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THE ATLANTA SEMT-WEEKLY .JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1913.
WITH REP. DONOVAN FIGHTS FOR FREEDOM
FEMALE EXILE FAILS TO
ESCAPE SIBERIAN PRISON
CONGRESSMAN GUILTY
! PULLETS
LAYING; EGG COST DROPS
• a*
(By Associated Press..)
NGTQN, Dec. 11.—]
between Representative Donovan, of
Connecticut, and Representative Hobson,
of Alabama, both Democrats, broke out
In the house again today and Donovon
blocked Hobson’s request for an hour’s
time tomorrow to discuss a petition
for a prohibition amendment to the
constitution.
For almost an hour the two mem
bers had been £hrrying: on a private ar
gument close to the speaker’s rostrum,
with feeling so apparent that some con
gressmen expected them to come to
blows. Later they continued the argu
ment in the lobby where Mr. Hobson
was reported to have invited the Con
necticut member to fight.
Later, when Hobson asked unanimous
consent to present the petition brought
by 1,000 citizens representing the Anti-
Saloon league, Representative Bar
thold, of Missouri, reserved the right to
object, and Donovan thundered an “I
object,” in a voice that reverberated
across the chamber. Hobson gave way
but announced that at 4 o’clock tomor
row afternoon he proposed to speak any-
NEW YORK BANKER
DIES IN U. S. PRISON
Frank P. Arnold, a banker of New
./Berlin, N. Y. r serving a term in the
• Atlanta p ederal penitentiary for viola
tion of the national banking laws, died
- ‘there Tuesday morning, following an
operation last week.
According to authorities at the prison,
Mr. Arnold was sixty-five years of age
and began his term at the prison a year
ago last July. It was stated he had
five more years to serve.
Since his arrival at the prison, it
. was said by Deputy Warden Hawke, Mr.
Arnold had been failing in health, spend
ing most of his time in the prison hos
pital. His condition became serious
last week and the ooeration was tried.
He failed to rally and died Tuesday
morning shortly before noon.
The body was removed to Harry G.
Poole’s chapel, and will be sent to New
Berlin Wednesday night.
Dr. J. Calvin Weaver, official physi
cian for the prison, refused to give out
the cause of Mr. Arnold’s death, stating
that it was against the regulations of
the prison.
ALBANY POSTMISTRESS
WILL RETAIN HER PLACE
BY RALPH SMITH.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—Mrs. Nellie
Brimberry will be reappointed postmis
tress at Albany, Dougherty county, on
the recommendation of Congressman
Frank Park. He recommended her re
appointment today, and Postmaster
General Burleson will respect his
wishes, with the result that the presi
dent will send her name to the senate
for another term of four years.
The Albany postmastership carries a
salary of $2,800 annually, and is the
most lucrative and desirable piece of
patronage in the district. Mrs. Brim-
berry’s present term will expire Decem
ber 18. She has given universal sat
isfaction during her occupancy of the
office, and Judge Park was moved to rec
ommend her for reappointment because
he believed her record entitled her to
patrons of the Albany office and because
he believed her record entitld her to
further recognition from the govern
ment.
fi
CEEANSE
FIVER ANO BOWELS
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 how 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
.s our 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.)
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NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 11.—Slowly re
covering from affects of a bullet fired
by an assassin, Houston Bickham, for
mer president of the defunct State Bank
of Bogalusa, in prison here in default
of a large bond, today began a fight for
a change of venue of his case and re
duction of his bond. Bickham was shot
from ambush near his home at Cumkon,
La., in October, soon after the bank
failed. He says he believed that failure
of the bank led to the assassination,
as he knew of no personal enemies.
After the shooting the bank president
lay between life and death for many
days and finally was brought to a hos
pital here. He was charged with irreg
ularities in connection with the bank
and his bond was set at $41,000, secu
rity for which had been arranged.
As his health slowly returned Bick-
ham expected to be released from the
hospital. Almost at the time when he
expected to go home and try to
straighten out his affairs his bondsmen
told him that they had received many
threatening letters advising them not to
remain security for his appearance.
They refused to act longer as security
and the wounded man was put into jail
as he could not get new bondsmen for
that amount.
Although still weak from his wound
Bickham believes he is able to begin
his fight and with his attorneys today
began negotiations to have his bond
reduced to $10,000 and his case trans-
fered to another parish.
