Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1913.
THE TRUTH
ABOUT CATARRH
TOLD IN A SIMPLE WAY
Without Apparatus, Inhalers, Salves,
Lotions, Harmful Drug's Smoke or
Electricity*
HEALS 24 HOURS
It is a new way. It is somethin* absolutely
different. No lotions, sprays or sickly smelling
salves or creams. No atomizer, or any appara
tus of any kind. Nothing to smoke or inhale.
No rtoaiaiug or rubbing or injections. No elec
tricity or vibration or massage. No powder
no plasters; no keeping in the house. Nothing
of that kind at all. Something new and dlf-
Germ-Demors of Catarrh Scattered
by Every Sneeze!
ferent, something delightful and healthful,
something Instantly successful. You do not
have to wait, and linger and pay out a lot
of money. You can stop it overnight—and I
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scription—but 1 am cured and my friends are
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will stop at once like magic.
I Am Free —You Can Be Free
"W catarrh was filthy and loathsome. It
made me ill. It dulled my mind. ,It under
mined my health and was weakening my will.
The hawking, coughing, spitting made me ob
noxious to all, and my foul breath and disgust
ing habits made even my loved ones avoid me
secretly. My dellgnt In life was dulled and
my faculties impaired. I knew tnat in time
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cause every moment of the day and night it
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lint l found a cure, and I am ready to tell
ron about it FREE Write me promptly.
RISK JUST ONE CENT
Send no money. Just your name and address
on a postal card. Say: “Dear Sam Katz.
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Do not delay. Send postal card or write me
a letter today. Don’t think of turning this
page until you have asked for tnis wonderful
treatment that can do for you what it has
done for me.
SAM KATZ, Suite E, 171.
1325 Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill,
(Advt.)
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DipiUlOS CHICA60
YOUR HEART
Does it Flutter* Palpitate
or Skip Beals? Have you
Shortness of Breath,Ten
derness*?? umbness or Pain
In left side, Dizziness*
Fainting Spells* Spots be
fore eyes* Sudden Starting
in sleep* Nervousness,
— ■- -r— Nightmare* Hungry or
oak Spells, Oppressed Feeling in chest*
loking Sensation in throat, Painful to
lie on left side. Cold Bands or Feet,
cult Breathing, Heart Dropsy,, Swelling
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heart? If you have one or more of the above
symptoms, don’t fail to uc*e Dr© Kinsnian’s
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medicine. It is said that one person out of
every four has a weak heart. Three-fourths of
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within your reach, lout) endorsements f urnished.
* FREE 'TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
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Send your uu »nd adrni and
w, will lead you la Beautiful
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eacb. All tk* raft In New York.
Whan i«ld return ua |L8P nnd
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lUt ef n«arlT 50 premiums a ' 1
raw to get them.
HOWARD * CO.,
106 dose SU Palmyra., Pa.
OLD-TIME DISTILLERY
One Relic of the Past Is
Still Busy Producing
Com Liquor in
Alabama
Alabama has one thing no other state has—
that is the only 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 what is known as a cooker to their equip
ment, and boil out the last drop of juice from
the corn, getting as much as five gallons to
the bushel. Hut the quality 1s said not to be
as good.
This old-time distillery is busy every day
turning out 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-fashioned way, because we
turn out so much better article. No, we charge
no more than the others.
“Ob, yes,” we fill mail orders and pay the
express, too. Of course, unless a mun 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 $3.00
for 4 honest quarts. Address ‘Moore’s Distil
lery, Box 25, Girard, Ala.’ ”—(Advt.)
Truant Officers Favor
Punishing the Parents
^4s Well as Children
(By Associated Press.)
ST. LOl?IS, Nov. £4.—-Uniform mar
riage and divorce laws, uniform com
pulsory* education and child labor lays
and an adequate mother’s pension law
were advocated in resolutions adopted
by the National League of Compulsory
Education officials at the second ses
sion of their annual convention here
today. Truant officers of sixty of the
largest cities in the country comprise
the league.
