
ice, no one has striven harder to do
his full duty without respect to persons.
We have noted with pleasure the man
ner in which even-handed justice is ad
ministered by this court.”
The grand jury of the western divis
ion was not less laudatory in its praise
of Judge Speer, as instance the follow
ing extract:
“We remember with appreciation the
reform of court and jury body following
your accession to the office.”
The grand jurors of the northeastern
division declared that “we feel indeed
fortunate in having a judge of so much
ability and learning to preside over its
courts, and view with alarm the rumor
that an attempt will be made to divide
the district.”
Man Dies in Cell
As Jury Votes to
Hang For Murder
(By Associated Press.)
ALMA, Kan., May 19.—Paul Roberta,
m trial for the murder of Anthony
■Ling, a restaurant keeper, was found
lead in his cell today.
The case went to the jury last night,
ind the judge Instructed that If a ver-
lict was reached it should he de 1 iv-
;red this morning. The Jury room was
iirectly over Roberts' cell, and it is
bought Roberts heard the jury pro-
:laim him guilty of first degree mur-
ie rand drank poison. The verdict was
•ead in court today.
Page Got Sweet on
Jessie Wilson But
Lost Brazen Nerve
Stops Tobacco Habit
In One Bay
Sanitarium Publishes Free Book Show
ing How Tobacco Kab.lt* Can Be
Banished in Prom One to
Pive Days at Home.
The Elders Sanitarum, located at 640 Main
St.. St. Joseph. Mo., has published a free book
showing the deadly effect of the tobacco habit
and how it can be banished in from one to five
days at home.
Men who have U6ed tobacco for more than
filty years have tried this method and say It
lif entirely successful, and In addition to banish
ing the desire for tobacco has improved their
health wonderfully. This method banishes the
desire for tobacco, no matter whether it Is smok
ing, chewing, cigarettes or snuff dipping.
As this book is being distributed free, anyone
wanting a copy should send their name and
address at once.—(Advt.)
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WASHINGTON, May 19.—Secret serv
ice men, after a five weeks’ hunt for
the origin of a mysterious midnight
telephone call to Miss Jessie Wilson,
one of the president’s daughters, dis
covered today that it was only a mis
chievous page boy of the house of rep
resentatives bent on a lark in a dull
moment and that he was now safe at
home in Texas, where he could not
even be officially spanked.
The White House telephone tinkled
late one night and a voice said:
“I want to talk tuh Jessie.”
Then, it developed, the little chap lost
his nerve and hung up, while the se
cret service men began a weary chase
finally tracing the call to the Repub
lican cloak room of the house to find
that everybody on the hoube side of
the capitol knew who did it.
NO CAROLINA STATUTE ON
L
Webb Bill Merely Confers Au
thority for Such Law,
Says Court
BY RALPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, May 19.—The parcel
post records of the postoffice for the
month of April show that Atlanta con
tinues to hold its own as a mail order
center and general distributing point.
The city ranks twenty-fourth, outstrip
ping half a dozen other cities that have
a much larger population. Among thi3
number may be mentioned Indianap
olis, Louisville, Denver,' Seattle, New
Orleans, Los Angeles, Portland and
Columbus. Ohio.
The most wholesome feature of At
lanta’s parcel post record, however, is
the fact that the merchants of the
city dispatched 184,000 parcels during
the month, and that the postoffice re
ceived for distributing in the city only
50,790. The balance of the trade wa“
largely in favor of Atlanta, and if this
fact were considered in fixing the rel
ative rating of the postoffices of the
nation, Atlanta would take even a
higher stand than is given her. For
instance, both Rochester and Washing
ton, D. C.. outrank Atlanta in the gen
eral classification, but in each of the
cities the number of parcels received
were larger than the number of par
cels sent out.
The relative rating of the cities,
however, is computed from the total
number of the parcels handled by the
Postoffice, and in this respect it is
not a fair index of business condi
tions. •
Considered in connection with her
would-be commercial rivals in the
southern territory, Atlanta is in a
class by herself. Birmingham is not
even accorded a place among the first
fifty pustoffices of the country. New
Orleans ranks thirty-first, Richmond
thirty-seventh. Memphis thjrty-ninth,
and Nashville forty-fifth, the total
parcel post business of each falling
far short of the 200,000 mark. Indexed.