The Bank of Bogalusa had $140,000
in deposits and was capitalized at
$50,000. Bickham says that he can prove
he was guilty of no wrong doing.
(By Associated Press.)
ST. PETERSBURG, Dec. 11.—Dis
patches from •Kirensk today tell of a
second unsuccesful attempt to escape
from exile in Siberia, made early this
month by Mme. Catherine Breshkovska-
ya, “grandmother of the Russian revo
lution,” whose case at the time of her
condemnation in March, 1910, aroused
widespread interest in Europe and the
United States.
Mme. Breshkovskaya was sentenced
to perpetual exile after a trial watched
with intense excitement throughout the
world. She was charged with revolu
tionary conspiracy in conjunction with
Nicolas Tchaikovskj*, “father of the rev
olution,” who had been active for re
form since 1870. The man was acquit
ted on evidence brought from the Unit
ed States.
Because she would not plead for the
Russian emperor’s clemency, Mme.
Breshkovskaya was incarcerated at Ki-
rensk, a penal settlement 400 miles
northeast of Irkutsk.
POLICE WERE FOILED.
The police kept close watch on her
there as it was expected she would
make an attempt to escape so as to
join hte scatered remnants of the
group to which she had belonged.
PIKE VETERANS ASK FOR
REFUND OF COTTON TAX
WHITE SLAVE PROBER
“POISON NEEDLE” VICTIM
(By Associated Press.)
CLEVELAND, Dec. 11.—Police are
searching for two men believed to be
members of a “poison needle” gang who
are alleged to have attacked George
Baker, said to be an immigration in
spector, and fobbed him of valuable
government papers while he was under
Influence of a drug.
The victim, who was said to have been
conducting a white slave investigation
here, vras walking down Lakeside ave
nue late yesterday afternoon, when he
was suddenly taken ill. Two men rush
ed forward and carried him into a near
by hospital. While physicians were re
viving Baker his “friends” fled with his
bag in which were supposed to be re
ports on white slave conditions here.
That Baker was the victim of a poi
soned needle is thought possible. Doc
tors at Lakeside hospital said they be
lieved Baker was a victim of heart trou
ble, but admitted that a drug injected
into his veins might have caused his
illness.
SHIP FOUND DRIFTING;
THREE PASSENGERS GONE
(By Associated Press.)
MOBILE, Ala., Dec. 11.—Nicholas Gould
and Edward Hogan, of Mobile, and
a third party from Pensacola are miss
ing. They left here for Pensacola last
Wednesday in the cabin cruiser Bever
ly S., which was picked up adrift in the
gulf Thursday. The Beverly S. -was in
tow of the auxiliary schooner Nellie P.
The day following their departure the
Nellie P. returned for repairs, reporting
the Beverly S. anchored off Lower Mo
bile bay. The'Nellie P. reached Pensa
cola last week but no new r s was received
from the Beverly S. until she was
picked up adrift.
TWO WOUNDED BY FIRING
OF “BLANK” CARTRIDGES
WEST POINT, Ga., Dec. 11.—Miss
Nell Woods, leading lady, was shot in
the left leg, and Lyonel Moncrief, an
actor, also was wounded when a pistol
supposed to contain only blank cart
ridges was fired during the performance
of “Northern Lights,” presented by the
C. W. Park Dramatic company at the
local theater last night.
The fact that tl^e pistol was loaded
has not been explained. /The manage
ment of the company is investigating.
ZEBULON, Ga., Dec. 11.—The Pike
county camp of Confederate veterans
has adopted resolutions asking the co
operation of all camps of veterans in
efforts to secure the appropriation by
congress to the southern states of $68,-
072,388.99, the amount of what is term
ed “a special and excessive tax levied,
on the cotton produced in the south
from July, 1862, to February, 1868. by
our national government.”
The resolutions say: “This tax was
pronounced unconstitutional by the su
preme court of the United States and
its collection stopped. The demands
of right and justice should dictate that
this money be returned to the people
of the southern states.”
The resolutions ask that “the sum
of this tax, together with a fair rate of
interest on same, be apportioned and
paid back to each of the southern
states, giving back to each state the
sum collected therefrom.”
The officers of the camp are instruct
ed by J. S. Lipsey, commander, and
R. Y. Beckham, secretary, to ask the
co-operation of the mother camps of
the south in the movement.