Another resolution deplored the fail
ure to enforce the birth registration
laws and blamed parents for the prev
alence of truancy and many other de
ficiencies characteristic of the small
“boy.” i
The resolution declared children were
being punished too much and parents
too little.
To remedy this, the organization pro
posed the establishment of courts of
domestic relations whose parents are to
be tried for offenses of their children
when the parents contribute causes
making the offenses possible. /
A resolution was adopted* urging
mothers and fathers to protect their
children by teaching them sex hygiene
* The report of the nominating com
mittee, which probably wil be approved
by the convention body this afternoon,
re-elects William P. Bodin, of Chicago,
as president for the third time.
CAN JUDGE CHANGE MIND
AFTER SENTENCING MAN?
WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—The pow
er of a judge to change his mind and
increase the sentence of a prisoner after
he has been sent to prison will be one
of the problems the supreme court must
solve shortly.
A judge in Trego county. Kansas,
sentenced Henry Meyer to Jail for three
months and to pay a fine of $100 for
contempt in violating a liquor injunc
tion. Twelve hours later the Judge re
called Meyer from jail and made his
sentence six months.
The legal minds of Kansas have beer,
figuring what happened to Meyer. The
supreme court of Kansas held the trial
judge was powerless to set aside the
first sentence and that this must be
served out. Meyer contends the judge
set aside the first sentence but was
without power to impose a second sen
tence. so that he is a free man
MERCHANT SHOT DEAD
IN QUARREL OVER $3
PIEDMONT, Ala., Nov. 24.—I. W.
Kemp, a furniture dealer of this place,
was shot and killed late today, by James
Tuckor, a mill hand. A dispute over a
cupboard valued at $3 is said to have
been the cause of the shooting. Tuokor
was arrested tonight and taken to Annis
ton, Ala., where he now is in jail.
Atlanta Promises
$250,000 to Fund
For Great College
Business Men Hold Quiet Conference and Pledge City to
Raise Quarter-Million for Rebuilding Historic Oglethorpe
in Atlanta Suburbs - Captai n J, W, English Chairman .of
Committee of 100 Strong Men
Lc * Adler
Take Your Own Time 1
To Pay
MOTHER! IF CHILD’S
TONGUE IS COATED
If cross, feverish, constipated,
give “California Syrup
of Figs”
A laxative today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Children simply will not
take the time from play to empty their
bowels, which become clogged up with
waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach
sour.
Look at the tongue, mother! If coat
ed, or your child is listless, cross, fever
ish, breath had, restless, doesn’t eat
heartily, full of cold or has sore throat
or ahy other children’s ailment, give a
teaspoonful of "California Syrup of
Figs,’’ then don’t worry, because it is
perfectly harmless, and in a few hours
all this constipation poison, sour bile
and fermenting waste will gently move
out of the bowels, and you have a well,
playful child again. A thorough ^in
side cleansing" is oftimes all that is
necessary. It should he the first treat
ment given in any sickness.
Beware < counterfeit fig syrups. Ask
your drugg.st for a 50-cent bottle of
“California Syrup of Figs,’’ which has
full directions for bahies, children of- all
ages and for grown-ups plainly printed
on the bottle. Look carefully and see
that it is made by the “California Fig
Syrup Company.” Don’t be fooled!
(Advt.)
Coming of
The Sunbeam
How to Avoid those Pains an&Distress
Which so Many Mothers Have Suffered
It is a pity more women do not know of
Mother’s Friend. This remedy softens the
muscles, enables them
to expand without
strain and enables
women to go through
the ordeal without
pain, nausea, morn
ing sickness or other
dreaded symptoms so
familiar to many
mothers.
There is no foolish
diet to harass the mind. Thousands of
women no longer resign themselves to the
thought that sickness and distress are nat
ural. They know better, for in Mother’*
Friend they have found how easy it is to
banish all those dreaded experiences.
It is a subject every woman should be
familiar with, and even though she may
not require such a remedy, she will now
and then meet some prospective mother to
whom a word in time about Mother’s
Friend will come as a wonderful bleBBing.
