Newspaper Page Text
8
I CHILO'S LHITIIT ■ I
IS "SfflUP OF FIBS"
Made fromlruH-Can’t harm
tender stomach, liver
and bowels
If your little one’s tongue is coated, it
is a sure sign the stomach, liver and
bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing
at onCe When your child is cross,
peevish, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, eat I
cr act naturally: if breath is bad. atom-|
ach sour, system full of cold, throat |
sore, or if feverish, give a teaspoonful
of- California Syrup of Figs.” and in a
few hours all the clogged-up. constipat
ed waste, sour bile and undigested food,
will gently mov® out of the bowels, and
you have—a well, playful child again
Sick children needn’t be coaxed to take
this harmless ’fruit laxative.” Mil
lians Os mothers keep it handy because
they know its action on the stomach,
liver and bowels Is prompt and sure.
They also know a little given today
saves a sick-child tomorrow.
Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle
of “California Syrup of Figs,” which
contains directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on
the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold
here. Get the genuine made by “Califor
nia Fig Syrup Company.”—(Advt.)
YOUR HEART
Does it Flatter. Palpitate
2nH|T?l*r ! * h *P Beats? Have you
|Bbortaeea at Breath. Ten
h’uaibncss. or
.n r «csw-- Paia in left side. Dizziness.
-*F Faint inc Spell*. Stpeta be-
tare eyes. Suddru Sis rt inc
ia sleep, X erveaaaeaa.
" Hancry ar Weak Hpella.
Oppressed Feelinc ia chest. ( hokinc Sen
sation la tkraat. Painful te lie na left aide.
Siskins er t*a»etberinc Sensntinn. Diffl
ealt Breathlac. Heart Drepwy. Bwellinc
as feet er ankles. er Xeuralcia traand
Cea rtf If vou have one or more of the above
•vmptoms. don’t fail to use Dr. Kinsman’s
Heart Tablets. Not a secret medicine. It Is
mid thst one person out of every four has a
weak heart. Probably three-fourths of these do
not Vnow It.and hundreds wrongfullytreat them
selves for the Stomach, i.nngs. Kidneys or
Serves. Don t take any chances when Dr.
Kinsamn’s Heart Tablets are within your
reach. More than 1000 endorsements furnished.
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mathng this coupon, with their
name and P. O. Address, to Dr. F. <«. Kins
man. Bex t»S4. Augusta. Maine. wUI re
cnft ea box of Heart Tablets for trial by return
Mil. postpaid, free of charge. Delays are
dangerous. Write at once—to-day.
——
/£SSjWONDEROLA
4 swsoms REE
M*ir» • Best
ML - I COST
The WONDEROL A Marks a
Tninnph of the Principle Diarove'— |
by the Wniard-EDISON! Itrvpro <
auees dawty every aovnd. TheU -#
world's Greyest Entertainers eater
year boane. It bmb any uie >
VICTOR OR COLUMBIA , R££orm
1
Owe «i S«o wdar Site rt« waeeq' Rxy- ~_
IT *WK*?BUST YOU ! Or, er
w' Extra G-ft far ,nan»i _ _ . _
WAVERLY SUPPLY C«. hi 6M BimrulU, PR.
18.55 ™. WOKOER OF WONDERS
Xw Maat ■a4anu sweatee* va»4 eteaaaeraak aaar aJaßad at
.a— M! « 12xLL>> Ma-mv-y tesah. Make h*«s«
fiff. >Cy <wreßj>«yC ” SMASH ED.
" t * r> FU^*iiT T r * e
TKuSGHRCv . Dae*. B-10 It taea. B.
f Send at your ordert for
IHAY NEP 11
I BOTTLED-IN-BOND I
■ri UWrMT sa w
X7>Jj.<pW
And we will include |j
IME HKT BOTTLE THCT
I NATWER GOLDEN JUBILEE k U k L
I WHISKEY (VALUE 75<) I I ILL
All Expreet Chargeo Paid
I N'atbing to compare with this offer has
■ *’ ever been known. This Hayner
■ Private Stock Bott ed-in-Bond Whiskey
■ ia the greatest value in America at our
fl price of 83.20 for FOUR full quarts, de
fl hvered—the only Bottled-in-Bond whis-
■ key of this quality to be had anywhere
■ at this price. And now. in honor of our
■ 60th Anniversary, we include, a full pint
I bottle of Hayner Goiden Jubilee Whiskey
■ —a rare, old whiskey which would sell
■ regularly for 75c a pint. -
t OrdersfrotnN. Mex.. Colo.. Wyo.,Mont.. ■
5» and all states West thereof oust call for ,
& MOP—«x cress paid. K-M.