CINCINNATI QUITS BATHING;
WATER FAMINE IS CAUSE
CINCINNATI, Dec. 11.—Cincinnati was
compelled to put up with the inconven
iences* of a water famine today because
of the recent bursting of a water main.
None of the schools were in session, all
firemen were held on emergency duty,
most of the laundries in the city sus
pended business and breweries faced
the threat of being closed.
Water, when obtainable, was used
with utmost caution. Hotels 'hnd res
taurants were in distress and conditions
in the hospitals were serious. The street
car company is maintaining limited
service by hauling water from the Ohio
river for use in generating plants.
Only a few of the manufacturing
plants in the center of the city were
operated today.
Service Director Price said the city
was being supplied by the high press
ure service which Is able to supply only
one-third of the normal daily consump
tion and most of this goes to residence
districts.
BOY KILLS FATHER WHO
RAN MOTHER FROM HOME
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
ELLIJAY, Ga., Dec. 11.—Ben Jones,
who shot and killed his father, Henry
Jones, at their home four miles north
of this place, last night, this morning
surrendered to the authorities. The
young man claimed that he had killed
his father because of abuse to his
mother and sister, who, he said, had
been driven from their home.
Tke superior court is now in session
fa«re. and young Jones may be given a
hearing within a few days.
PHILIPPINE SALARIES
Cljj; IT STARTS TR0BULE
MANILA. Dec. 11.:—Many officials of
the Philippine government threatened
today to hand in their resignations in
consequence of the passage by the as
sembly of an appropriation bill by
which economies amounting to $2,000,-
000 in the government’s expenditures
are affected, chiefly by the reduction
of salaries.
It is expected the Philippine commit
tee will modify the measure.
ECZEMA BOOK FREE
The National Skin Hospital, located at 183
Main street, St. Joseph, Mo., who treat skin
diseases only, have published a book of more
than sixty pages which they are mailing free
to any one writing for it. It has many col
ored plates showing the different forms of skin
disease and tells how they can be treated at
home. Any one interested should write for it
at once.—(Advt.)
URGE CONGRESS ACTION
AGAINST POISON NEEDLE
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—President
Wilson will be asked to use his good
offices in an effort to have legislation
pased by congress that will effectually
suppress the poisoned needle wielders,
who have been very active recently.
A committee from the Woman’s
Temperance union has been appointed
and will cal upon the president soon.
The rapidity with which the poisoned
needle practice has grown in New York,
and, it is believed, in other large cities,
has stirred the temperance workers to
action. National officers and other offi
cials discused the subject at a recent
board meeting and determined upon the
visit to the White House.
The rapidity with which the poisoned
needle practice has grown in New
York, and it is believed in other large
cities has stirred the temperance work
ers to action. National officers and oth
er officials discussed the subject at a
recent board meeting and determined
upon the visit to the White House.
The members of the committe are
Miss Anna A. Gordon, of Illinois, nation
al vice president of the Woman’s Chris
tian Temperance union; Mrs. Frances
Beauchamp, of Kentucky, and Mrs. Mar
garet Dye Ellis.
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—Results of
the house lobby investigation by a. com
mittee headed by Representative Gar
ret, of Tennessee, were made public to
day in (wo reports—a majority report
signed by Democrats and Republicans,
and a supplemental report filed by Rep
resentative McDonald, of Michigan.
The majority made no pecommeuda-
tions, but declared Representative Mc
Dermott, of Illinois, had been guilty of
acts of grave impropriety, unbecoming
the dignity of his position, though ‘ we
cannot say he has been corrupted in
his votes.” The majority report also
held that McDermott, having intimate
relations with 1. H. McMichael, former
chief page of the house, knew that M.
M. Mulhall. “a lobbyist for the National
Association of Manufacturers.” employ
ed McMichael. hTe majority held that
both the National Association of Man
ufacturers arid the American Federa
tion of Labor engaged in political ac
tivities and expended money to effect
nominations and elections ot the mem
bers of the house of representatives.
Representative McDonald, who agreed
with the majority findings, declared con
gress had fallen somewhat from its
high estate, in the estimation of the
American people, that there lias been
a broadcast suspicion of conditions ex- ;
isting in congress and that a system'
has been built up for defeating or pre
venting remedial legislation. He recom
mended legislation reforms.
LOBBY IS DEFINED.