This famous remedy is sold by all drug
gists, and is only $1.00 a bottle. It is for
external use only. Write to-day to the
Bradfield Regulator Co., 227 Lamar Bldg.,
Atlanta, Ga., for a most valuable book to
onf mother*-
To Women
Who Dread
Motherhood
fciformatton How Thoy May Glvo Birth to
Happy, Healthy Children Absolutely With
out Fear of pain. Sent freo
No woman need any mong
er dread the pains of
childbirth- Dr Jf H.
Dye devoted his life
to relieving the sor
rows of women He has
proven that the pain at
nildbirth need no longer
W % be feared by womanand we
will gladly tell you now it may
hft dene absolutely free of charge Send your
name and address to Dr J H Dye Medical
Institute, 127 Lewis Block, Buf alo, N Y and
we will send you, postpaid, his v onderfui 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.
O GLETHORPE university is to be refolded and rebuilt in Atlanta.
The institution of ante-bellum days is to be borp again out of the
ashfcs of war, and be greater and more glorious than ever before.
This was decreed finally last Friday morning at a meeting of one
hundred of Atlanta’s most substantial business men, when the decision was
reached that Atlanta’s share of the cash subscriptions toward the expense
of the rebuilding shall not be less than $250,000. That decision fixed the
home of the new Oglethorpe in Atlanta. Otherwise it might have become
Houston, the hustling Texas city, which wants the university very much
indeed, and stands ready to do all that Atlanta is pledged to do.
The meeting was held in the rooms of the Atlanta chamber of com
merce. Those who attended were told that $300,000 already had been
raised in money and land in ten southern states. They were told that
Atlanta expects to augment this fund by a quarter of a million dollars, and
then the other subscriptions can be increased to $500,0Q0, thereby com
pleting a foundation fund of $750,000; and that with this in hand and
Oglethorpe a fact, the institution can be made a $1,000,000 university
within a short time.
Their response was characteristic of Atlanta. They looked over what
had been done and surveyed what remains to be done, and then resolved
“We will raise that $250,000 here.”
Without further ado, they set about carrying that resolve into effect.
They authorized Captain J. W. English, chairman of the meeting, to name
a committee of 100 Atlanta men to plan the procedure. This committee
will be appointed soon, will organize immediately afterward, and the can
vass for subscriptions will begin at once.
HOWELL CALLS MEETING.
Clark Howell, editor of the Constitu
tion, called the meeting to order Fri
day morning and stated that the three
Atlanta newspapers had agreed to get
squarely back of the Oglethorpe uni
versity movement.
Captain J. W. English was chosen
chairman and Dr. Thornwell Jacobs was
elected secretary.
James R. Gray, editor of The Journal,
then gave a statement of the object of
the three Atlanta papers in calling the
meeting. He told of the movement of
seven or eight years ago, to bring a
great university to Atlanta, and how at
that time Atlantians subscribed $265,000,
or more than is now asked, for this
purpose; but the plan fell through be
cause of legal difficulties. He showed
that now Atlanta has the opportunity
to do even better than was then pro
posed, by refounding Oglethorpe. He
said $200,000 in cash, had already been
subscribed, more than $1&6,000 of which
has been given outside of Atlanta; in
addition to a site on Peachtree road
worth $100,000.
“Atlanta is now asked to raise a quar
ter of a million to be applied to the es
tablishment of this university here,”
Mr. Gray said. “If this amount is giv
en, there is every reason to believe the
outside subscriptions can be pushed to
$500,000, and that Oglethorpe can soon
be made a million dollar university.”
TO BE LIKE PRINCETON.
Mr. Gray explained that Oglethorpe
would be an institution modelled after
Princeton, N. J., that it would be
under general Presbyterian supervision
through its board of trustees, but in
no sense a sectarian ojk/ ecclesiastical in
stitution. It is planned to be a big
broad £auge university, in every sense
a credit to the south.