Louisville did not touch the 200,000
mark for the month.
! uuu ! 1
TD HUERTA'S REGIME
SHERIFF GETS DAVIS,
WANTED FOR BURGLARY
REIDS VILLE, Ga., May 19.—Sheriff
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
J. A. Phillips, from Colquitt county, ar
rived here this afternoon for the pur
pose of taking Charlie Davis, a negro,
who was arrested here last Thursday
on the charge of burglarizing the fjost-
offlee and several other places, back to
Colquitt county, where he was in the
gang serving out a fifteen-year sentence
for murder.
Davis served eighteen months of his
sentence and then escaped and has been
at large for over a year. They had not
heard from him since his escape until
he was arrested here last Thursday by
A. C. Curry and C. L. Chenney. The
sheriff of Colquitt had offered a reward
of $50 for his apprehension, which will
be collected upon his delivery.
MINERS WILLING TO
TESTIFY TO SENATE
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, May 19.—More than
a thousand letters, petitions and tele
grams have been placed on Senator
Kern’s office desk urging the passage of
his resolution for inquiry into the con
dition in the Paint Creek and Cabin
Creek coal mine region of West Vir
ginia.
Today the senator received a letter
from a man in New York, who wrote
that he had been induced to go into
the West Virginia mines under false
representations, compelled to pay his
own expenses and to get away, was
forced to steal his way out to avoid
the mine guards. The man offered to
testify.
Action on the Kern resolution is ex
pected Monday after Senator Goff com
pletes his argument against it.
Five-Year-Old Tot
Plants His Mother's
Pearls For Beans
(By Associated Press.)
NEW TOEK, May 19.—Charles Fred
erick Von Glahn, the five-year-old son of
Mr. ^.nd Mrs. Charles Frederick Von
Glahn, of Berlin. Germany, has original
ideas in floriculture. The young disciple
of Luther Burbanks was caught by his
nurse on the roof garden of a prominent
Broadway hotel yesterday planting his
mother’s $8,000 string of pearls in one
of the flower boxes.
Young Charles had seen workmen on
the roof planting some large round
seeds. He stole to his mother’s room
and obtained her string of forty pearls
from her jewel box. He had several of
them planted when the nurse found him.
They were all recovered.
FAKE SMALLPOX PATIENT
CAUSE OF CONSTERNATION
WASHINGTON, May 19.—Consterna
tion was caused in the Union station
today when an unidentified Syrian im
migrant awaiting a train for the south
was believed to be suffering from
smallpox. A policeman escorted the
unfortunate to a local hospital, declin
ing to permit him to board his train.
It was found that he was afflicted with
measles.
A number of departing and incoming
members of congress and government
officials were carefully herded away
from the suspect. Several hurried to
be vaccinated. An effort will be made
today to learn the man's name and his
address.
ACUTE SITUATION GROWS
OUT OF HOUSTON STRIKE
HOUSTON, Tex., May 19.—An acute
situation has grown out of the strike
of 600 union carpenters declared hore
several dayh ago. Master builders have
refused their demands for increased
wages and announced today 300 strike
breakers are en route to take the place
of strikers. The builders issued a state
ment declaring they would not again
employ union men. The strikers say
they are confident of securing their de
mands.
AGED FARMER HANGS
HIMSELF IN HIS BARN
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
LITHONIA, Ga., May 19.—T. J.
Poole, an aged farmer living near here,
was found dead by members of his
family about 8 o'clock tonight, hang
ing, with a rope around his neck, u»
a beam in his own barn. He is said
to have committed suicid#, ill health
being given as the cause.
EuroDean Capitalists Put Up
Funds for Provisional Mex
ican Government
(By Associated Press.)
LONDON, May 19.—A Mexican gov
ernment loan of $25,000,000 for restora
tion of Mexican railroads was under
stood to have been practically arranged
here and in Paris. The terms have not
yet become available, but it is stated
that they are high.
The-- Mexican agents are endeavoring
to secure $50,000,fi00 more for govern
mental purposes.
Lord Cowdray has been active in the
negotiations.
