Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, November 18, 1913, Image 3

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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1913. H" IF,CHILD IS GROSS, PALM LIMITED IN FEVERISH AND SICA I Look, Mother! If tongue is coated give “California Syrup of Figs” Children love this “fruit laxative,” and nothing: else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not stop playing to empty the bowels, and the result they become tightly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverish, don’t eat, sleep or act natural ly, breath is bad. system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diar rhoea. Listen, Mother! See if tongue is coated, then give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the system, and you have a well, play ful child aagin. Millions of mothers give “California Syrup of Figs” because it is perfectly harmless; children love it, and it never fails to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly -printed on the bottle. Beware of coun terfeits .sold here. Get the genuine, made by “California Fig Syrup Com pany.” Refuse any other kind with contempt.— (Advt.) Southern Officials Believe the Wreck Was Work of Ma- ' licious Persons Low Fares! Homeseekers tickets are sold at greatly reduced fares on the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month; stopovers free and 25 days time, via Cotton Belt Route,—to Arkansas and Texas Winter tourist tickets (round trip) from southeast points to many points in Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico, will be on sale daily Nov. 1st, 1913 to April 30, 1914; with exceedingly long return limit of June 1st, 1914. Stopovers. All year tourist tickets on sale daily to certain points in Texas —90 day limit. The Cotton Belt Route is tho direct line from Memphis toTexas, through Arkansas—two splendid trains da'ily, with electric lighted equipment of through sleepers, parlorcars and diningcars. Trains from all parts of Southeast make direct connection at Memphis with Cotton Belt Route trains to the Southwest. For full information about Home- seekers Fares, Winter Tourist Fares . or All Tear Tourist Tickets, address | the undersigned. Books about farm- ! ing in Southwest, sent free. Writel » L. P. SMITH, Traveling Pass’r Agent, j Brown-Marx Bldg. Birmingham, Ala. -j 9 swell , Shown how to earn this tailorea-to-order suit in an hour. How to make $35 to $65 a, week.by showing your fine Free! Sample Suit and our beau-! tiful samples to your friends. Lowest Wholesale p r ] r oc ever heard of. We rncespay express charges. Fellows everywhere going wild about our styles. Finest quality guaranteed tail oring in America. We send magnificient Sample . Outfit and everything Free. You pay nothing, sign noth- inpr, promise nothing—and need no experience. Wait until you see how handsome your Free Sample Stilt is before you decide to be our Agent. More quick money in this than you ever thought possible. So easy to make It yon will be Astonished. Only one Frei* Samplo Qoo!: to each county. Territory eoinar fast. Send us your nrme today. CHICAGO TAILORS* ASS*N., Daptj .Van Duran Chicago THESE 3 BEAUTIFUL RINGS agraW* i a—Given for selling oolv 10 pieces Assorted JEWELRY st 10 cents , each and returning $1.00 In 15 days. Address “MERIT” GO. Room fc, Cincinnati, Ohio. -TIME DISTILLERY One Relic of the Past Is Still Busy Producing Corn Liquor in Alabama Alabama has one thing no other state has— that Is the tmly corn whiskey distillery of the old type so prevalent a few decades ago. In this case the seeming lack of progress is real progress, for by the old method the dis tiller got only two and a half gallons of liquor from a bushel of corn, and It was considered to be a generally healthful and palatable bever age. By the newer modern method the distillers add whaf is known as a cooker to their equip ment, and boll out the last drop of juice from the corn, getting as much as five gallons to the bushel. But the quality Is said not to be as good. This old-time distillery Is busy every day turning ont corn liquor for people who prefer the old-time article. “Yes,” said Mr. Moore, proprietor of this old plant at Girard, Ala., “we are satisfied to do it in the old^ashioned wa.v, because we turn out so much better article. No, we charge no more than the others. "Oh, yes,” we fill mail orders and pay the express, too. Of eourse, unless a man really appreciated an old-time superior corn liquor, we don’t care for his trade, for we sell about all we can make. “However, anybody that wants to try some of our Good Stuff Corn liquor can send $Z.OO for 4 honest quarts. Address ‘Moore’s Distil- lery, Box 25, Girard, Ala.’ ”—(Advt.) HAZLEHURST, Ga.. Nov. 17.—Offi cial of the Southern railway have be gun an Investigation here of a report that a switch was maliciously pried open early this morning in an tial tourist train, the Palm Lim ited, Chicago to Jacksonville, which ran into an open switch here at 4:30 o’clock this morning, and collided head- on with an engine standing on the siding. The officials claim to have evidence that the switch was pried open, and Conductor Strickland, of the Limited. Jias an iron pip v e which detectives believe was used to move the switch. The switch stand, it is said, was found shut and locked, after the collision. The Limited, the Southern’s newest and most popular trai~\ was crowded with tourists. It was supposed to have right of way over all others, and was due to pass through Hazlehurst at 4:30 this morning. Examination of the switch box just before the train was due showed the switch locked and the track clear, it is said. The fast train, however, suddenly swerved at the switch and crashed into an engine standing on the siding. Engineer Fred Bair, of Macon, suf fered a broken leg, and many of the passengers were badly shaken up. The engine was able to resume its trip soon under its own steam. ALASKA FARMS CAN RAISE 20-POUND TURNIPS AND 10-POUND CABBAGES f' TWENTY-TWO KILLED IN WRECK AT CLAYTON, ALA. (By Associated Press.) MONTGOMERY, Ala., Nov. 17.— Twenty-two persons are now known to have been killed in the wreck of the Central of Georgia passenger train near Clayton, Ala., yesterday morning. Twelve were killed outright and the remainder died en route to Clayton and Eufaula. The revised list of dead, is as fol lows: MONROE FLOYD, sixty-year-old farmer of Clayton. POMP UTSBY, superintendent of the Barbour county poor farm, sixty years of age, Clayton. MISS BONNIE BROCK, eighteen years old, Clio. CURB BELL, JR., twelve years old, Clayton. MRS. ANNIE WILKERSON, Clio. INFANT OF JAMES M’RAE. MRS. J. WILBUR M’RAE. JAMES M’RAE. LOIS BROCK, infant of B. F. Brock, of Clio. JACK PEAK, Clayton. WASH M’RAE, Louisville, Ala. Eleven negroes also are among the dead. Sheriff A. F. Teal, of Barbour county, was seriously hurt, but will recover. His two brothers, William and Thomas, were also injured. Jeff Clayton, brother of Congressman Henry D. Ciayton, will recover from his in juries. Charles Moseley, son of State Senator Moseley, declared there this morning that when he rode over the Central Tuesday the defective rail that caused the wreck was discovered, but was not repaired. A special train passed through Eu faula this morning from Macon, Ga., carrying a number of high officials of the Central of Georgia to Clayton to make an official investigation of the wreck. SAYS MAN WHO KILLED SELF WAS EMBEZZLER e-U *'. Here is a ten-pound cabbage rad Bed on a farm In Interior Alaska. There Is a field full of them, hut there Is n o railroad to ship thsm to the towns. (By Associated Press.) SEATTLE, Nov. 17.—A woman told the police last night a man who com mitted suicide here yesterday was an embezzler of United States army funds from San Francisco. She said she met him at San Francisco and agreed to accompany him to this city. He gave his name as W. B- ’Walker, said he was a quartermaster sergeant and had taken a large sum of money, with which he intended to have a good time and then kill himself. Yesterday, she said, he told her his money was all gone. A few hours later he was found dead from poison. PIG CLUB IS POPULAR WITHJ30YS AND GIRLS ' (Special Dispatch to The Journal.) MACON, Ga., Nov. 17.