Aside from the fact that Atlanta is
not the educational center it should be,
Mr. Gray said, there is the material side
of it—’the bringing hero of 500 or more
students who will forifi a valuable busi
ness asset.
“If you will put up this quarter of
million dolars, I will personally see to
it that the rest of the million is raised,
if it takes the rest of my life to do it,'
is the spirit in which Dr. Thornwell
Jacobs spoke, urging his hearers to
seize this opportunity.
Dr. Jacobs gave a brief history of old
Oglethorpe university, whose students
went into the war and whose money
was invested in confederate bonds.
“Oglethorpe,” he said, “died at Get
tysburg.”
He told how eighteen months ago he
began the work of raising funds to
redound the old institution. He called
on D. I. MacIntyre, of Atlanta, and
told him he wanted him to give $1,000
to build Oglethorpe university here.
“I never gave $1,000 to an educational
institution in my life,” Mr. MacIntyre
replied.
“Neither have I,” said Dr. Jacobs,
“but I am not going to ask any man
to do anything I don't do. I am going
to head the list for that amount.”
Mr. MacIntyre subscribed his $1,000.
and Dr. Jacobs went to work. Since |
that time he has told the story of Ogle
tiiorpe from forty-three platforms all j
the way from Virginia to Texas, and in j
every instance from one to six men i
subscribed $1,000 each.
HOUSTON WANTS IT.
“Houston, Tex., has not only given •)
$7,000 to build Oglethorpe in Atlanta," I
said Dr. Jacobs, “but is ready right now
to give a quarter of a million and more
for it if Atlanta does not want it. We
come to you with $300,000 and all we
ask is that Atlanta will do as she has
always done in great enterprises of this
sort, and that is to tackle this propo
sition and put it over.”
He said the Presbyterians want to
| put the university here because in every
way they consider Atlanta the logical
place for it.
Dr. William Owens, representing the
Silver Lake Park company, told of the
hard work Dr. Jacobs had in persuading
his company that the university could
be established here, but Dr. Jacobs final
ly succeeded and the company gave the
university for its campus a tract of six
ty acres, twenty-fiv# acres of whicn
were given personally by C. H. Ashford,
and in addition gave to the university
the perpetual use of Silver Lake.
“We didn’t believe it could be done,"
said Dr. Owens, “but now we are as
sured of it and it is my belief that there
is not a man in Atlanta who will not
subscribe in some way to the extent of
his ability to put this institution here."
L. P. Bottenfield corroborated Dr.
Owens’ statement that Silver Lake es
tates had subscribed $5,000 to the uni
versity fund.
Edgar Watkins, representing the
committee composed of himself, WH-
mer L. Moore and Frank M. Inman,
stated that they had personally can
vassed all of the subscriptions mad-s
for the building of Oglethorpe, and
found them all valid and m proper
form.
TO HAVE 200 TRUSTEES.
Mr. Watkins stated that 200 men, all
members of the Presbyterian cnurch and
each of whom will give the institution
$1,000, will be its trustees. These men
ar e located throughout the south from
Virginia to Texas, and one of them
lives in Connecticut. The institution,
he said, under this plan will have all
the benefits of church control and none
of the disadvantages.
“If ’you gentlemen decide to under
take this movement, I will be glad to
subscribe $1,000 personally,’’ said John
W. Grant.
Mr. Grant said he was not thoroughlv
familiar with all the details of the prop
osition, but indicated that he would sup*
port tne movement if it were decidua
to undertake it.
“Atlanta has never been known to
fail in anything good she has undertak
en,” said Eugene R. Black. “I cannot
imagine anybody considering this move
ment in any other light than as a good
thig for Atlanta. I should like to have
more time to consider it, but if we
determine to undertake it, Atlanta, will
do it.”
Captain English, Mr. Gray and Dr.
