Newspaper Page Text
2
Fly for Britain
In Order to Fly
For the U.S.A.
(By Associate* Brees.)
NDW YORK. Jan. 3®.—To obtain ex
perience aa aviators In the British army
which wUI equip them for service in the
aviation corps of the United States, W 11-
liam F. Sullivan and A_ Livingston Al
“ ian. • two young teachers in an aviation
school at Hammondsport. N. T., start
today for Liverpool on the American
-"Udine st*am*r New York. They have
been appointed lieutenants of the Royal
Flying corps of Great Britain and are
licensed hy the Aero Club of America
as pilots. They appear to be not more
than twenty years old.
Their ambition to join the American
aviation corps is blocked by the fact that
they have not the military training rw
' quired by United States regulations and
“J W hich could be acquired here only by
a course at Annapolis or West Point.
They expect that before they return
from service in Europe legislation will
have been enacted here permitting men
who have had military training in Eu
rope to be appointed members of the av-
Nation corps of the United States army
•ar navy.
WHAT'S IKBI6ESTION?
WHO WOES’ LISTEN!
“Pape’s Diapepsin” makes
sour, gassy stomachs feel
fine at once
Time R1 In five minutes all stomach
dfetrese will go. No indigestion, heart
bum. sourness or belching of gas. acid,
or eructations of undigested food, no
dinlneeeb bloating, foul breath or head
hche.
Papefts Diapepsin is noted for its
aim* in regulating upset stomachs. It
is the surest, quickest and most cer
tain Indigestion remedy in the whole
world, and besides it is harmless.
Millions of men and women now eat
their favorite foods without fear— they
knew Pape’s Diapepsin will nave them
from any stomach misery.
Please, for your sake, get a large
* fifty-cant case of Pape’s Diapepsin
from any drug store and put your etom-
* ach right. Don’t keep on being misera
ble— life is too short —you are not here
long, so make your stay agreeable. Eat
what you like and digest it; enjoy it,
without dread of rebellion in the stom
ach.
Pape’s Diapepsin belongs in your
home *nywa.y. Should one of the fam
■ ily e*t something which don't agree
with them, or in case of an attack of
indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis or
-stomach derangement at daytime or
during the night, it is handy to give
* the quickest, surest relief known.
—(Advt).
Ends The Misery
|Of Wearing Worthless Trusses
* Z (f X-kjT
jr Lh - v ww2i
Away With Leg-Strap
X "nd Spring Trusses TvVtJf;
• ■ So fir u we know our X; Ariw ;
—guarxntceil rupture bolder is |i -TO*-''
the only thine of any kind pvIN J»»
” Tor rapture that yon can get
oa 60 days' trial—the only thine good enoi.rh
• to stand such a long axul thorough test It's the
fsmoa* Clutbe—made <y> an absolutely new
principle—baa M patented featur-«. Self-nd-
Justlng Doe* away with the misery of wear-
Inx belt*. I eg-* trap* and springs. Guaranteed to
bold at all time*. Has cured la cane after case
that seemed bepeles*.
Write for Free Book of Advice—. Cloth-bound,
• KM page*. Explains the danger* of operation.
t< Bteowo Juat what* wrong with elastic and spring
frame*. Expose* the humbug*—shows how old
faahioned. worthless tra**e« are sold tinder false
*. ""6 misleading names. Tells all about the care
! * and attest 100 we give you. Endorsements from
over 6.000 people, including physicians. Write
today. Box 672—Clathe Co.. 125 E 23rd St..
Wow York City.
ZYOUR HEART
11 Pnlbitate
* *- TZ, IO r Skip Beats? Have you
F**kortneoa of Breath. Ten
i-nvWKi ~ fderness. Numbness, or
' 1 • FWfa Paininleft aide. Dizziness,
Fainting Spells. !«pota be
tHR " tore eyes. Sudden Starting
sleep. N ereeusness,
Jluotry er Weak Bpells,
Oppressed Feeling In chest. Choking S*en
eatten in tbrsat. Paint al to lie on left side,
dinking er Nmethering Henaatien. Diffi
cult Breathing. Heart Dropsy. Swelling
of feet er ankles, or Neuralgia around
hearts If you hare one or more of the above
symptom’, don't fall to use Dr. Kinsman’s
Heart Tablets. Not a secret medicine. It la
said that one person out of every four has a
' T"“'weak heart. Probably three-fourths of these do
not know It, and hundreds wrongfully treat tbem
sslvee for the Hlomach, Lungs. Kidneys or
•- Nerves. Dont take any chances when Dr.