Main conclusions of the majority de
fine a lobby as a “person or body of
persons seeking to influence legislation
by congress in any manner whatso
ever.” The National Association of
Manufacturers, the National Council for
Industrial Defense, the National Tariff
Commission association, the American
Federation of Labor, the Washington
City Associations of Liquor Dealers and
local loan sharks are found to cave
maintained lobbies.
Martin M. Mulhall is held to have
admitted errors in some vital statements
made in his charges, but to have been
corroborated in other matters of im
portance by officials of the National As
sociation of Manufacturers and the Na
tional Council for Industrial Defense.
Mulhall, the report says, was extrava
gant in many of his claims and over
stated his potency an<I influence with
members of congress and public men
generally. High officers of the manu
facturers’ organization and the Council
for Industrial Denfens^ used him
"very largely and primarily for personal
lobbying,” says the report.
TAMPERED WITH LEGISLATION.
The lobby of the Association of Man
ufacturers and of Industrial Defense is
held guilty of improperly preventing
and seeking to prevent legislation.
Nothing illegitimate was found In the
activity of the American Federation of
Labor.
No evidence was found of employ
ment of members of the house for im
proper purposes.
Tipping of house employes was de
nounced as reprehensible. Employment
by the manufacturers’ association of
former Chief Page McMichael, of the
house, was severely censured.
Representatives Bartholdi, Burke.
Calder, Sherley and Webb were upheld
as “neither reached nor influenced by
the^nanufacturers.”
The committee held Representative
McDermott minimized his intimate rela
tions with Mulhall, that he obtained
small loans from Mulhall, but add,ed
“these w r ere personal acts ol' Mulhall
and we do not believe, he let McDer
mott have the money with a view to
corrupting him nor do we believe Mc
Dermott received from Mulhall in loans
or otherwise anything near the $1,500 or
$2,000 as alleged.”
The committee concluded that Mc
Dermott’s training and associations have
not given him Vhe ethical perceptions
and standards relative to public office
that usually characterize public /i|ien.
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—Relief from
the prohibitive egg prices is in sight, ex
perts of the department of agriculture
announce in a special report on the sub
ject, because pullets all over the coun
try have begun to lay. Information
reaching the department is that already
poultry owners are reporting a 50 per
cent egg reduction.
The experts declare this change of
heart on the part of the aristocrats of
the barnyard is not due to the threat
ened egg boycott, but to natural con
ditions.
Explanation of the shortage of last
fall, they say, dates back to w’eather
conditions of last spring and summer.
“Investigations of weather condit
ions,” says the report, “shows the spring
was unusually wet and cold, which set
back the laying development of the pul
lets;’and the unusual drouth of July
further postponed the laying period, be
cause both of these weather conditions
affect the food supply of the pullets.
The pullets that normally begin to lay
in the fall have not commenced their
laying until about a month later than
the usual fall laying season.”
Unless extreme cold weather should
intervene this pullet egg supply should
continue, says the report, and bring
with it a gradual reduction in egg prices.
BAPTISTS OF ALL GLOBE •
OF
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Dec. 11.—Coincident with
| the holding of an international expo
sition of safety here this week, New
York is aroused by the frequency of the
so-called automobile killings. So many
children have been victims that a num
ber of women representing various or
ganizations have appointed a committee
to call upon Mayor Adolph Kline and
to petition for the appointment of a bu
reau for the prevention of further speed
ing and reckless driving.
The Society for Political Study, of
whicii Miss Edith Reiffert is chairman,
i has also called a public mass meeting,
j which will probably be called in Cooler
! Union next Monday evening, at which
' the situation will be discussed.
There have been 241 deaths in this
city from automobile accidents in the
) last eleven months, in connection with
which there Jiave been only thirty-nine
arrests, no indictments and no licenses
revoked, according to a speaker at yes
terday’s meeting of the Society for Po
litical Study. In view of the fact that
there are over 50,000 automobiles in
New York, it was argued that there
were not enough police to cope with the
situation.
Dr. Blosser’s
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Blosser, who has made a specialty of treating
catarrh l’or over thirty-nine years.