Jacobs explained why it was impo-
tant that Atlanta should answer now
the question as to whether she wants
Oglethorpe university. It was stated
that Houston, Texas, is eager and wait
ing for it, ready to give the money, ant
it is said Houston’s position is such
that an early answer is important. ft
was further pointed out that all those
outside of Atlanta who have subscribed
to the movement have been promisee
that Atlanta should go on record as \.o
what she is goig to do before the end
of the present year.
“I believe Atlanta ought to have a
great university,” said Hugh M. Willet.
“We need a classical university and the
time is ripe to begin this work and to
push it to success. I believe it will
succeed and I want to se it done.”
“WE WILL DO IT”
W. Woods White, after stating that
he stood ready to make a substantial
contribution to Oglethorpe university,
and that Atlanta needed and ought to
have it. moved that the business men
present indorse the plan and that “we
undertake to do it.”
The motion was seconded by R. C.
Alston and adopted by a rising vote.
George M. Brown expressed warm ap
proval of the plan and indicated that
he would lend it material assistance.
Clark Howell moved that a campaign
committee of 100 be appointed by Chair
man English at his leisure, and that
this committee get together at the first
opportunity and plan the details of the
work before them. This motion was car
ried, and Captain English will soon
name the committee.
“You have heard it stated that Tech
started with only $25,000,” said Captain
English, “but Tech really had an ear
lier beginning than that. It began in a
downtown room which a few citizens
of Atlanta equipped with anvil, forge
and tools. You see what it is today.
These are things that have made At
lanta Take courage and have faith, and
you can do whatever you set your minu
and heart to.”
Captain English appealed to the young
n.en personally to take an interest in
this and other movements of the sort
lor the benefit of Atlanta, and concluded
with the suggestion of a vote of thanks
to the Atlanta press for what it has
done and proposes to do for the building
of this institution. The motion was car
ried and the meeting adjourned.
THREE WOMEN
TESTIFY
To the Merit of Lydia E. Pink,
ham’s Vegetable Com
pound during Change
of Life.
An Adler Organ in your
own home will be a never fail
ing source of pleasure, refinement,
r education and culture, making home the
most attractive place on earth, paying for
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1 -happiness and contentment.
Its value cannot be measured in dollars and
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[ listen to.its sweet music—what pleasure to
The Adler
Plan Wipes Out
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more than'85,000 of these famous organs are
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THANKSGIVING BARBECUE
TO BE HELD IN BUTTS
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
JACKSON, Ga., Nov. 24.—The Butts
County Live Stock and Poultry associa
tion will have a mammoth barbecue on
Thanksgiving cay to which well known
out-of-town speakers, the members,
their families and interested parties
will be invited. The ’cue will be held
at Mallet Springs, about a mile from
Jackson.
The citizens of Butts are becoming
very much interested in live stock and
recently some thoroughbred stock has
been purchased*. The cattle tick is be
ing fought and a quarantine will lkely
be establshed n the early sprng. The
local assocation has some fifty mem
bers and its work is doing much to en
courage the live stock industry in Butts
county.
Arouses the Liver and Purifies the Blood
The Old Standard general strengthening tonk,
GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC, arouses the
liver to action, drives Malaria out of the’ blood
and builds up the system, ror adults and
children. 50c.
(Advt.)
WILSON INVESTIGATES
COLORADO COAL STRIKE
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—President
Wilson is giving serious consideration
to the many questions involved in the
Colorado coal strike with a view to set
tlement through federal agencies.
Representative Keating, of Colorado,
had a long talk with the president today
and presented several telegrams urging
a federal investigation. The president
already has asked both sides for a
statement of the case.
Representative Keating urged that
the department of labor endeavor to
compose the situation. Secretary Wil
son, on his return from the Pacific
coast, will stop in Colorado to discuss
the strike with both sides.
GOV. SLATON ADDRESSES
MUSCOGEE CORN SHOW
COLUMBUS, Ga., Nov. 24.—Governor
John M. Slaton was greeted by 5,000
residents of Muskogee county this aft
ernoon at the Columbus fair grounds,
where he addressed the Boys’ Corn
clubs. The address was along agri
cultural lines in the main.