Kinsman's Heart Tablets are within your
reach. More than 100? endorsements furnished.
.. Ifree treatment coupon
*- Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
name and P.O. Address, to Dr. F. Kino
-577, man. Box Mid. Augusta. Maine, will re
• ~eire a box of Heart Tablets for trial by return
• " maH. postpaid, free of charge. Delays are
dangerous. Write at once—to-day.
k_ ———,
—•■J Send as your order* for ® I
MHAYNER f
* fl BOTTLED-IN-BOND I
'I WHISKEY'ffIS
w A MwiMßfl aZj *hiskev
■ Tai If 1 ilk ■■
And w« will include MiJH
I he m nttie oFrnrr*
I HAfWER 60LCEN JUBILEE kkkh
I WHISKEY (VALUE 75/) | I ILL
All Exprew Chargee Paid
| KJothing to compare with thia offer has
■ • ’ ever been known. This Hayner
■ Private Stock Bottled-m-Bond Whiskey
■ is the greatest value in Arr eriea at our
H pries of 13.3) for FOCR full quartz, de-
i ■ Beared—tha only Bottled-in-Bondwhii
key of this quality to be had anywhere
P7 3 at thia price. And now. in honor of our
I. ■ 60th Anniversary, we include, a full pint
■ bottle of Hayner Golden Jubilee Whiakey
■ —a rare, old whiskey which would sell
I regularly for "Sc « nint.
■ Order*from N. Bex.. Colo., Wyo.. Mont,
1 and aU states Wot thereof moat call foe
KOO—express paid. *>-*•
?■» X ddreu cur nearett office
| THE HAINER DISTILLINGCO.Dept.26
I Daries. 0. Wssbisgtes. 0. C. St. U«». M*.
■ Tsleds.o. Bestss.MaM. KaasasCity. Me.
4 Sprimf.eM, Okie. Miaaapeli*. Ind.
*■ St-PaaLMisa. Jacksonville, Fla.
New Orissa*. La.
100 DEAD UNO VAST
AREA IS LAID WASTE
IS RESULT OF FLOOD
Death List Probably Will Be
Greatly Increased When Ex
tent of Damage in California
Valleys Is Made Known
SAN DIEGO, CH. Jan 23.—<By
tireless to San Francisco.) —One hun
dred lives have been lost, as nearly as
any estimate can show, ana valleys for
fifty miles north of tne Mexican line
lie desolate tonight from floods and
cloudbursts
With the death toll in the Otay val
ley seemingly established at fifty, re
ports reached here late today of floods
sweeping the San Luis Key and San
Pa equal valleys, doubling the loss of
life. With communication almost al
together cut off. it was impossible to
list accurately the number of dead.
Seventeen bodies were taken out of
San Diego bay before nightfall. These
had been swept down the Otay river
when the lower dam went out late
Thursday and the current of the flood
was thought to have carried many oth
ers out to sea.
San Diego is virtually undamaged.
Many injuries were reported from
Tikuana Hot Springs, where a hotel
collapsed. A cloudburst, reports had
it, caused the flooding of the San Luis
Rey and San Pasqual valleys. The
town of San Pasqual was said to have
been wiped out altogether.
Nothing was known as to the fate
of San Luis Rey and Oceanside, in the
path of the San Luis river, but if the
flood was of the reported magnitude, it
seemed impossible that the former
could have escaped annihilation. Ocean
elde is a summer resort with two good
sized hotels and a population of about
LOOO.
AID FROM 1 THE SEA.
Railroads, highways, telephone, tele
graph—all ordinary means of commun-.
ication and relief were gone with no
prospect of early recovery. Only the
sea remained and from it aid began to
come. An expedition from the United
States warships in San Diego bay was
started in launches for the Otay val
ley. Reports were that the first land
ing party had been unable to penetrate
the valley for reasons not given. The
destroyer Lawrence anchored off the
mouth of the Otay river, which stream
ran bankfull after being dry for years.