■ Addreu our nearest office
I THE HAYNERDISTHJJNGCO.DepL26
■ Daytea. 0. Waskiaftea. D. C. St. Leets. Me.
■ TaUda. 0. gaytea, Mesa. KaatasCsty. Me.
g SariaefieM. Okie. ladiaaapelu, lad.
5 SUraal, Jetbseerille, Ek.
New Oriaaas. La.
PARALYSIS
n» Dr. Cha*»e Sp—til Blood and Nerve Ta Meta.
De. Cbaac. =t N. Teeth Street. Philadelphia. Pa.
-r" - - * — 1
Get Acquainted With Us Through the
World’s Most Wonderful Offer
Nt a Whiskey-Nat ■ 5-Year-Old Whiskey f7 *■ -
But Genuine 6 -Year - Old Bottled -in - Bond jBwJE
Detrick WhiskeylO
BOTTLED IN BOND jV***?*'
, 1 Quart 75 Cents)Express Z
4 Quarts 53.001 I
Introductory offer to new customers i 'X 1 » f
only and but one shipment te each. I irf*
An offer never before made. An offer absolutely ■ •{UHUIUIIUIKiI
unparalleled-so daring that no one but Detrick— •» ~~jiZ I MJ
;etling dirfcl from the distillery toyou—would attempt it. Just think, <.- /TQq /v
Bottled in Bond Pure whiskey of the rarest flavor, most en- <. fit®) /
trancing aroma and genuine medicinal qualities, practically Seven “>YS&J • fz»
Susnmers Old— such a whiskey as costssl or more every day in xd, - / ■'/!/
the year for 75 cents a quart or SJ for four quarts—with every cent 'fh f f/FLz
of the express prepaid by us.
Why such a generous offer? Because we know that every person I f !//</ •\ z £*S.o/
who tries this whiskey will use no other brand. The first taste V s
will delight you—the first quart will convince you—you will never f/ z
use any other and you will always be an enthusiastic booster. This 7 . 1/» . f/7»c
is genuine bottledinbond whiskey-absolutely pure. The United / f hlSf\lL' y
States Government green stamps protect you and are a guarantee [7-
that this whiskey is fully matured, full measure and KO proof. Your |rpib AT CCT ACnj
medicine chest or sideboard should never be without a bottle of *- v Y*hl
Detrick's in time of emergency, it's a positive necessity, Our whis- A6ED IN WOOD
key is indorsed for its medicinal qualities. ... a iuK C 3
Now —thia minute— a bile you can taste the goodness and mwrnl?n»un
magniticent flavor of Detrick's Whiskey—rush that order. We will
rush the shipment by express at once.
DETRICK DISTILLING COMPANY D»pt. ItDAYTON, OHIO |
Hurled 130
Feet Through
Water; Lives
Explosion in Subway Far Be
neath Surface of River
Sends One Man tor His
Death
<By Associated Preu.)
NEW YORK. Feb. IS.—One workman
is dead and another is missing as the
result of a compressed air explosion
late today in a subway under construc
tion 100 feet below the surface of the
East river. A third workman, who was
shot with the others through mud and
water to the surface of the
bruised and dazed, but soon recovered.
The explosion, believed to have been
caused by a leak in the compressed air
pumped into the subway to stabilize the
work under construction, imperiled the
lives of thirty-five other men working
in the tube.
Frank Driver was killed and John Mc-
Carthy is missing.- With Marshall
Mabey they were sent sky-rocketing up
through the roof of the tunnel, into
the icy water. Witnesses on the water
front declared the three men were hurl
ed fully thirty feet above the river
surface.
Rescuers who put out from shore
found Driver still alive. He died, how
ever, before he could be taken to land.
Mabey appeared only slightly injuied
while no trace was found of McCarthy.
There were four .men working in an
air chamber at the time, one of whom
was blown up into- the river and res
cued. The explosion caused the erup
tion of a geiser in the river thirty feet
in height. Small boats put out to the
scene, rescued one of the men alive and
recovered the body of a second.