FRENCH DEPUTY DISLIKES
UNDERWOOD TARIFF BILL
Gerald Expresses Objections
to Administrative Clauses,
His Reasons
(By Associated Press,)
PARTS. May 19.—The Underwood
tariff bill, as far as it relates to Frencii
industry, was energetically condemn
ed today at a meeting of the National
Association of Industry and Com
merce.
Deputy Georges Gerald expressed
hig objection to the bill’s administra
tive clauses, which instead of reliev
ing the great hindrances which he de
clared exist, in trading in the United
States, increased them arbitrarily.
“When Mr. Underwood and his
friends say they are only applicable to
professional defrauders," said Gerald,
“this affirmation is not sufficient for
French exporters, who already know
too much about the administration of
the American tariff.
“The world has seen how the Unit
ed States by its Panama canal act
has violated the Hay-Pauncefote
treaty and how the state of Califor
nia has violated the United States
treaty with Japan,” said Deputy Ger
ald. “The projected tariff. which
seems intended to subsidize Ameri
can ship and American shipping, vio
lates twenty treaties, yet I still hope
that France and the United States will
be able to arrange a practical agree
ment.”
M. Lebon, former commerce com
missioner, regretted that “the United
States, although professing the de
sire to live on good terms with all the
world, does not give any practical
proofs of this to France.”
Former Foreign Minister Hanotaux
and former Commerce Minister De-
lombre were at the meeting.
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II MINERS KILLED
AND 16 ARE ENTOMBED
Rescue Party at Belle Valley,
Ohio, Driven Back by
Gas
(By Associated Press.)
BELLE VALLEY, O., May 19.—Two
r.ien are dead, three are probably fatally
wounded and 16 others entombed as the
result of two explosions tonig-ht in the
Imperial mine of the O&ara Coal com
pany. The 16 men caug-ht by the first
explosion are imprisoned a mile and a
half from the entrance of the mine.
At midnight hundreds of persons, at
tracted to the scene of the explosion,
were in absolute ignorance of the fate of
the entombed miners.
A rescue party entered the mine, but
its members were driven back by the
deadly gas. .Miners doubt whether the
men in the mine will be found alive.
Additional relief was summoned from
Cambridge, 20 lies north of Belle Vel-
ley. Superintendent S. T. Mathews, of
the O’Gara company, and Deputy State
Mine Inspector ^Ellwood, a number of
physicians and a score of volunteer re
lief workers left Cambridge on a spe
cial train soon after the explosion.
Friends and relatives of the entombed
miners gather about the mine and it was
with difficult that they were restrained
from entering the tunnel. Twenty
miners left the workings just a few min
utes before the first explosion occurred.
MYSTERY OF DEATH OF
PRINCE RUDOLPH SOLVED?
(Special Cable to The Journal.)
VIENNA, May 19.—All the world
knows that on January 30, 1889, the
Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria, the
heir to the Austrian crown and the only
son of the aged emperor, and the Bar
oness Mary Vetsera were found
dead at the hunting box
of Meyerling, near Vienna. But
to this day it has never been au
thoritatively stated how the prince and
the oaroness met their end. The secret
is at last to be told, and it will be
revealed by one who played an impor
tant part in the drama, and whose testi
mony Is unimpeachable.
It is the Countess Marie Larisch, a
niece of the late Empress Elizabeth of
Austria, who has decided to speak, after
a silence of twenty-four years, and her
narrative is as sad and terrible a story
as nas ever been told.
The Countess Larisch is probably the
only person living who is able to tell
the whole story. She was the confidante
of the poor girl who died with the
prince, and her story of the greatest of
European court mysteries will be eag
erly awaited.
An official account of the death that
was given out at the time attributed the
princes’ death to apoplexy.
It was known for certain that a mer
ry party, which included Count Hoyos
and Prince Philip of Coburg, brother
of King Ferdinand of Bulgaria, had been
dining at the hunting box with the
crown prince the night before. It was
Count Hoyos who first sent the news
ol the death to the emperor.
But rumors added that there had been
a scene of wild disorder in the hunting
box, widely varying results as follows:
That the crown prince had been shot
by a gamekeeper.
That he had been hit on the head
with a chair by the duke of Braganza.*
That the Baroness Mary Vetsera
(whose dead body had also been found
in the hunting box) had wounded him
because he wanted to break off his re
lations with her.