An overland expedition also was
started from San Diego with pontoons
and engineering equipment. No word
came as to its success.
First reports of the Otay disaster
reached here late Thursday. They told
of ranch houses washed away and of
cattle an<f stock drowned. Investigation
appeared to indicate exceptionally high
water, and word came that the lower
Otay dam was holding. This dam,
started as a reinforced concrete affair,
was changed above the foundation line
to a strip of riveted steel set in con
crete, as a backbone for a loose rock
dam. Engineering magazines said that
when the reservoir was full the test of
the construction would come. The re
cent rains filled it Last night the
flood, bearing human bodies, with a
frightful amount of wreckage, includ
ing hundreds of rattlesnakes from the
mountain sides, established, seemingly
beyond all doubt, the collapse of the
dam.
The Tia Juana river was at its high
est in its history and reports received
here from Tia Juana say the town is
under water. Rain continued here to
night.
Flood Situation Still
Very Serious in Arkansas
(By Associated Press.)
LITTLE ROCK. Ark., Jan. 29.—Dis
patches tonight from points along the
Arkansas and White rivers in eastern
Arkansas, where the flood situation is
regarded as grave, reported all levees
holding and property damage so far
confined to the flooding of unprotected
lowlands and the inundation of several
small towns. Continued rain today
added to the gravity of the situation.
F. H. Fuller, of Fort Wayne, Ind.,
who yesterday was reported drowned
near Clinton, was found alive today.
Fuller swam to the bank of a small
river near Clinton when the buggy in
which he had attempted to ford the
stream was swept away. He returned
to Clinton tonight.
Two fatalities were reported tonight.
Thomas Harmon, a farmer, was drown
ed near Kensett, Ark., when he at
tempted to drive a team of horses
through a swollen creek and P. Kilgore,
an aged man. fell into Black river and
was drowned near Poplar Bluff, Mo., sev
eral miles north of the Arkansas state
line
You Can’t Flirt
If You Work on
This Railroad
LEXINGTON, Ky„ Jan 29 —Some
body is always taking the joy out of
life!
By an official order employes of the
Huntington division of the Chesapeake
and Ohio railroad have been forbidden
tc flirt with the wives of oertain resi
dents of Ashland, Kenova and Hunting
ton while on their runs through those
town.
Had Pellagra;
Is Now Well
Ringgold. La—Mrs. S. A. Cotter, of
this place, writes: "Will say that I am
perfectly well and the happiest soul on
earth. Wish every pellagra qpfferer
could know of your great remedy. I
know how to appreciate health and sym
pathize with those that are so blest
as I. Am growing stronger, gaining in
weight and can do anything I ever
j could. Oh, I know lam well of that
horrible disease, and my heart is full ox
rejoicing. I feel that I have come out
< of a dense cloud into the blessed sun
shine. God be praised! He has spared
my life for some good, and I fee! that
I have just begun to live.”
There is no longer any doubt that pel
lagra can be cured- Don’t delay until
it is too late. It is your duty to consult
the resourceful Baughn.
The symptoms —hands red like sun
burn: skin peeling off, sore mouth, the
lips, throat and tongue a flaming red,
with much mucus and choking; indi
gestion and nausea, either diarrhoea or
constipation.
• There is hope; get Baughn’s big Free
book- on Pellagra and learn- about the
reemdy that has at last been found.
Address American Compounding Co.,
box 587-L. Jasper. Ala., remembering
money is refunded in any case where the
remedy fails to cure.—(Advt.)
THE ATLANTA SEMi-WEEKLT JOURNAL, ATLANTA. GA.. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1. 1916
PHONOGRAPH MUSIC
SPEEDS UP STENOGS
jjmy
Miss E. B. Dearborn helping a young typist speed up to the tune
of “Dixie” played on the phonograph.
Should Your "Please Remits’-
Have a Jingle to Them, Yod
Will Know the Reason Why
Should your New Year's duns have
a gladsome, jingly ring to them, should
your "please remit” reminders breathe
forth the melody of the “Anvil Chorus”
or the "Knockers’ Serenade,” here’s the
reason for it.
Typists now typewrite to music; they
write duns to fox-trot tunes, legal doc
uments to waltzes and bills of sale to
minuets. Not all, but a great many largo
business establishments now consider
Unsuns Heroes of Snows
Answer the Call of Duty
Story of Man Who Risked Life
to Save Comrades Trapped
in Cabin by Northern Bliz
zard
(Staff Special.)
SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 22.—These are
the days when from the great snow
swept regions the word often comes,
“telegraph and telephone communication
has been cut off"—when the wires are
down.
By that token it is also a time when
the names of heroes are being written
in the calendar of linemen’s perilous ex
ploits.
Across the northern states, where the
wire trunk lines pass from. Pacific to
Atlantic, the vigilant men who repair
the breaks when storms play havoc are
stationed in little cabins five to ten
miles apart.
In his office here the wire chief sits,
equally alert.
When a break occurs he figures out
the approximate location by means of
his Wheatstone bridge, a device that
measures wire mileage through resist
ance.
A hurry call goes to the nearest patrol
this side the break, and a muffled figure
on snowshoes, kit strapped to his back,
fights into the storm to locate “the trou
ble.”
One of the most recent cases of a
"trouble shooter’s” bravery to be record
ed is that of Ben Hunegardt, a lineman
at Easton, Wash.
The wires had gone down somewhere
east of Lake Keechelus. The snow was
deep and still falling. Lineman G. W.
Hull had been dispatched from Wolf’s
cabin, together with Wolf, to make re
pairs.
Then the wire chief at Seattle noted
a second break, not long after the two
men had left. It was behind them. They
were cut off from all communication
with the outside world.
After waiting twenty hours to hear
from Hull and "Wolf, the wire chief sent
I out rescue parties from the nearest
: points, east and west.
Hunegardt and a helper comprised one
of these parties. In a few hours the
helper turned bax*k. “You’re a fool to go
cn, Ben,” he said. "I'm going back.” And
he quit.
“All right, Bill,” replied Hunegardt
briefly, plodding on into the storm,
searching for Hull and Wolf.
Night came, and the blizzard closed
in about him. At midnight, half dead,
he saw part of a cabin roof above the
snow. It proved to be a deserted shack,
half smashed by the weight of a slide.
Crawling through the wreckage, Hune
gardt managed to light a flame in the
fireplace and hung up his dripping stock
ings to dry. The warmth had made
him drowsy. When he awoke it was
morning, and his socks had burned.
Thrusting hit naked feet into icy
boots, he continued his search on snow-
I shoes, locating Hull and Wolf In another
deserted cabin about noon of the sec
ond day.
They had broken their snowshoes and
were helpless prisoners of the snow.
I ‘They were not alarmed. They waited
j with implicit confidence in their brother
linemen.
“We knew help would come,’ they
said, "either you, Ben, or some of the
other boys.”
It is merely one of a hundred tales
; written every year into the annals of
fieroism by the wire patrol whose duty
t is to keep open the lines so that
your telephone or telegraph message
may not be delayed.
ARMY OfTToOOOOO
IF THIS BILL PASSES
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29. —The maxi
mum cost of putting into operation the
| Chamberlain bill proposing universal
' military training would be $188,000,000
I a year, according to figures submitted
; the senate military committee today
iby Quartermaster General Aleshire.
I They were based upon the assumption
I that 11,000,000 men between the ages of
12 and 23 years, would be trained. The
average cost of a continental army
proposed in the war department measure
was estimated at $31,000,000.
“canned" music a necessary part of
their office equipment
Instead of serving afternoon tea to re
vive the flagging spirit and limber the
fingers of weary typists some one turns
on "Dixie” or the "The Blue Danube”
or “The Sari Waltz.” Away go the
typists' fingers dancing, prancing, one
stepping, trotting over the keyboard.
“We must insist on immediate remit
tance,” hum the ivory keys to the gay
tune of "I don’t know the meaning of
care;” “we hope you will be interested
in this choice piece of real estate,’
chirps the keys to the air of “The Blue
Danube."
The typewritlng-to-music scheme
doesn’t come out of Naples or Vienna.
Its home is Red Bank, N. J., and Miss
E. B. Dearborn, director of business ed
ucation in the Red Bank high school,
is its author.