CONTAIN*
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tbadc ham
IUISTUC9
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK. Dec. 11.—Baptists the
world over will tomorrow hold a prayer
meeting at the corresponding hour of
such a gathering for divine guidance in
Rangoon, Burmah. The prayers will be
in observance of the one hundredth an
niversary of the arrival in India of
Adorniram Judson and his wife, Ann
Haseltine Judson, the first Baptist for
eign missionary and the first Ameri
can misionaries sent to a foreign land.
The Rangoon service of prayer will
be held from half-past eight to half
past nine in the evening. Because
there Is a difference of 11 1-2 hours in
time between Rangoon and eastern time
in America, the meetings in this part
of the country will take place from 9
to 10 o’clock tomorrow morning.
Between Buffalo and Omaha, the Bap
tists will gather for prayer from 8 to
9 o’clock; between Omaha and the
Rocky mountains, from 7 to 8 o’clock;
between Colorado and the Pacific from
6 to 7 o’clock. The idea is for a world
wide colective prayer of thanks for the
life work of the Judsons.
There will be a mass prayer meeting
of Baptists in Ford hall, Boston, to
morrow morning. It is there that the
Baptist Foreign Missionary society has
its headquarters. It was from Salem,
Mass., that Adonlram Judson and his
bride left on a honeymoon trip for In
dia.
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COLUMBUS, GA.
MONUMENT TO MEMORY
OF STUDENT-SOLDIERS
TUSCALOOSA. Ala., Dec. 11.—Plans of
the Alabama division of the United.
Daughters of the Confederacy for the
erection of a monumental boulder honor
ing the memory of the students of the
university who went to the front during
the Civil war and also those who took
part in the defense of Tuscaloosa
against Croxton’s raiders on April 3,
1365, are well uqder way, and It Is prob
able that the stone will be unveiled at
the next meeting of the United Daugh
ters of the Confederacy, which will be
held in Tuscaloosa in May.
DR. CRAIG IS SET FREE;
COURT ORDERS RELEASE
SHELBYVILLB, Ind., Dec. 11—Judge
Alonso Blair today instructed the jury
to dismiss the case against Dr. William
B. Craig, charged with the murder of
Dr. Helene Knabe. at Indianapolis Oc
tober 23, lDl 1. The motion to dismiss
the case was made i«tr The defendant
yesterday when the state concluded its
evidence.
Henry Spaan, counsel for Craig, in
his argument in support of his motion
to dismiss the case, said he believed Dr.
Knabe was murdered, but declared “it is
a far cry from the physician that Dr.
Knabe was murdered to the proposition
that Craig did it.” He ,declared the
state had failed to connect Dr. Craig
with th ecrime in any way and also had
failed to establish any motive for the
’crime. Attorneys for the state denied
that their evidence was insufficient, but
were overruled by Judge Blair's decision.
Dr. Helene Knabe was one of the
moBt prominent women doctors in the
state and at one time was connected
with' the state board of health. She
was found dead in her apartment in In
dianapolis on the morning of October
24, 1911. The police reported that Dr.
Knabe committed suicide. Coroner Dur
ham returned a verdict of murder by
persons unknown.
JIM CROW LAW HEARING
DEFERRED BY HIGH COURT
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—Consideration
of the constitutionality of the Oklahoma
Jim Crow law, applicablt both bo in
trastate ana interstate traffic in Okla
homa, has been postponed by the su
preme court because of illness of coun
sel. An attempt will be made to have the
case argued in about two months.
French Aviator Killed
BARBEZIEUX. Department of Char-
ente, France, Dec. 11.—Leon Letort, a
well known French aviator, was killed
here today. He was about to land after
a short flight when his biplane turned
over and crushed him.
CHICAGO WOMEN VOTERS
MUST BALLOT IN SMOKE
(By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, Dec. 11.—When Chicago
women voters go to the polls next
spring they will be compelled to mark
the ballots in a haze of tobacco smoke.
A request that smoking be prohibited
at the polls was made to the election
commissioners yesterday by the Polit
ical Equality league. The commissioners
informed the women there is no law by
which smoking can be prohibited.
Politicians announced they will in
voke court action in an attempt to pre
vent women from acting as judges and
clerks of elections. Their opposition
will be based on the Illinois law which
limits the working day of women to
ten hours. They say election officials
are often required to work from eigh
teen to twenty hours, whileb allots are
being marked and counted.
WILKES COUNTY LOSES
TWO OF ITS LEADERS
WASHINGTON, Ga., Dec. 11.—Two
(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
prominent Wilkes county men, B. S.