—In view of the fact that so many boys and girls of the country took interest in the recent state fair, W. G. Middlebrooks, county agricultural agent, is now working among the corn club boys for the pur pose of enlarging the membership of the Tig club. The club was formed during the fair with a small member ship, but by the time of the 1914 fair, he expects to have the club so well organized that the swine display will be considerably larger than that made this year. BIG AVERA FARM BRINGS $65 PER ACRE AVERAGE (Special Dispatch to Tho Journal.) QUITMAN, Ga., Nov. 17.—The Avera farm sub-division, one of the record- breaking. land sales' in southwest Geor gia, took place yesterday and was con ducted. by Mr. A. Q. Gates, formerly of Atlanta. The plantation, which has been in the* Avera* family for many genera tions, consists of 800 acres, and brought an averago price of $65 per acre. This sale, which was attended by bidders from all parts of the state and south, marks the beginning of many sub-di visions of other larger estates. GEORGIA DINNER TO BE GIVEN IN BARNESVILLE BARNESVILLE, Ga., N<#V. 17.—Mayor J. M. Cochran and President W. H. Mitchell, of the BarnesYille chamber of commerce, with others who are work ing with them, have arranged with President W. II. Maxwell, of the Sixth District Agricultural school, to prepare a Georgia products menu for a big ban quet which will be held in the dining rooms of the school Tuesday evening, November 18, in accordance with the suggestion of the Georgia chamber of commerce. BY E. O. SAWYER. (Staff Corrspondence.) VALDEZ, Alaska, Nov. 17.—This Is the one town in southwestern Alaska that is not suffering from a serious at tack of let’s-sit-down-and-wait-for- something-to-happen. Cordova, Seward and Katalla are al ready half deserted—-Valdez may be soon If Uncle Sam doesn’t hurry! A query as to what is the matter draws out a fierce denunciation of all the leading American “conservationists and the United States government in general for present inactivity. Also the steamship companies are generally de nounced for holding back the develop ment of Alaskan territory by refusing to lower freight rates, and also the big mercantile companies are castigated for refusing to buy Alaskan agricultural products, preferring to ship goods in from the outside for Alaskan consump tion. All these stories of trouble end with the same phrase: “And now things are in such a shape we don’t care who does it, so long as something is done for Alaska!” Many Alaskans really agree, though, with the policy of preventing private corporations from grabbing everything in sight, and would rather have govern ment-owned transportation lines than lines built by grabbers over which they would have the privilege of paying “such charges as the traffic would bear.” Alaska denies she is an ice bound wilderness, fit only to be looted of her wealth and then fled from. In proof of this, turnips are displayed weighing ten to twenty pounds, and gardens are pic- Doctors Said He Had Dropsy. Some time ago I had an attack of grippe, which finally settled in my kid neys and bladder. I doctored with the doctors, and they claimed I had dropsy. I tried other remedies and got no relief from any of them. My condition was such that I was unable to work for about two months, and the annoying symptoms caused me a great deal of trouble and pain. I was hardly able to turn over in bed. Seeing one of your Almanacs, I decided to give Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp—Root a trial, and after taking several bottles was able to resume my work again. I cannot say too much in praise of your Swamp-Root, as the re sults in my case were truly wonderful. Yours very truly, ROBERT BALLARD, Mansfield, Pa. Sworn and subscribed before me, this 7th day of May, 1912. fLay c. longbothum. Notary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingrliamton r N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You. Send ten cen^s to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention The Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal". Regular fifty-cent and one- dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores.—(Advt.) NASHVILLE DRY AS A TINDER BOX NOW (By Assoolated Press.) NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 17.