Lake Drains Dry
Through Strange
• Fissure in Earth
VALDOSTA, Ga., Jan. 29. —Hundreds
of people have gone to Ocean Pond in
the past two days to witness the phe
nomenon of the passing away of the
waters of Clayton lake, which is con
nected by canals with Ocean Pond. The
canals were dammed and the waters of
Ocean Pond saved, bilt at noon today
Clayton lake was dry, its fifty feet of
water covering twenty-five acres, hav
ing run off in three days through sub
marine passages caused by caves in the
earth. It is the first time since 1866
that the lake has been dry, due then
to a long drouth. It is believed that
the running off this time was caused by
a subterranean cavein and some do not
believe the lake will fill up again with
out filling the hole which runs under
a high embankment.
Thousands of fish have been left
stranded in the muddy bottom of the
lake, but fishermen are afraid to venture
too far toward the “sink” in getting
them.
Woman’s Fund of
Chicago Fair Is
■ Given to School
(By Associated Press.)
CHICAGO, Jan. 30.—The Woman’s
fund of the World’s Columbian exposi
tion held here in 1893 today is in the
possession of the Chicago School of Do
mestic Arts and Science. The fund which
has been in the care of Mrs. Potter
Palmer for more than two decades was
turned over to the school by Mrs. Pal
mer last night.
Originally the fund was raised by the
lady managers of the world’s fair
through the sale of souvenir coins. It
amounted to about $36,000. Mrs. Pal
mer after the close of the fair reinvest
ed the fund which now totals almost
SIOO,OOO.
Argentine Exports
BUENOS AIRES, Jan. 30—Official sta
tistics of the foreign trade of Argentina
in 1915 show imports of $226,892,000;
exports $558,280,000; Imports decreased
$45,000,000; exports increased $209,000,-
000.
LAXATIVE FOR OLD
PEOPLE - “CftSGftRETS”
Salts, Calomel and Pills act on
*.r and Bowels like pep
per acts in Nostrils.
Danger!
Get a ten-cent box now.
Most oM people must give to the bow
els some regular help, else they suffer
from constipation. The condition Is
perfectly natural. It is just as natu
ral as it is for old people to walk slow
ly. For age is never so active as youth.
The muscles are less elastic. And the
bowels are muscles.
So all old people need Cascarets. One
might as well refuse to aid weak eyes
with glasses as to neglect this gentle
aid to weak bowels. The bowels must
be kept active. This is important at
all ages, but never so much as at fifty.
Age is not a time for harsh physics.
Youth may occasionally whip the bow
els into activity. But a lash can’t be
used every day. What the bowels of
the old need is a gentle and natural
tonic. One that can be constantly used
without harm. The only such tonic is
Cascarets, and they cost only 10 cents
per box at any drug store. They work
while you sleep.—(Advt.)
JH CIPTURES COTTON
SOODS TRADE IN CHIN*
American Trade Has Dwindled;
to Almost Nothing, Says
Report
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 28. —Japanese 1
manufacturers ha\e captured the Amer-j
lean cotton goods trade in China so l
completely, says a department of com
merce report issued today .that all hop* 1
of renewed American business lies in
an entire change of the class of goods
manufactured for Oriental export.
Ten years, the report declares, has
seen American cotton goods sales dwin
dle in China as the Japanese business;
grew. Now American mills, it says,
hopelessly distanced by the Japanese,
either must extend their trade by sell
ing another class of goods at the ex
pense of England or dismiss hopes for
further Chinese business.
The report was prepared by Ralph
M. Odell, a textile expert of the bu
reau of foreign and domestic commerce,
after six months’ investigation in Chi
na.
Increasing cost of production in Eng
land because of the war. the report
says, has created an opportunity for
American mills to introduce into China
lines of cotton goods they heretofore
have not sold. Sheetings and drills, for
merly sold, must be left to the Japanese
and to new Chinese mills built and build
ing. China for many years has been
the largest market for cotton goods in
the world.
Tables contained in the report show
that from 1902 to 1913, eleven years,
the Japanese cotton goods trade in
China increased nearly nine times, while
the American trade dropped to one
third what it had been. Reasons for
this as given in the report are better
selling and distributing methods intro
duced by the Japanese and lower prices
for Japanese goods. American goods,
dependent on quality alone for their
sale and with no one to push them, were
sold in smaller and smaller quantities.
British trade has remained stationary.
