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THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1913.
THESE GEORGIA GIRLS PUT UP BE'
-p'- v; r>
PRESERVES THAN MOTHER USED TO MAKE
steamship aground on $9.50 Christmas Offer $9.50
MflDTU PADOI IMA PAACT ■' »MVI y
NORTH CAROLINA COAST
(By Associated Press.)
WILMINGTON, N. C., Dec. 6.—
Passing a fishing schooner at a sharp
turn in the channel three miles below
Wilmington, the Clyde steamship
Navahoe late today, while proceeding
down the river, outward bound to
Xew York, ran hard and fast ashore.
Two tugs made an unsuccessful at
tempt to float her, and will maKe
further efforts early tomorrow' morn
ing. The Navahoe has no passengers
aboard and is not in immediate danger.
GIBX.S WHO LED THEIR COUNTY CLUBS IN CANNING- AND PRESERVING CONTESTS, THEIR EXHIBITS ARE AT THE STATE CAPITOL.
-Stall i noio ' by Winn.
SEEK PARDON FDR UN
SAYS OIL WILL REPLACE
COAL AS WARSHIP FUEL
Escaped Jail Term Through
Error and Now Holds Posi
tion of Trust
(By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, Dec. 8.—Active steps were
taken today to obtain a pardon for
Joshua Tedford, who, convicted nine
years ago for conspiracy to spirit away
a witness, has risen from a discharged
policeman to superintendent of one of
the largest mens furnishing stores in
the world.
Tedford escaped serving time through
the error of a clerk who pigeon holed
the mandate of the supreme court up
holding his sentence, instead of filing
the document with the trial judge.
While his appeal was pending Ted
ford obtained employment with a large
retail firm as house detective. Later
tie was promoted to assistant superin
tendent. In that position he rejected
hundreds of checks offered for mer
chandise and H. George Lytton, vice
president of the store, says a bad
check never got past Tedford because
he **knew crooks too well.” Tedford
has been superintendent two years.
CONFEDERATE VETERANS
TO MEET ON APRIL 29
(By Associated Press.)
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Dec. 8.—April
C9 and 3d and May 1 have been selected
as dates for the 1914 reunion of the
United Confederate Veterans, to be held
In this city, according to announcement
>iere yesterday by General Bennett H.
Young, commander-in-chief of the or
ganization.
General Young was here to confer
with local committees in charge of ar
rangements for the reunion. Present
plana, which were heartily indorsed by
the commander-in-chief, provide that all
veterans be afforded accommodations in
hotels, lodging houses anl private resi
dences, and that the customary tent
camping grounds be abolished.
Colonel S. A. Cunningham, editor of
the Commonwealth Veteran, accom
panied General Young on his trip here.
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—Early aban
donment of coal as fuel for the battle
ships of the American navy and the
substitution of oil is foreshadowed in
the annual report of Rear Admiral R.
S. Griffin, chief of the bureau of
steam engineering. He declares the con
struction of oil engines for the Maumee
at the New York navy yard and the
elimination of coal from the designs of
new battleships and destroyers are
steps in this direction.
To meet the future needs of the navy
for fuel oil, Admiral Griffin recom
mends that the navy department imme
diately should undertake the production
and refining of its own oil. He points
out that the sale of by-products in the
form of gasoline and illuminating oils
will go far toward covering the expense
of production and at the same time
furViish the ships with suitable fuel at a
cost considerably below the present
price.
IE IN THEATER DDK
Pharmacy Student Held While
Chemist Analyzes Stain on
Unique Instrument
DUPUY WILL NOT FORM
NEW FRENCH CABINET
(By Associated Press.;
PARIS, Dec. 8.—The French min
isterial crisis, brougnt about by the
resignation of Premier Barthou after
his defeat in the cnamber of deputies
on the question of the finance bill, was
still unsolved this morning. Jean
Dupuy. after consulting his political
friends, informed President Poincare
that he must decline the task of form
ing a cabinet.
President Poincare has invited Sena
tor Gaston Dourmergue, a Socialist, who
was formerly minister of the colonies
and twice minister of commerce, to call
today with the object, it is assumed, of
asqing him to form a cabinet.
(By Associated Press.)