As the doctors refused to certifly
apoplexy as the cause of the crown
prince’s death, it was announced of
ficially that the prince had committed
suicide.
The last letter written by the baron
ess and found in the hunting box had
been addressed to the Countes Marie
Larisch, a niece of the late empress of
Austria, and only daughter of Duke Lud
wig, of Bavaria. Rumor had it that
this lady had brought about the meet
ing between the crown prince (her cous
in) and the baroness (her friend). The
truth appears to be that she was their
unintentional tool.
City Clerk Kills Self
By Dizzy Leap From
Oakland City Hall
OAKLAND, Cal., May 19.—Harold E.
Magill, city clerk committed suicide
today by leaping 200 feet from the
fourteenth story of the new city hall
to the roof of ft. lower part of the same
building.
Magill obtained a permit to go to
the roof and while the permit was be
ing prepared asked the clerk if he
thought a man could drop 200 feet and
be conscious on striking. He told one
of his associates yesterday that he had
not slept for three weeks and had
walked miles in an attempt to tire him
self out that he might gain some
rest.
Executive Committee of Na
tional Committee Getting
Ready for 1914-16 Fights
CBy Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, May 19.—Plans for
drawing the political battle lines of
1914 and 1916 were talked over today
at conferences of the executive com
mittee of the Democratic national com
mittee.
The plan included a conference over
what the national..committee should do
to make the party successful in the
state and congressional elections two
years hence, with a look ahead to the
next national election; a meeting with
officers of the Democratic congressional
committee regarding a greater represen
tation of senators on that body and a
conference with President Wilson.
“The committee, which met at its per
manent offices, is composed of Commit
teemen Palmer, of Pennsylvania; Clark
Howell, of Georgia; Cato Sells, of
Texas; Homer Cummings, of Connecti
cut, and Fred. Lynch, of Minnesota.
“Concentration, anticipation, amalga
mation, confederation, harmonization,-
of methods, is the way one member of
the executive committee epitomized the
plans of ther. conference.
Today marked the opening of the
permanent offices of the jjemocratic
national committee, which the party
organization expects to maintain every
day during the next four years at
least.
^he “executive” committee, so-called,
but really a finance committee, is
under instructions to devise methods
for raising money under a resolution
adopted at a meeting of the national
committee on March 5, which indorsed
the effort of Chairman McCombs to
establish a permanent headquarters
and press a vigorous publicity cam
paign.
LAWYER TRIED BRIBERY
10 FREE HURRY 1
John N, Anhut Is Convicted of
Attempting to Free Thaw by
Illegal Means
NEW YORK, May 17.—John M. An
hut was convicted of attempted bribery
tonight by the jury before which he has
been ontrial in connection with an at
tempt to free Harry K. Thaw from Mat-
teawan by alleged illegal means. The
young lawyer will be sentenced Mon
day.
In summing up, assistant District
Attorney DeFord rehearsed Thaw’s un
successful attempts to get his free
dom and declared in the Anhut case
Thaw, in desperation, sought Illegal
means to gain an end he could not ac
complish legally.
Arthur Palmer, in summing up for
Anhut, asked the jury to disregard
Thaw’s testimony, in view of his men
tal condition. He said Anhut was a
victim of circumstances brought about
by Th^w and Dr. Russell, and had
acted honestly as Thaw’s counsel.
In charging the jury, however, the
court said Thaw’s testimony should be
given careful 1 consideration. Thaw
said on the stand that he sent Anhut
$25,000 when the defendant told him
he had talked with Dr. Russell, and
that the physician had promised to see
that Thaw was released. Dr. Russelll
said that Anhut tried to bribe him with
a $20,000 offer.
JAPS WANT EQUALITY
WITH U. S. CITIZENS
Resolutions Adopted in Tokio
Demand That Japs Have Equal
Rights With Americans
(By Associated Press.)
TOKIO, May 19.—Representatlvs
Terutakb Hinata and Kenzo HayashJ
protested against the discrimination
shown by the alien land ownership bill
and condemned the lack of land and
agricultural clauses in the existing
treaty. They scored the reckless agi
tators, who, they said, were mefely
playing the game of those seeking* or
ders for guns and warships.