Irvin, of this city, and James W. Arm
strong, living five miles north of here,
died early today. Mr. Irvin, who was in
his sixty-sixth' year, was one of Wash
ington’s ablest lawyers and president
of the local board of education. He
was married twice, his first wife be
ing Miss Sara Hill, sister of Mrs. Ed
ward McCandless, of Atlanta. His
widow, who was Miss Brownie Brewer,
of Alabama, and young daughter sur
vive him.
Mr. Armstrong depresented the coun
ty in several sessions of the legislature
and was one of the county’s promi
nent farmers. He was in his sixity-
second year and leaves a wife and six
children.
Funeral arrangements will be made
later.
AUSTRIAN PARLIAMENT
ADJOURNS IN CONFUSION
VIENNA, Austria, Dec. 11.—Such a
din was created by the Ruthenian depu
ties in the Austrian imperial parlia
ment today that the sitting was sus
pended.
For over an hour the Ruthenians. as
a protest against the alleged passive
attitude of the government in the mat
ter of electoral reform, blew horns,
wrenched the lids from their desks and
beat the pieces furiously together. The
uproar became so deafening the speaker
quit the chair, suspending the session.
The Only
Old-Fashion
Corn Whiskey
Distillery
in the World
MRS. PANKHURST STARVES
WAY OUT OF EXETER JAIL
LONDON, Dec. 8.—Militant suffra
gettes gathered in force to welcome
Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst on her ar
rival today from Exeter. She was re
leased from the Exeter jail last night
after sh-e had started a hunger strike.
Mrs. Pankhurst was able to alight
from the train with the assistance of
a nurse and another companion. She
looked very weak and made her way
with tottering steps from the train to
a carriage. She was taken to a nurs
ing home at the head of a long proces
sion of taxicabs containing her cheer
ing supporters.
THREE CHILDREN DIE
FROM WEDDING LIQUOR
NEW YORK. Dec. 10.—To “some un
known person,” a coronoi’s physician
attributed today the death last night
of three little children who, as guests
at an East Side wedding ceremony, hid
themselves and drank the contents of
several bottles of liquor. Two other
children are seriously ill.
The physician was unable to deter
mine the nature of the poison and a
chemical analysis will be made. Similar
liquor, the police assert, was drunk by
adults at the wedding party without
ill effect.
This Remedy Is composed of herbs, flowers
and seeds possessing healing medicinal proper
ties: contains no tobacco, is not injurious or
habit-forming; is pleasant to use aud perfectly
harmless to man. woman or child.
Catarrhal germs are carried into the head,
nose and throat with the air youxbreathe—Jusi
so the warm medicated smoke-vapor 1s carried
with the breath, applying the medicine directly
to the diseased parts. If you have tried the
usual methods, such as sprays, douches, salves,
inhalers ami the stomach-ruining “conetltu-
tional” medicines, you will readily see the su
periority of this Smoking Remedy.
Simply send your name and address to Dr.
J. W. Blosser', 51 Walton St., Atlanta, Ga.. and
he will send you a free package containing
samples of the Remedy for smoking in a pipe
and made in cigarettes, together with an Illus
trated booklet, which goes thoroughly into the
subject of catarrh. He will send by mall, for
one dollar, enough of the medicine to last about
one mouth.—(Adt.)
YOUR REAR!
It Flutter* Palpitate
Skip Bent*? Have yon
^Shortness of Breath,Ten-
,derue»H,N uinbnet*« or Pain
'in left wide* Dizziness.
Fainting Spells* Spots be-
fore eyes* Sudden Starting
Sn steep. Nervousness.
Nightmare. Hungry oi
Wenk Spells* Oppressed Feeling in chest.
Choking Sensation in throat* Painful to
lie on left side. Cold Hands or Feet. Diffi
cult; Bren thing. Heart Dropsy, Hwelllug
of feet, or ankles* or Neuralgia around
heart ? If you have one or more of the above
symptoms, don’t fall to uoo Dr* Kinsman’s
<; mi inn teed Heart Tablets. Not a secret
medicine, ic Is srild that one person out of
every four has a weak heart. Tnrce-fourthsof
these do lot know it, and hundreds wrougfully
treat themselves for the Stomach* I.tings.
Kidneys or Nerves. Don’t take any chances
when ilr. Klusiiinu*s Heart Tablets are
within your reach. 1000 endorsements furnished.