—Acting under instructions from Judge A. P. Neil, of the criminal court, the fifty-nine saloons of Nashville that has not pre viously been closed by order of the court or by distress warrants issued to enforce the collection of quarterly taxes, locked their doors at 6 o’clock this after noon and Nashville is dry? so far as the open sale of liquor is concerned. YOUR HEART aDoes it Flutter* Palpitate lor Skip Beats? Have you [Shortness of Breath,Ten- (Ideniess^Nuiiihnessor Pain vjjjin left side. Dizziness, 7^Fainting Spells, Spots be- " fore eyes, Sudden Starting in sleep. Nervousness, Nightmare, Hungry or Weak Spells, Oppressed Feeling in chest, Choking Sensation In throat. Painful to lie on left side, Cold Hands or Feet, Diffi cult Breathing, Heart Dropsy, Swelling of feet or aukles, or Neuralgia around heart ? If you have one or more of the above symptoms, don’t fall to uoe Dr. Kiusman’s Guaranteed Heart Tablets, Not a secret medicine. It is said that one person out of every four has a weak heart. Three-fourths of those do not know it, and hundreds wrongfully treat themselves for the Stomachy Lungs, Kidneys or Nerves. Don’t take any chances when Dr. Kinsman's Heart Tablets are within your reach. 1000 endorsements furnished. FREE TREATMENT COUPON Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their name and P. O. Address, to Dr. F. G, Kins- inan* Box 864, Augusta, .Ttnine, will re reive a box of Heart Tablets for trial bv return mall, postpaid, free of charge. Delays are dangerous. Write at once—to-day. tured in which forty-five food products are grown! Experiments show that in the shelter ed valleys back of Cordova and Seward there are thousands of acres on which farming can be carried on with success, but there is only one farm of any size near Seward and a few scattered gar den patches along the line of the Cop per River railroad back of Cordova. On both sides and at the head of Cook inlet are vast districts of land on which any thing but the slow-maturing grains can be grown. The rest of the agricultural efforts in each district are confined to little truck gardens from ten to twenty feet square and these are few. Little or no effort is made to raise pigs or chickens. “There is no market,” is the excuse. The answer to this is found in the manifests of . inbound steamers, which bring hundreds of tons of potatoes, on ions, bacon, beef and all other food products to this part of Alaska. The best farm lands are not near pres ent commercial centers, but with raii-j roads to the interior to attract tillers of the soil much can be expected of agricultural Alaska. Name Address “Mary, you and John come over to- night—this is our wedding anniversary and we want you to help us celebrate it” \ O NE great use of the telephone on the farm is that it gives COMPANION- SHIP. It brings your friends to you, takes you to them, no matter how far away they may live. % It summons help in an emergency. Invites company for the birthday, wedding and_ other anniversaries dear to every home. And back of these conveniences is 1 other great use—BUSINESS. Don’t hold back any longer. You intend to have a telephone some day. You can have one now. Get a few of your neighbors to join you and build your own line. The cost is not much—less than you probably think. You can have the best service there is, too—that given by Western * Electric Rural Telephones Tear off the coupon on the corner and send it to us. That will be a start. We will send you by return mail our FREE book, “How to Build Rural, Telephone Lines.” It tells the whole story. Shows you how easy it is to build a telephone line. Our experience on what to use, how to get the right kind of material, and the best construction for the line, is valuable—yet it is at your service free. The next few months are the best time for building a telephone Une—best time for you as well. Do not delay. Write nearest office. WESTERN ELECTRIC COMPANY Booklet No. 91 . Manufacturers of the 7,500,000 “Bell” Telephones SOUTHERN HOUSES: Atlanta Savannah Cincinnati Kansas City Richmond New Orleans St. Louis Oklahoma City EQUIPMENT FOR EVERY ELECTRICAL NEED Dallas Houston NATIONS OF THE WORLD ALSO ARE VERY HARD UP (By Associated Press.