This afternoon the governor was en
tertained by the Women’s Reading club
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry R.
Goetchius, where he was greeted by all
of the club women and members of va
rious other women’s organizations. He
left at 5:30 for Atlanta.
GLASS’ CREDENTIALS
PRESENTEDJ0 SENATE
WASHINGTON, Nov. 24.—The creden
tials of Frank P. Glass, appointed by
Governor O’Neal, of Alabama, to suc
ceed the late Joseph F. Johnston as
United States' senator from that state,
were presented to the senate today by
Senator Bankhead.
They were referred without action
to the committee on privileges and
elections, where Mr. Glass’ eligibility
will be passed upon.
CHARGE AGAINST JUROR
HALTS MURDER TRIAL'
CROWLEY, La., Nov. 24.—Another
sensation helped to intensify feeling in
the murder trial of Dora Murff today
when the prosecution charged Mitchell
Muller, one of the jurors, was preju
diced. The district attorney said he
had witnesses to prove that two days
before Muller was accepted as a juror
he said he never would convict a per
son under like* circumstances. The de
fense will fight the new phase of the
case and the trial was postponed until
Saturday morning.
Judge William Campbell late yester
day added an air of mystery to the
proceedings when he suddenly ad
journed court for reasons he said he
would not divulge. People crowded injo
the courtroom this morning and heajfd
the reason when the charge agairtst
Muller was made.
Eighteen-year-old Dora Murff Ha
charged jointly with her half-brother,
Allie Duvall, and her stepfather, Janies
Duvall, with killing J. M. Delehaye, wo
had been attentive to her. The srl
says she did the shooting, but the stjjte
will try to place the blame directly |t>n
James Duvall.
FREE TO YOU—MY SISTER
YOUNG AGRICULTURISTS
'TO BE GIVEN DIPLOMAS
(By AEuociated Press.)
WASHINGTON. Nov. 24. — Cham
pion young agriculturists from
various sections of the coun
try will arrive^, December 11, to
receive from Secretary Houston, of the
department of agriculture, diplomas for
excellence in their work. Those who will
receive prizes include those of the girls’
cannings clubs and boys’ corn , clubs
from the south, and of the potato, corn
and canning clubs of the northern and
western states. Chaampion “Potato
Boys’’ will come from Massachusetts.
Ohio, Iowa and Michigan, and the cham
pion beet .sugar growers will come
from Colorado.
Streator, III. — “I shall always praise
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound wherever I
go. It has done me
so much good at
Change of Life, and
it has also helped my
daughter. It is one
of the grandest
medicines for wo
men that can be
bought. I shall try
to induce others to
try it.”—Mrs. J. H.
Campbell, 206 N.
Second St, W. S., Streator, Illinois.
Philadelphia, Pa. — “It was at the
‘Change of Life ’ that I turned to Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
using it as a tonic to build up my ays-
tem, with beneficial results. Mrs.
Sara Hayward, 1826 W. Venango St,
(Tioga) Phila., Pa.
San Francisco, Cal.—“ I have taken
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound for many years whenever I
would feel bad. I have gone through
the Change of Life without any troubles
and thank the Compound for it I rec
ommend it to young girls and to women
of all ages.”—Mrs. C. Barrie, 3062
E5th St, San Francisco, Cal.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalelled.
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi
dential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
Woman and held in strict confidence.
MAN WHO SLEW WIFE
SENTENCED TO HANG
(By Associated Prees.)
NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 22.—W.
F. Cook, convicted of the murder of his
wife and under indictment for the mur
der of Lucy Stanford, his wife’s niece,
was sentenced by Judge Richardson at
Murfreesboro today to be hanged De
cember 23.
A law recently enacted by the legis
lature provides electrocution shall be
the method used for exacting the death
penalty in Tennessee.
WILSON THANKS GRANGERS
FOR INDORSING HIS POLICY
(By Associated Prees.)
MANCHESTER, N. H., H|ov. 22.—Dele
gates to the seventh annual convention
of the National Grange left for their
homes tonight. The next convention
will be held in Delaware, probably in
Wilmington.