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer moiling this coupon, with their
name ami P. O. Address, to Dr. F. G. Kins*
man. Box h«4. Augusta, Maine, will re
ceive a box of Heart Tablets for trial l)v return
mail, postpaid, free of charge. Delays ore
dangerous. Write at once—to-day.
C. 'I— "I A H «» 1. ——————1
95
cents
6 YEAR
GUARANTEE
T.J? a '* road Watch
l*tL O l!? 0 kTtiT??„ < 5 p i N . T8 - Q,all,n,B ’ i •»“. foilaick*l>ilv*r pl*Ua
I • looomotl?* OO 4i»l. l*T*rMMp*m*mt.al*ta wind Md Mi * n.rf**i
for 6 7mU *- 8 * nd «*!• 04**rtlMMmitt«a
fc.u&vj.wja stmT" im 14 -
B. E. CHALMERS It CO., 538 So. Dearborn St., CHICAGO.
9 QUARTS WHISKEY
WORTH $-©-£5- |
OUR PRICE $4I£ jT |l
Going
" fL
GREAT
30-DAY OFFER
HALT! BEAD! Think of it! Greatest offer ever mad*. Good
only thirty days.
4 quart* Going SomeRye worth 93.00
4 “ Juicy Fruit Com “ 3.00
1 quart of either FREE “ .75
Total value $0.75
And if you uae this coupon, all for $4.50
Just to advertise—just to add a thousand regular customer*
to our lists, we make this unheard-of offer—9 quarts of straight
whiskey for only $4.50.
No more than 9 quarts in any one shipment. Money order
for $4.50 must accompany order. Order must be sent before
Dee. 20th, and it must be on this coupon, which is worth $2.25.
Stop and think! Whiskey worth $6.75 for only $4.50—think
of getting properly approved whiskey — bonded distilleries’
whiskey—you know what that means in quality.
If we lose money on each order, that’s our business. Offer lasts only 30 days.
Don’t sleep. Get in while it lasts. Fill out coupon for 9 quarts and send money
order for $4.50.
BONDED DISTILLERIES COMPANY
CHATTANOOGA. TENNESSEE
_ THIS COUPON WORTH $3.35.
boboed nsnuiwO $
•tori*#* imm* M** 1
Bonded Distilleries Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.: C-10J.
Enclosed please find money order for $4.00, which with this coupon, worth $2.25. is good
for 9 .qugrtsy-of whiskey worth $6.75. Please ship No. ... quarts Juicy Fruit Corn and No. ..
quar<§ #bitffTSome, making » quarts ip all.
NAME '
POSTOFFICE
EXPRESS OFFICE
R. F. D. or ST J STATE
ft!!
EXPRESS
.PAID
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 corn whiskey distillery in the world selling direct *°
the consumer. Whenever you’re by th lS 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 o
fashion corn liquor—the best that can be made. It has a line taste.
If you don’t say it’s the best corn liquor you ever saw, keep a quart for „ a—'
trouble, return the rest and we will refund your $3.00. i
MOORE’S DISTILLERY, Box 18 , Girarte, AJc.
Proprietor*, Registered Distillery No. 3. District of Alebarita
foodstuff
"minid
(Up
SPECIAL 30-DAY CUT PRICE ON OUR
STRAIGHT WHISKEY
MADE TO SECURE 5,000 NEW CUSTOMERS
Send for 2 gallon
Express Paid, and
kind advertised in th
and if our Straight
ours back on first t
bill extra to pay for y
IR0
The above is an
paper by any whiskey
turn this ad with retn
—wo will do the rest
Free with the 2 gallo
We refer to Atlan
the largest banks In
s of this whiskey at. the cut price of $3.50,
ompare the quality with 2 gallons of any other
is paper at $3.00, $4.00 or $5.00 for 2 gallons,
Whiskey is not better—you be the judge—send
rain and wc will return your money and a dollar |
our time.
N-CLAD AGREEMENT.
iron clad agreement never printed before in any I
bowse—so it’s up to you to test it out. Re- I
tttance and address your letter plainly as below I
and pack big Sample Jug and nice Calendar [
ns.
tic National Bank, Jacksonville, Fla., one of |
Florida.
Atlantic Coast distilling Company,
JACKSONVILLE, FLA.
\