NEWARK, Dec. 8.—A common darning
needle, found today in the theater box
occupied last night by Mrs. Marjorie H.
Graff, bride of a week, is believed to be
the instrument by means of which Mrs.
Graff was inoculated with a subtle poi
son which rendered her insensible. This
developed today with the arraignment of
Armand Megaro, a student-pharmacist,
the other occupant of the box, on a
charge of assault.
To determine the nature of the poison
the needle was submitted to a chemist
today. It was found near the spot
where Mrs. Graff sat. Megaro stoutly
asserted his innocence when confronted
by Mrs. Graff on the witness stand.
She repeated her story that she had
felt a sting on her hand, as if she had
been pricked by a pin or needle, that
her hand had quickly become numb and
that the feeling spread to her arm. She
left the box and went to the women’s
waiting room, where she fell uncon
scious but was soon revived. Megaro
was held in $20,000 bail today.
DALTON SUNDAY SCHOOLS
TO HOLD INSTITUTE
Bursting Main Kills Three
CINCINNATI, Ohio, Dec. 8.—One
white and two negro laborers were
drowned by the bursting of a sixty-inch
water main at the bottom of a trench
twenty-four feet deep at the Rockwood
avenue crossing of the Pennsylvania
railroad here today. The men were at
work in the trench.
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
DALTON, Ga., Dec. 5.—A special com
mittee, consisting of the superinten
dents of the various Sunday schools
here, is preparing a program for the
two-day Sunday school institute which
opens at the First Baptist church next
Thursday morning. The work will be
conducted by D. W. Sims, of Atlanta,
secretary of the Georgia Sunday School
association, and Rev. W. A. Brown, of
Chicago, superintendent of the mission
department of the International Sunday
School association.
VETERANS’ SONS TO HAVE
BARNESVILLE CHAPTER
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
BARNESVILLE, Ga.„ Dec. 8.—Com
mander J. S. Lifsey and Secretary R. Y.
Beckham, of the Pike camp of Confeder
ate veterans, have calleda public meet
ing at Zebulon for Saturday, December
6. for the purpose of considering the or
ganization of Sons of Veterans and
chapters of the Daughters of the Con
federacy. The old veterans are taking
this step to perpetuate the work which
they have been trying to do to keep up
interest in the heroic deeds of the south
during and immediately following the
war period.
A basket dinner will be provided at
the Zebulon meeting and C. T. Smith,
Prof. Charles . M. Neel and others will
make addresses on the subject at in
terest.
CLOTHES AND JEWELS
ARE SEIZED FOR DUTIES
NEW YORK, Dec. 8.—Jewels and
wearing apparel valued at $100,000, the
property of Mr. and Mrs. W. Allen
Dunlap, who arrived here on the
steamer Olympic, November 12, have
been seized by customs inspectors, it
was announced yesterday afternoon,
after the rejection of Mr. Dunlap’s
claim for exemption of duties on the
ground that he was a non-resident.
CURRENCY BILL DELAYS
ANTI-TRUST LEGISLATION
WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—-Anti-trust
legislation will receive no detailed con
sideration before the senate interstate
commerce committee until after the
passage of the currency bill. The
committee decided to delay outlining
a general program until the senate has
completed its long daily sessions.
PARCEL POST LIMIT IS
RAISED TO 20 POUNDS
Postoffice Department Yields
to Demands and Makes
- Material Concessions
Louisiana Bank Closed
NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 8.—The bank
of Vacherle at Vacherie, La., was closed
by the state banking officials today. It
is said the examiners found several
unsecured loans. The institution was
small, being capitalized at $10,000, with
resources of about $100,000.
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.—The maxi
mum weight of parcels to all zones be
yond the second was increased from 11
to 20 pounds today.
The commission’s “consent” to the
proposed changes was transmitted in
three letters from Chairman Clark to
Postmaster General Burleson. The ap
proved changes in rates and weights
to be in effect January .1, 1914, fol
lows :
To reduce the rates for the third
zone from 7 cents for the first pound
and 5 cents for each additional pound
to 6 cents for the first pound and 2
cents for each additional pound.