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Saddled with debt, the nations of the world are feeling, no less than individuals, the pressure of the “high cost of living.” This is clearly set forth in a report of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce dealing with the national debts of the principal governments. The aggregate debt is up ward of forty-two billions of dollars, an increase of 20 per cent in the last dec ade and doubts what it was forty years ago. France, according to the expert figures, has been leading the fastest pace, for its debt is the heaviest of any single gov ernment. Next is Russia, after which comes the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, British India, Japan, Germany and the United States in the order named. The debt of this country in the past ten years grew by a little more than $100,000,000. The strong nations are enabled to get money at comparatively low interest rates, but, weaker governments are com pelled to pay heavily for accommodation. Interest on the national debts of the United States ranges from 2 to 4 per cent with the bonds selling at their face value and above it. MARRIED WOMAN TEACHER WiNS herjcasje in court (By Associated Press.) NEW YuKK, Nov. 17.—Mrs.* Bridget,t C. Peixott, a school teacher, discharged a month ago for neglect of duty in being absent nearly a year on sick leave to become a mother, today won her fight for reinstatement. Supreme Court Justice Seybom issued an order directing the board of education to re store to Mrs. Peixott her position. Her case was selected to test the board’s ruling that married women teachers may not obtain leaves of absence to per mit them to bear children. Invigorating to tho Pale and Sickly The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out Malaria, enriches the blood, builds up the sys tem. A true Tonic. For adults and children. 50c. (Advt.) DECLARES LAND IS NOT YIELDING FULL RETURNS MANCHESTER, N. H.. Nov. 17.— Less than forty per cent of the culti vated land in the United States is rea sonably well cultivated and less than 12 per cent is yielding maximum returns. Secretary Houston, of the department of agriculture, told the National Grange of Patrons of Husbandry in forty-sev enth annual convention here today, that the best figures he could procure led to such a conclusion and that only in a few localities had conditions been developed to insure maximum returns. Secretary Houston touched on rural credits, marketing methods, extension of agricultural education, and the cost of living. He spoke of “manipulations of those middlemen who perform no useful or necessary service;” as one of the causes of soaring prices. Relief For Rupture Without Operation We Allow A 60-Day Test— Entirely At Our Own Risk —To Prove It No longer any need to drag through life at the mercy ol leg-strap and spring trusses. No reason In the world for * It ' * J — letting them force you to undergo a dangerous operation. FLORIDA ORANGE RATES REDUCED BY COMMISSION WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Freight rates of 33 cents a hundred pounds, carload, and 35 cents, less than carload, on citrus fruits from points on the Caloosahatchee river, Florida, to Jacksonville, for ship ment north, today were held by the in terstate commission to be unreasonable. Rates of 31 and 34 cents respectively were fixed. CALIFORNIA STANDARD OIL LANDS CONTROL OF WELLS SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 17.—Accord ing to a morning newspaper a deal has been consummated here by which tho Standard Oil company of California ob tains control of the Murphy Oil com pany’s production and the ownership of the wells in California. The price paid by the Standard Oil was said to have been more than $22,000,000. NO, THANKS! UNCLE SAM DIDN’T CARE FOR PULLMAN (By Associated Prsss.) WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—The United, States government would have a Pull man palace car on its hands had it not been for the action taken by Assistant Secretary of Commerce Sweet. Col lector of Customs Wheelan, at Detroit, informed him the Grand Trunk Rail way company had ferried an empty Pullman from Detroit to Windsor, on the Canadian side, then back again to Detroit to another station. As it was in a Canadian owned ferry, this was considered a violation of the law pro hibiting carriage of American coast wise merchandise in foreign bottoms. The penalty would hav^ been confisca tion of the “merchandise.” Secretary Sweet decided he .did not want a Pullman car, and that, any way, there had been no intention of breaking the law. The company, how ever, will be ordered not to do it again. The Only Old-Fashion Corn Whiskey Distillery , in the World RICH FARMER HELD ON CHARGE OF PEONAGE SAVANNAH, Ga., Nov. 17.