Resolutions were then adopted de
claring that the Japanese In America
must have equal rights with the whites
and that this fundamental solution of
the existing difficulty would uphold
Japanese prestige and guarantee pw
manent peace.
The meeting closed with dignity ana
seriousness and, with the exception of
the idea that granting naturalization
rights, the Japanese in America would
find a practical solution.
PRUSSIAN PRINCESS WEDS
PRINCE HENRY XXXIII
TALLULAH FALLS DEPOT
IS BURNED TO GROUND
TALLULAH FALLS, Ga. May 19.—
This morning at 5 o’clock the Tallulah
Falls railroad depot here was burned
down. About one-half of the freight
was saved. The fire's origin was un
known, and the flames had the advan
tage before discovered. The work en
gine removed the freight cars that were
near the depot and kept them from
burning.
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to deliver to your customer In less than a min
ute after making the exposure. This REMARK
ABLE INVENTION takes 100 pictures an hour.
Everybody wants pictures and each sale you make
advertises your business and make3 more sales for
you.
NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED
Simple Instructions accompany each Outfit and
you can begin to make money in fifteen minutes
after the outfit reaches you.
A trifling investment will get this WONDER
FUL OUTFIT for you and put you in a position to
make $2,500 a year. If you want to be indepen
dent, and absolutely your own boss, write me to-day
and t will send you by return mail, full free inform-
ftlon regarding this WONDERFUL PROPOSI
TION, including letters offering positive proofs
from every part of the world. DON'T DELAY,
ANSWER THIS ANNOUNCEMENT TO-DAY.
1. Luctlle, Mfr.,827 W, 43d Si., Dept. lew Yerk.U.S.A.
1019
,0F
He Is Suggested for Office De
clined by Fuller E.
Callaway
BY RALPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, May 19.—George W.
Baxter, of Knoxvile, Tenn., may be ap
pointed Indian commissioner by Pres*'
ident Wilson. The orfice \vast endered
recently to Fuller E. Callaway* oM La-
Giange, Ga., but he declined it. Bax
ter’s chances of appointment are con
sidered exceeding bright.
Today, Secretary of Interior Lane, de
clared that he had chosen three men,
any one of whom would be acceptable,
as an Indian commissioner. The names
cf these men, their record and qualifi
cations, have been forwarded by the
secretary to President Wilson, and it is
regarded as certain that one of them
will be named. George W. Baxter’s
name was among the three.
Senator Lea, who presented Baxter
to Secretary Lane on yesterday, is en
couraged over the success he has en
countered, and will take up the matter
of Baxter's appointment with the pres
ident next tfreek.
COLONEL HUFF WILL BE
TRIED FOR CONTEMPT
MACON, Ga., May 17.—Colonel W. A.
Huff will be tried in the federal court
for contempt next Tuesday morning at
10 o’clock. Judge W. I. Gribb, of the
northern district of Alabama, will pre
side and Olixer D. Street, United States
district attorney, will conduct the
prosecution.
The case was formerly set for trial
on Monday, May 19, but Attorney Gen
eral T. S. Felder has a case before that
state court of appeals on Monday and
will be unable to appear in court here
as attorney for Colonel Huff. The con
tempt charges against Colonel Huff
were brought after he had sent two
caustic letters to Judge Emory Speer
about the rulings of the federal jurist
in his bankruptcy case. Juoge Speer
will have the following witnessed sub
poenaed:
Emory Speer, Alexander Akerman,
Cooper Moorecock, E. Y. Mallary, John
F. Cone, A. J. Cobb, of Athens, L. M.
Erwin and Cecil Morgan. Colonel Huff
Princess Victoria Margarete,
of Prussia, Marries Henry,
of Reuss
POTSDAM*, Germany, May 19.—The
marriage of Prince Henry of Reuss, and
Princess Victoria Margarete of Prussia,
only daughter of Prince Frederick Leo
pold of Prussia, was celebrated at the
new palace here this morning.
The ceremonial was the same as is
to be employed in Berlin on May 24, at
the nuptials of her friend and comrade,
Princess Victoria Luise, the only daugh
ter of Emperor William.