To reduce the rates for the fourth
zone from 8 cents for the first pound
and 6 cents for each additional ppund
to 7 cents for the first pound and 4
cents for each additional pound.
To reduce the rates for the fifth zone
from 9 cents for the first pound and 9
cents for each additional pound to 9
cents for the first pound and 8 cents
for each additonal pound.
“It seems obvious,” says the commis
sion, “that the service to the public
will be prompted by these changes pro
vided the revenue from the service is
not less than the cost thereof. Your
experiences and statistics seem to show
clearly that the revenue will not ba
less than the cost of the service.” *
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of I
DRIVER’S CONFESSION
IMPLICATES STRIKERS
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Dec. 8.—-Louis |
Bauer, arrested yesterday on a charge of
being the chauffeur of the gray automo- ,
bile from which four men, armed with;
riot guns fired upon two non-union team- j
sters, tonight confessed to the police that ;
he was driver for the “shotgun squad.”
Edward J. O’Leary, a structural iron
worker, was arrested upon charges ot
assault and battery with intent to kill,
as & result of the confession. The police j
charge that O’Leary was one of the
; men who shot the strike-breakers. ■
| O’Leary denies he was in the car from !
which the shots were fired.
w\
f
CUBAN AMNESTY BILL
IS PASSED BY SENATE
HAVANA, Dec. 6.—The senate has
passed the amnesty bill freeing the ne-
- gro rebels and the former liberal office-
‘ holders of the Gomez administration
: who had been charged with various
crimes. Some of these men are serv
ing sentences and others have not been
tried.
The bill provides for their liberation
after six months’ imprisonment. It or
iginally was intended solely to benefit
, the rebels in the negro uprising, and.
when the corrupt civil employes were
included the United States strongly op
posed it.
SUDDEN DEATH COMES TO
REAR ADMIRAL NILES
NeW YORK, Dec. 8.—Kossuth Nilea,
rear admiral United States navy, retired,
died suddenly today in a book store in
the shopping district. His home was
at Winsted, Conn.
The rear admiral and his wife had
come into the city to do Christmas
shopping.
He was born In Belleville, IL11., in
1849, was graduated from the naval
academy in 1869 and served in the Civil
war. In 1908 ne was in command of
the battleship Louisiana on a cruise
around the world. He retired in June,
1911.
SEND US YOUR CHRISTMAS ORDER FOR
HAYNER BOTTLEDHNBOND WHISKEY
It is the richest—purest—most delicious whiskey
you ever tasted—guaranteed to
please you in every way or
Your Money Back
^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Feel bully! No headache, sour
stomach, bad breath,
constipation
Get a 10-cent box now.
Are you keeping your liver, stomach
and bowels clean, pure and fresh with
Cascarets—or merely forcing a passage
way every few days with salts, cathar
tic pills or castor oil? This is impor
tant. '
Cascarets immediately cleanse the
stomach, remove the sour, undigested
and fermenting food and foul gases;
take the excess bile from the liver and
carry out of the system the constipated
waste matter and poison in the bowels.
No odds bow sick, headachy, bilious
and constipated you feel, a Cascaret to
night will straighten you out by morn
ing. They work while you sleep. A
10-cent box from your druggist will keep
your head clear, stomach sweet and your
liver and bowels regular for months.
Don’t forget the children—their little
insides need a gentle cleansing, too.
# (Advt.)
Our Annual Christmas Combination
FEATHER BED, FEATHER PILLOWS,
PAIR OF BLANKETS AND BOLSTER
Greatest bargain ever offered. Feather Bed
weighs 40 lbs., covered In 8 ot. A. C. A. ticking;
pair of 6 lb. pillows, same grade; Pair full 8iz Q
blankets and large, 6 lb. bolster. This combi
nation would cost you at a retail store $17.60. ,
AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
$10.00—2 Feather Mattresses, 1 Ticking—$10.00
Built for winter and summer use. One side
a succession of soft, springy sections, snug and
warm. Other side, firm, smooth and cool, for
summer use. Weighs 35 lbs. Guaranteed for a
lifetime. Something new.
$6.35 36 LB. FEATHER BED $6.36
No excuse for not having a new, comfortable
feather bed, now. All feather beds, mattresses,
pillow was made from new, clean, odorless and
dustless feathers. Mattresses, beds and pillows
ventilated and sanitary. All goods guaranteed.