—After a hearing before United States Commls sioner J. C. Morcock this afternoon, D. S. Miller, a wealthy farmer of Screven county, was held under $1,000 bond on a peonage charge, to await the action of the federal grand jury. Miller was arrested last night In Screven county. He gave bond and ap peared in court today. He is charged with keeping a negro named Jim Golden on his farm against the negro’s will. The man testified that Miller would not let him go and kept his clothes from him, and .even would not give him rations. OFFERS $5,000 REWARD TO FIND MEN “HIGHER UP” (By Associated Press.) CHICAGO. Nov. 17.—A reward of $5,000 for the arrest and conviction of the men “higher up” in the Donahoe- Funk case was offered here today by Clarence S. Funk. Funk was prosecuting witness in the trial of Daniel Donahoe, a lawyer, and Isaac Stiefel, a detective, in which Don ahoe was found guilty of conspiring to defame Funk. The case did not de velop the source of the money used by Donahoe in prosecuting an aliena tion suit against Funk and for keeping witnesses out of the state after it col lapsed. GEORGE BRIGGS TO FACE WHITE SLAVERY CHARGE MONTGOMERY, Ala., Nov. 17.— George Briggs will be tried before John A. E. Elmore, United States commis sioner, November 25 on a charge of transporting his daughter or step daughter from LaGrange, Ga., to Tal lahassee and thence to Montgomery in violation of the Mann white slave law. Briggs has been unable to furnish a 1,000 bond and is in the county jail. Mary Newberry, sixteen years old will be the state's chief witness. She claims she is a daughter of Mrs. Briggs and her first husband, but Briggs maintains that the girl is his own daughter. Away With Leg-Strap and Spring Trusses So far as we know, our guaranteed rupture holder is the only thing of any kina for rupture that yon can get on 60 days trial—the only thing we know of good enough to stand such a long and thorough test. It’s the famous Cluthe Automatic Massaging Truss-made on an absolutely new principle—has 18 patented features. Self- adjusting. Does away with the misery of wearing belts, leg straps and springs. Guaranteed to hold at all times—lnclud- lng when you are working taking a bath, etc. Has cured In case after case that seemed hopeless. Write for Froo Book of Advice—Cloth-bound, 104 pages. Explains the dangers of operation. Shows just what s wrong with elastic and spring trusses, and why drugstores should no more be allowed to fittiusses than toporform operations. Exposes the humbugs—shows how old-fashioned worthless trusses are sold under false and misleading names Tells all about the care and attention we give you. Endorsements from ovet 6000 people, including physicians. Write to-day —find out how you can prove every word we say by making a 6i» day test without risking a penny. New York City. Box 672, Cluthe Co., 125 E. 23rd St. FREE! Handy Book ffor^Trappora If you are interested, we will send you this book free and keep you informed as to prices on all kinds of Furs. 9 11 PIT . It Will Attract All LUIfll Animals To Your Trap* A large sample bottle for 25c. Guaranteed to increase your catch or money refunded. It Advertises US To Satisfy YOU ST. LOUIS COMMISSION CO., Dept. 41 208 N. Main St 0 St. Louis, Mo. . In a little old-fashion distillery down here in Alabama we are working every day, except Sunday, distilling corn whiskey just like it used to be made in Georgia before Georgia went dry—made. just across the river from Georgia at Girard, Ala. Our whiskey is GOOD STUFF CORN LIQUOR 4 Honest Quarts $3, express prepaid This is the only com whiskey distillery in the world selling direct tat the consumer. Whenever you’re by this way, drop in