A letter was read from J. P. Tu
multy, secretary to President Wilson,
thanking the grange in behalf of the
president for its commendation of his
policy with reference to the Mexican sit
uation.
Free to You and Every Sister Sup.
erlng from Woman’s Ailments. -
I am a woman.
I know woman's sufferings.
I have found tho cure.
I will mail, free of any charge, my hone lint-
amt with full instructions to any sufferer from
woman’s ailments. I want to tell ill women about
this cure—you, my reader, for yourself, yojkr
daughter, your mother, or your sister. Iwanttfc
tell you how to cure yourselves at home with-
out the help of adoctor. Men cannot understand
women’s sufferings. What we women know from ■
experience, we know better than any doctor. I
know that my’home treatment is safe and sore
euro for iouccrrhoen or Whitish ditchorgas, Ulceration, 01a-
placenant or Falling of the Womb, frofuto, Scanty or Poioful
Periods, Uterina or Orarim Tumors, or Growths; olio coltish
head, bock amt boarala, boaring down failings, ntrawoooo.
eroding fooling up ihn iplno, melancholy, dilirt to cry. hot
floshoo, mrloitt, kidney, ond bladder troubles whom conoid
by weaknesses peculiar to our sox.
I want to send you t complete ten day's trootmOM
entirely tree to prove to ,you that you can cure
yourself at home, easily, quickly and
surely. Remember, that, it will cool you nothing to
—mmmmm— give the treatment a complete trial: and if you
Wish to continue, it will cost you only abont 12 cents a week or less than two cents a day. It
will not interfere with your work or occupation. Juot Mod ms your Mini ond oddtiM, te^IQSiLto'wre£
suffer if you wish, and 1 will send you the treatment for yovucM®, «fatlroly free.in pln-in
per, by return mall. I will also send you trio of cool, my hook— WOMAN S 0W* NtRGAl gflllgtg w'™
explanatory illustrations showing why women suffer, and how fhev can easily curetnem-slvea
at home. Every womanshould have it, and learn to think for herself. Then when the doctor says
“You must have an operation,” you can decide tor yourself. Thousands of women have cured
themselves with my home remedy. It cures ill old or young, To Bothers of Osughliri, I will explain a
simple home treatment which speedily and effectually cures Leucorrhoea, Oreen Bicknessana
Painful or Irregular Menstruation in young Ladies, Plumpness and health always results from
Wherever you live, I can refer you to ladles of your own locality who know and will gladly
tell any sufferer that this Homs Trnitmr.i really cum all women a diseases, and make* women well,
strong, plump and robust. Just sing your address, and the free ten day s treatment Ur your*, aiao
the book. Write to-day, as yon may not see this offer again. Arldrees ,
qiRS. M. SUMMERS. Box 337 • South Bena, Ind., u.
SOHCS 1 DENT EACH a Minn fr u
7 Old Black Jo© (green 244 In the morning by the bright
12 See that my grave's kept252 Darling Nelli© Gray Right
22 Old folks at horn© (Sueneo264 I left Ireland and mother
aOKathleeu Mavourn©en[ribbor because we were poor
88 When you and I were young. 276 I've only been down to tlio
84 Cottage by the sea [Maggie 283 Come home, father [club
48 Take this letter, to my mother 802 Butcher boi
This elegant Gold plated
KlJiCu, guaranteed to
Stand acid, and this
Beautiful Pin which looks
exactly like a real Diamond*
FREE
with ever yfjQc order for songs
5ft Litliowldlograbiniu the lone 305 I' se gwine back to Dixit 629 Ten thousand miles sway 1114 Johnstown flood
58 Starching through Georgia313 OM oaken bucket C3t I’ll meet her when the sun 1127 Three leaves of shnMRMk
€7 Star-spangled banner 331 Remember that tho poorftUfl Milwaukee fire [goes down 1141 Dying oowbojr
77 My old Kentucky home tramp has to live 660 Tramp, tramp, tramp, the 1100 Down on the farm
84 I'll be-all smiles tonight 838 Answer to Gypsy's warning boys are marching 1170 Song that braaks SIT he»r»
*5 Gipsy's warning (love339 Battle cry of freedom «B4 Bring back my bonaietome 1195 Where is mj wandauflg