You must be satisfied or money back. Cash must
come with orders. Good territory for live agents.
Catalog free. Write today for your bed. Roferl
once: Broadway National Bank.
PURITY BEDDING CO., Box 244,0, Nashville
Tenn.
IMIEPH
Don’t ship anyone furs till you get
Our Free Bulletin quoting cash prices
we actually pay for Coon. Mink, Skunk,
Oppossum and other furs. We charge
no commissions. Write today for FYee
Bulletin, it will pay you big.
NATIONAL FUR AND WOOL CO.,
©ept* 137 St. Louia. Mo.
raisraisa
ship a single fur to anyone
until you get ourprice list. It will provr
■ that we pay highest prices for fun of
any concern in America.
We Charge No Commlaalon
Send us a trial shipment. Our higher 2
prices prove * K at it will pay you Dig %
aSsS'’' ^ to send us all your furs. Send „ J.
for FRKEprice list today. \
HILL BROS. FUR CO.
*31 i N. Main St. St.Louis,Me
RAW FURS1 LIVE wiRE-rnrr
Ftlft I If*l-IT Price Bulletin* i\Li Li
DUUun I ■■ WRITE FOR IT TODAY
A. E. BURKHARDT
International Fur Merchant.
mi?ce s uot ss Cincinnati, O.
TRAPPERS
LET US PAY YOU
MORE MONEY FOR
FURS
St. Louis is the largest fur market in America and the biggest buyers in the world
? ;ather here. F. C. Taylor A Co. is the largest house in St. Louis, receiving more furs
rom trappers than any other house in the world and our enormous collections are always
sold at top prices, which enables us to pay you more.
WE WILL TEACH YOU HOW TO TRAP
Trapping is nothard work if your outfit is complete. You need s few good traps,
the best bait and your spare time morning and night. Our big new Supply Catalog ana
| Book on Trapping is ready and you can have a copy FREE if you write today. The book
tells you when and where to trap, kind of traps and bait to use, how best to remove and
prepare skins, etcj also contains trapping laws of every state. Price lists, shipping tags,
etc., also free. Got busy at once—Dig money in it. Write for book on trapping today.
F. C. TAYLOR & CO., 82S Fur Exchange Bldg., ST. LOUIS, MO.
AMERICA'S GREATEST FUR HOUSE
The Only
Old-Fashion
Corn Whiskey
Distillery
in the World
,.;oo p "oor^.
MEMORIAL TO MINISTER
WHO SACRIFICED LIFE
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.) j
CALHOUN, Ga., Dec. 8.—A memorial !
Baptist churcli is being built in Fair- j
view community near hear in honor of
R*v. W. A. Hall, a Baptist minister, who
lost his life last September In an heroic
effort to save the life of a neighbor,
Mr. R. L. Worley, who was being suf
focated in a gas filled well. The church
will be known as the "W A. Hall Memo
rial."
The deed of 11- 'ail is now being
considered by the Carnegie Hero Fund
commission and it is expected that it
will be recognized in a fitting manner
by that body. The memorial church is
close to the scene of the tragedy.
This is the Ideal
Whiskey for the Home
W E know you will want some good, pure whiskey
for the Holidays—for your own use and to set
before your friends. Be particular in your
selection—avoid blends and compounds—consider
quality as well as price—and remember there is only
one way you can be SURE of getting absolutely pure,
straight whiskey and that is to insist on BOTTLED-
IN-BOND—the kind with the Government’s Green
Stamp over the cork.
That’s What We Offer You
Hayner fine, old Private Stock Bottled-in-Bond
Whiskey—rich, pure and delightfully pleasing —
shipped in strong, sealed case—direct from distillery
to you—and all it costs you is $3.20 for FOUR full
quarts—express charges paid by us.
There Is No Question
About a Whiskey Like This
You KNOW it is good—you KNOW it is pure—the
U. S. Government’s official Green Stamp over the cork
is put there for your protection and it tells you in plain
words that this whiskey is bottled-in-bond, fully aged,
full 100% proof and full measure—and is your assur
ance that it comes to you just a3 it left the original
barrels—as pure and good as it is possible to produce.