and see our old- style still. NO PRESENTS. If you want something good, order from us. No free goods, no premiums, no faking—just straight, pure old- fashion corn liquor—the best that can be made. It has a fine taste. If you don’t say it’s the best com liquor you ever saw, keep a quart for yau? trouble, return the rest and we will refund your $3.00. MOORE’S DISTILLERY, Box 18 , Girard, ASc. Proprietor*. Registered Distillery No. 3. District of Alabama Hi STRA1QHT Order by ! Mall UNEQUALED Kentucky’s Great Whiskey Express Prepaid from Distiller to You 9 Rallnn, fnr 3fpr$7.B0 or 1 for$3,cholcoof Bye-BourbonorOmr » MallUIl* IMi yvi Fulton Straight whiskey highest medicinal thoroughly 38^, matured, in Myers patent 1 gallon demijohns. To prove Fulton la beet you need send no money We ship on 30 day's credit, If you have your merchant or bank write na guar anteeing: account. No C.O.D. Foil Quart Dottles of Rye, Bourbon or Corn arc expressed prepaid !n plain boxes, either 4 for S»3.,8 for $6. or 12 for $9. expressed prepaid in plain boxes, FREE—4 miniature bottles of Selected Fulton with every 2 grallon order, 6 with 3 grallon orders, accompanied by cash. If not satisfied with whiskey return; and. if *" ' ** ~“ ’ ’ * - * - : and, if paid for, all your money will be refunded by first malL ■MYERS & COlli PAN Y, ^covington 8m.b Own ns TJ.S.Bm. PiIt't No.22,6th Dm.. Kr, Onltra from Mont., Wyo., Colo., N.Mox.nndWeatthoroof, matt04J1 for either to fall quart bottlea, S gallons in demijohns,or aoaak, for$15. byprepald freight. Writ# for oxpreeeterms —— 1 ———■g Writefor our hook, A Fair Customer, and price I'sl sealed. SS553SSS5SS2S Jf mnwaiHiri Write today for our free Trap pers’ Book—tells you all about how to increase your catch, and inside facta about hovr to get the moat money out of furs. Best book for trappers ever published. # No up- to-date trappers can afford to be without it. Our confidential information is very valu able and will be sent to you. monthly during the season—it means big money to trappers. All of the above free for the asking. Address ' I. ABRAHAM 213 N. MainSt., Dept. 105 St.Louu.Mo. TRAPPERS WE ,UT FOR CASH And pay highest prices for Coon, MinK, SKunlf, Possum* Muskrat* and all other Furs, Hides and Ginseng. Best facilities in America. Send for Free Price List and Ship ping Tags. No commission charged. 1 ROGERS FUR COMPANY, Qept. 134 St. Louis, Mo. AGENTS WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY! ■ k Act quick. Sell ZAN0L Concentrated 3 Extract, (or making Liquor, at home. ’ A few minutes does the work— L makes the genuine article—saves over 60%. Perfectly legitimate, can be sold anywhere, no lic ense required. IF S60 A WEEK OR MORE LOOKS GOOD TO , YOU—get busy. The newest > thing out, Immense demand, / sells fast, coins you money. , Small, compact, carry weeks supply In your pocket. Terri tory going fast. Just send ' postal to-day. We’ll show r you how to make money quick. ^UNIVERSAL IMPORT CO. J ' D,pt360f Cincinnati,0. FREE^==Johnson’s FactBook===FREE Johnson’s Fact Book tells how to make many useful labor sav ing devices for the Home and Farm that will save you Time and Money. Tells How to do things 'with less Work ana More Ease. Gives information that you will put into practical use every day. Is an Encyclopedia in itself. .• The Farmer or the Good Housewife will find many hundreds of valuable suggestions in JOHNSON’S FACT BOOK tha* will save Time and Trouble every day. It is a mighty handy little book to have around the house and does not cost you one penny. All you have to do Is to secure us one NEW subscriber to THE SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL for Six Months at Twenty-Five Cents and we will give you JOHNSON’S FACT BOOK ABSOLUTELY FREE. Se cure the new subscriber TODAY and send to us with the Twenty- Five Cents he pays you and we will send the paper to him six months and mail you the Book. Use the coupon below. ; 1’ *1 Semi-Weekly Journal, Atlanta, Ga. Enclosed find Twenty-five Cents Send The Senji-Weekly Journal Six Months on Trial to Name ... ... ... ... ...... P. O R. F. D State ' » and mail JOHNSON’S FACT BOOK to " ~ , T*;, ^ 1 - - - 1 - r Name r . .... P. O. . R. F. D. ,.. State