The Japanese began, the report says,
by imitating the American product in
a cheaper material. This allowed the
Chinese dealer a wider margin of profit
and gave the consumer a fabric that
compared well in appearance with the
American cloth.
•In Manchuria, the report says, the
Japanese enjoyed special advantages in
reduced rail rates and Immunity from
certain Chinese taxes.
PREPAREDNESS’
To Fortify The System Against Grip
When Grip is prevalent LAXATIVE BROMO
QUININE should be taken, as thia combination
of Quinine with other Ingredients, destroys
germs, acts as a Tonic and Laxative and thus
keeps the system In condition to withstand
Colds, Grip and Influenza. There Is only one
"BROMO QUININE." E. W. GROVE’S signa-
SENATOR M’LEAN OPPOSES
PHILIPPINE INDEPENDENCE
(By Associated Press?)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29—Senator
McLean, Republican, of Connecticut, to
day urged the senate not to vote for
relinguishlng soverignty over the Phil
ippines on the grounds that they are
a military menace.
“The fact is «e are afraid of Japan,”
he said, “and Japan knows it and en
joys it hugely. If we are to release
Philippines because of their hazard,
why worry that Japan is seeking a mil- i
itary base in Turtle bay or on the I
American side of the Pacific- If we ever |
have a war with Japan it will be be
cause of our assumed superority and
of that pride which goeth before a
fall.”
Senator McLean assailed the Clarke
amendment for Philippine indepen
dence in from two to four years.
“The Mexicans are now enjoying the
kind of independence we will give the
Filipinos if the Clarke amendment car
ries," he said. “They are working out
their salvation in their inalienable
rights to robbery, arson and murder.”
HEAL YOUR SKIN
WITH RESINOL
It Stops Itching Instantly, and Clears
Away Unsightly Eruptions.
If your skin itches and burns with
eczema or any such tormenting, unsight
ly skin disease, simply wash the sore
places with Resinol Soap and hot water,
dry, and apply a little Resinol Ointment.
The itching stops INSTANTLY, you no
longer have to dig and scratch, sleep
becomes possible, and healing begins
at once. That is because the soothing,
antiseptic Resinol .medication strikes
right into the surface, arrests the action
of the disease, and almost always re
stores the tortured, inflamed skin to per
fect health—quickly, easily and at little
cost.
Prescribed by doctors for twenty
years, and sold by every druggist.
A GOOD WAY TO SHAMPOO.
Shampoo with Resinol Soap, rubbing
its lather thoroughly into the scalp, so
as to work in the soothing, healing
Resinol medication. This almost always
stops dandruff and scalp itching, and
keeps the hair live, thick and lustrous.
(Advt.)
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The Three Leading Papers for only One rnFr
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o'
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The Semi-Weekly Journal — The Biggest Newspaper in the South— lß Months
Home and Farm— The Biggest and O.dest Farm Journal in the South— l 2 months
Woman’s World Magazine— Most Widely CirculatedMagazineintheWorld— l2 Months
AND GOLD-HANDLED SHEARS, FREE
THE SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL, Atlanta, Ga., . . .
Enclosed find SI.OO. Send me your Offer No. 1.
NAME
P. 0 R. F. D ...STATE
DRUGGISTS PRAISE DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOT
CUSTOMERS ALWAYS SATISFIED WITH RESULTS
T have been handling Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root for two years and over and
my customers are always satisfied with
the results obtained from its use. I know
of a case of Liver trouble where Swamp-
Root proved very beneficial. I believe
it is one of the finest kidney remedies
in the country.
Verv truly yours,
H. H. BROWN,
Druggist,
Pinnacle. N. C.
November, 12th. 1915.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y., for a
bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of;
information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When wrltl . nS ® _ dolUr
mention The Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar
size bottles for sale at all drug stores. — (Advt.)
Making Garbage
Into Grease for
Nitroglycerine
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—The war and
resultant’demand for nitroglycerine are
given as the reasons for a legal contest
which has begun here for a contract to
remove the garbage of New York City.
Although the city has paid 33,750.000 in
17 years for removal of its garbage, a
company now offers the city $900,000
for that privilege for five years.
Counsel for the new bidder explained
why the garbage had suddenly become
so valuable by saying that the product
of garbage after being treated with
steam is grease, the value of which at
present is high. From this grease, he
said, comes glycerine from which is
made nitroglycerine.