Nowhere Else Can You Do So Well
Blends and compounds can be had anywhere and at
any price—the papers are full of such offers—but when
itcomes to BOTTLED-IN-BOND—the kind with Uncle
Sam behind it—the kind with the Government’s Green
Stamp over the cork—Hayner Whiskey stands abso
lutely alone—the greatest value offered by anyone
in America at our price of onlyiSOc a quart—delivered.
How Can We Afford To
Name So Low a Price?
We are the largest distillers of pure, straight whiskey
in America—and the only distillers who sell their entire
product direct from Distillery to Consumer—thus sav
ing you all the profits of the middleman and dealer—
and offering you this fine, pure, bottled-in-bond whiskey
—direct from distillery—at the distiller’s price.
Profit By Thu Great Saving
Over 1,000,000 men in the United States are our steady
customers—they know and appreciate the quality of
Hayner Whiskey—and send us their orders time and
time again for more of the same good kind. NOW—
we want an opportunity to prove our claims to YOU
—we want to show you what we are producing—we
want to convince you of the great saving our Direct-
from-Distillery plan of selling means to you.
Send U» Your Order Now
Try this Whiskey—at our risk and on our positive
guarantee that you will find it all we claim—as fine a
whiskey as you ever tasted and the best value you ever
bought—or you may send back balance of goods at our
expense and we will return your money without a word.
You Take No Chances
Our guarantee is as fair and square as we know how
to make it—it means what it says—we MUST make good
—we must send you a quality that will strike you as rich,
pure, delicious—right in every way—and we will do it
Don’t Put It Off
Attend to this right now while you think of it—no letter
is necessary—use the coupon below—fill it out and
mail it to our nearest Office and Shipping Depot—and
we will surprise and delight you with the quality of
the goods we will send you.
CUT OUT AND USE THIS COUPON
EXPRESS CHARGES PAID
THE HAYNER DISTILLING COMPANY
Enclosed find $3.20 for which send me FOUR full quart bottles
of Hayner Private Stock Bottled in-Bond Whiskey—express paid
—as per your offer. It is understood that if this whiskey is not
found as represented and satisfactory to me in every way, it may
be returned at your expense—and my $3.20 is to be promptly
refunded.
J-36
Name
Address
No orders filled for loss than 4 quarts
BunutHtinMUHUMiuMiiniHiniiiumiiimiiwHiinMMiuiuiHimiiiiiiuuuiiBwmwmi
ADDRESS OUR
NEAREST OFFICE
$15.20 by Freight Prepaid.
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO, Dept J-26
GUARANTEED UNDER THE FOOD AND,DWJ0$ ACT
JUNE 30 1906 SERIAL NO. KOI.
tfAYNEP
* PRIVATE STOCK
WHISKEY
BOTTLED IN BOND
^ H*rNER DISTILLING COMPANY
“’stuery noz ion* district, trot; w* 10 -
DAYTON, OHIO IE# j M
—BIT
. _ _ - 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 t®
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, keop a quart for yauj
trouble, return the rest and we will refund your $3.00.
MOORE’S DISTILLERY, Box 18 , Girard, Ale*
Proprietors. Registered Distillery No. 3. District of Alabama
Farmer’s Favorite $1^2
The Three Leading Papers
for only One Dollar
and this pair of
Gold Handled Shears
FREE
Sign your name and ad
dress to Coupon below and
send to us withOne Dollar
and we will send you
THE SEMI- IQ ,
WEEKLY JOURNAL 10 Months
Tbs BUnrest Nowapapar In tbs South.
Home and FarPi 12 Months
Tbs Biggest and Oldest T*rm Journal
In the south.
Woman’s World Magazine 12 Months
Most Widely Circulated Magazine In tha
Word.
and the Gold Handled
Shears FREE
Daylon. 0. Boston, Hass. St. Loals, He.
Distillery at Troy, Ohio
Kansas City. Mo. St. Paul. Minn.
ESTABLISHED 1866
New Orleans, La. Jacksonville, Fla.
Capital $500,000.00 Full Paid
cn tn
PJ cn
Name ...
Postoffice
R. F. D. ..
State,