The German empress took charge of
the bride’s ante-nutial toilette and
placed on the young princess' head the
historical princess crown, which is
taken from the imperial treasury only
for the marriages of Prussian prin
cesses.
Afterward the grand marshal of the
Prussian royal court, Count August Zu
Eulenburg, performed the civil cere
mony. ,
The Return of
Bleed Eruptions
No Reason Why Anyone Should Suf
fer With Such a Disheartening
Experience.
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American Woolen mills Co. *
Bept. bU6. CHICAGO, ILL.
To Women
■■ m* % .
■'■• >., ■■■-: '
:4c, ;>
r ho Dread
Motherhood
PRESBYTERIANS HEAR
OF CANNIBALISM
SYDNEY, N. S. W„ May 19.—Can-
nabalism In Its worst form exists
among natives of the New Hebrides
Islands, in the South Pacific, accord
ing to a statement today by Rev. Thom
as GUan, at the Presbyterian assembly
of New South Wales. Human flesh is
looked upon as a luxury and tribal
wars invariably end with a “banquet,”
unchecked by the authorities, he de
clared.
No case of contagious blood poison la
ever cured until the last particle of the
virus has been removed from the circula
tion. The least taint left in the blood
will, sooner or later, cause a fresh out
break of the trouble, with all its hideous
rind destructive symptoms of ulcerated
mouth and throat, copper colored
splotches, failing hair, sores and ulcers,
etc. No other medicine so surely cures
contagious blood poison as S. S. S. It
goes down into the blood and steadily
and surely drives out every particle of
the infection. It absolutely and perfectly
purifies the blood, and leaves thjs vital
fluid as fresh, rich and healthy as it was
before the destructive virus of contagious
blood poison entered the circulation.
S. S. S. quickly takes effect on the blood,
and gradually the symptoms disappear,
the health i3 improved, the skin cleared
of all spots, sores and other blemishes,
the hair stops coming out, the mouth and
throat heal and when S. S. S. ha3
cleansed the system of the poison no
trace of the disease is left. S. S. S.
cures contagious blood poison because it
is the greatest of all blood purifldrs,
tested and proven in hundreds and hun
dreds of cases all over the country.
You will find S. S. S. for sale in all
drug stores at *1.00 per bottle. Write to
The Swift Specific' Co., 127 Swift Bldg.,
Atlanta, Ga., for private medical advice
and a very instructive book on all blood
diseases, sent free, sealed in plain
wrapper,
ftiformatlon How They 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 ha>
f proven that the pain at
childbirth need no longer
be feared by woman and we
will gladly tell youhow it may
be done absolutely free of charge. Send your
oame and address to Dr. J. H. Dye Medical
Institute, 810 Lewis Block. Bufalo, N. Y. and
we will send you, postpaid, his w onderful book
which tells how to give birth to happy, healthy
children, absolutely without fear of pain, also
how to become a mother. Do not delay-bus
write TO-DAY.
$3.50 Recipe Free
For Weak Men
Send Name and Address
Today—You Can Have
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Strong and Vig
orous.
I nave In my possession a prescription foe
nervous debilily, lack of vigor, weakened man
hood, failing memory and lame back, brought
on by excesses, unnatural drains, or the fol
lies of youth, that has cured so many worn
and nervous men right in their own homes—
without any additional help or medicine—that
1 think every man who wishes to regain his
manly power and virility, quickly and quietly,
should have a copy. So I have determined to
send a copy of the preparation free of charge,
in a plain, ordinary sealed envelope, to any
man who will write us for It.
This prescription comes from a physician whn
has made a special study of men, and I am
convinced it Is tha surest-acting combination
for the cure of deficient manhood and vigor
failure ever put together.
I think I owe It to my fellowman to send
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anywhere who Is weak and discouraged with
repeated failures may stop drugging himself
with narmful patent medicines, secure what I
relieve is the quickest acting restorutive, up
puilding, SPOT-TOUCHING remedy ever de
vised, and so cure himself at home quietly
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Dr. A. E. Robinson, 3771 Luck Building, De
troit, Mich., and I will send you a copy of
this splendid recipe In a plain ordinary en
velope, free of charge. A great many doctors
would charge $3.00 to $5.00 for merely writing !
out a prescription like this—but 1 send it #a*i
tlrely free.—(Advt.)