Hearing on Bill
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29.—The house
foreign affairs committee today agreed
to a hearing February 24 on Representa
tive London’s bill, calling on the presi
dent to convene a congress of neutral
nations, to talk peace.
MEL WHEN BILIOUS? NO! STOP!
ACTS LIKE DYNAMITE UN LIVER
I guarantee “Dodson’s Liver Tone” will give you the best
Liver and Bowel cleansing you ever had
Stop using calomel! It makes you
sick. Don’t lose a day’s work. If you
feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti
pated. listen to me!
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when it comes into contact
with sour bile crashes into it, breaking
it up. This is when you feel that awful
nausea and cramping. If you a*e “all
knocked out,” if your liver is torpid
and bpwels constipated or you Jiave
headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if
breath is bad or stomach sour just try
a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s Liver
Tone.
Here’s my guarantee —Go to any drug
store and get a 50-cent bottle of Dod
son’s Liver Tone. Take a spoonful to-
R i | iQuart
WWB WHISKEY
ji jW 2Quartß
n i m i Here’s a brand new way of ordering
. iLsgy whiskey.
Don’t buy ordinary whiskey whiskey that’s half water.
Order one quart of BONDED DISTILLERY DOLBLE TV HlSKEy—
understand it’s Double Strength Whiskey, Full 180 PROOF—no water.
Then add one quart of water yourself. This cuts the strength in half
and you have fine 90 proof whiskey —two quarts of 90 proof whiskey.
GREATEST IDEA OF THE AGE
Don’t pay the dealer for whi.key that’s whiakiea sold. Add tha water yon reel f and
half water. Don’t pay exprew on water. front every quart order get two quarts of
When yon can order only a quart or two whiskey; from every 2-qnart order you
at a time, how foolish to take half of it receive get four quarts of whiskey.
in water. Try this system once and you will fol-
No. air; get our DOUBLE WHISKEY, lew it always; find out for yourself that
which is three times as strong as some this is the sensible way to order whiskey.
CORN, RYE or GIN
BONDED DISTILLERY DOUBLE WHISKEY
1 Qt., $1.35 2 Qts., $2.50 4 Qts., $4.35
EXPRESS PREPAID EXPRESS PREPAID EXPRESS PREPAID
Just as a trial offer send us $2.50 and we will ship you twe full quarts of DOUBLE
WHISKEY, either rye, com or gin. and you’ll have a whole gallon of soothing whiskey
of a velvet smoothness as good a liquor as you ever drank the health of fellow-man
with. Send in your orders; learn how to get a gallon of whiskey on a 2-quart shipment.
BONDED DISTILLERY COMPANY
ORIGINATORS OF DOUBLE WHISKEY
Dapt. 86 CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
We are pleased to handle Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root for our customers ars al
ways satisfied with the results obtain
ed from its use. Our present manager
who is an old-time drug man has used
it with good results in Kidney trouble
and does not lose an opportunity to
recommend so fine a medicine.
Very truly yours,
PORTER’S DRUG STORE.
North Main St., Salisbury, N. C.
November 12th, 1915.
Adventists Gave
$750,000 in 1915
For Church Work
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.—Seventh
Day Adventists of North America con
tributed nearly three quarters of a mil
lion dollars to the church last year, ac
cording to a report to the general con
ference, made public today. This was
said to have been the best record ever
made by the denomination. The money
went to foreign missions and to aid
educational institutions in North Amer
ica.
“Gasoline Dogs”
Invade Far North
DAWSON. Y. T., Jan. 29. —The "gaso
line dog" has invaded the far north!
It is a bicycle motor wheel attach
ment which is now used on an ordinary
Yukon sleigh.
night and if it doesn't straigten you
right up and make you feel fine and
vigorous by morning I want you to go
back to the store and get your money.
Dodson’s Diver Tone is destroying the
sale of calomel because it is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
it can not salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod
son’s Diver Tone will put sluggish
liver to work and clean your bowels of
that sour bile and constipated waste
which is clogging your system and mak
ing you feel miserable. I guarantee that
a bottle of Dodson’s Diver Tone will
keep your entire family feeling fine for
months. Give It to your children. It is
harmless; doesn’t gripe and they like
its pleasant taste. —(Advt.)