104 Girl I left behind me 869 Old, and only in the wtyy <, • 0, K — *- — /-*-!-«
107 Carry me baok to old fir-362 Yellow rose of Texao ... ..
??? ?' tty W ? 1I< Ctinay 386 Barnej McCoy [girls 712 Ship that never returned
pard
lakes
ir the
278 It takes a girl to i
113 Two orphans 409 Boyi. ^keejT away from’the 713 Why did they dig ma*s 1824 After ^he ball (evsryttBa*
10 Songs 10c. 50 Sengs, Ring, Scarf Pin and Watch Chain ALL 50c. Stanos taken. Satisfaction guaranteed or money back.
COMMERCIAL MFG, CO., Suite 808, 542 S. Dearborn St. CHICAGO. II. S, A.
MEXICANS REPUDIATE
THREAT AGAINST TEXAS
AUSTIN, Tex., Nov. 24.—A letter
signed “various true Mexicans,” was
received by Governor O. B. Colquitt to
day disparaging the telegram recently
sent the governor by rpore than 100
Mexicans in San Marcos, Tex., threat
ening the state unless leniency should
be shown Mexican smugglers captured
at Carrizo Springs last fall.
The letter was from San Marcos and
asserted the signers of the telegram
were followers of Flores Magon, who
did not represent the true attitude of
Mexicans generally, resident in Texas.
BELGIUM STAYS OUT
OF ’FRISCO EXPOSITION
(By Associated Press.)
BRUSSELLS, Nov. 24.—Itis announced
the Belgian government has decided not
to partiiepate in the Panama-Pacific
exposition at San Francisco in 1915 for
reasons similar to those which governed
Germany and Great Britain and for the
additional reason that the United States
did not participate officially in the ex
positions held at Brussels and Chent.
cr» a wet road, upset and caught fire.
SO YEAR
GUARANTEE
Full 7 Jeweled •
Genuine (ev*u Rallrot.1 w,teh worth 416 to noyono who roqul r«o on oboe
lately reliable timekoopor ond o wotoh that will Oat • llfotlmo. Looomorlvo of
dial, (tompodend(uoro&toodaoTonjowol*,breqnotbolnprlcg, potent rofulntof
quioktrain. Fitted In h*ovy or tnodium wilcht»oUdoro-*U„r duifproof *orow$ooi
both eoac ond work* obaolutoly guoronUod for »»ioera. Toadrortl*e our buoloote
moke new friend*ond Introdu.o our preot ootologtlo of Klgln wotehot we will otaf
thisolegont wotoh tonny oddreas by moll poitpold for Q M IV S2 26
th : .» odvertleement with $2.05 ond watch will be eont to roc by return nSofl pop-
paid. Botlefoctlon caorontoed or monoy rofandod. Bend $2.95 today. Ad drop
R. E. CHALMERS A CO..538 So.Deerborn St..CHICAOO^
The Only-
Old-Fashion
Corn Whiskey
Distillery
in the World j
In a little old-fashion distillery dorfcn
here in Alabama we are working ev^jfy
$
day, except Sunday, distilling corn whiskey just like it ui
to be made in Georgia before Georgia went dry—made julfet
across the river from Georgia at Girard, Ala. Our whiskeyjs
GOOD STUFF 1
CORN LIQUOR
4 Honest Quarts $3, express prepaid
1
This ig the only corn whiskey distillery in the world selling direct to
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 corn liquor you ever saw, keep a quart for yju--
trouble, return the rest and we will refund your $3.00.
MOORE’S DISTILLERY, Box 18 , Girard, AJc.
Proprietor., Registered Distillery No. 3, District of Alabama
r • re-