The subway under construction is
routed from the foot of Montague
street, Brooklyn, to W hitehall street,
New York. The air chamber in Which
the accident occurred was a short dis
tance from the Brooklyn shore. The
workmen were employed in mining op
erations. About forty other workmen
were In other sections of the tube, but
the compressed air apparatus prevented
an inrush of the water and they escaped
in safety. . *
Fnrr 96 Exquisite
rKCEWaII Paper
sawaate Samples
' 7 •\-d*'VNew Ywrii Btyie« La wall-pawra tba awet baantifßi
g=£S-S=t£g.^teiaEg jr -
39c oegere big room
:»e parlor. -vu-e r~-«>. b«room. ai><3 it
-<') bnetwr eh»..->ar, efrely new.
f~o’t m:.. ! --»<■ se cr.e-nal letter-. we iMYftgk JWFI3
■M.i "-".s'/i- ,k;k>' ■ - jMMMW
Storet
g 3IC Stores Bide-. New York
BT PARCH
/ ?RPWk Te Weerrke aw epeeM f»!4 '■/
•»« ® J«’ #l •• «*• •• V V W
/ Aft \ wuitoatf thA ertm thte n >4el. IB
/ W ZiE*IlX 1 ,lM n* *• f*««. <• * «r white
/ V OSBmA a • r» : ?• Üb»lr>ldla abed cats
/ f i• ,a ’ *'*’• 1 ' 4 ’ rbta ‘ ’
/ rf’/Wmß* il eJ r < tlnekaerer Wv*Tl
I Full > GuTMttet 5 YEARS IvSgS/J
• ■ Vr?r ,r * 1 adlea. Kaataar R...a .lie
fl'aAAu^c«ll l ’** ,>, * H '"‘ ,l, »'' ’ v lM’t i .i
■ S t« I ® Wfe.d |AM>
I fl!^xt-• •i<»i<*»r-<iri*wd•*•>«»*’ i* 11 " EK* # *'v\a
A!- tSa ”* w ’ f b ''’••* “*’■ f °' Mura ray 1H
FB*SR aHETJ S..ICOD byrarcalpwl y.’WT*' l '. JH
ntw*/ P-* »xa wtaa y<a> racl.a II aa y T&VoaOSfli
>2 97“<T' 1 m’ aa«ltte ya.ta Wg>dagSHM
7' ,/ V te.Ei.aa .:*a aa.tad. SATUFIC. wEMjJkJ?/
Tiox GV*R*\rtm rumh
OAK park watch co. xmls?
etp. b 17 o*x park, ill.
1000 Shot ZNHamllton 22
®. e ' Al yrOYsj\P al -
RIFLE X’sc.tfnsK R |FLE
WAVKIM.Y SUPPLY CO., Dea »6» «M>eei«a>l>ola.»*
GIFT for YOU
I o I io I riel CAN YOU SOLVE THIS PUZZLE?
I 0 I 10l 5 15 I Each of taeie squares repreieati a
L-sX-XLwJaXJ »«"« but « « be. e used fisures in
I 1 Intlnnlicl stead of letters. There are 26 letters
I |L I |ZU | lb |in the alphabet. Letter Aisl. Bia
2. Cis X etc. The eight letleis rep.
resented by figures form two words w hich will iaterest
you mlehely. Seed tbekorda oe a slip of paper togeth
er with 4c ta Memos to pey mailing charges, etc. Agree to
abow my plan and mdse, to your friends and I will give you
a big pack of protty seat oaede & other uaafol novelHab
that wifi aurely please you. Can you solve it? Write quick.
THE AUTO MAH. Ml New Ideas MtW-. Philadelphia. Pa.
KinKy Hair
A 6k»H. H*r»b or Cbfulj Bair. »Mo Mft
Mbc«th. !©•«• * laxurUat with
“LUXURANTO”
Hur Straichteninc Pomade.
I V en<K ' Dsndrug A keeps the
| pci P berutitui.y ce.n Asa- -
Itaty Colored ajents
1 1 Write for terms. luo% Profit.
\VS£Xw\vLipJP J Price 25c by mail. (Stamps or
\X‘kX\l Jr x coin.) Your money back if not
satisfied. Kins Ms«. Ce.
Dept 41. St Louie. Mo
BL27lLockßt, Chain ft Braotlßt
HRk. O QIV C M 6»ll 4 bcasa of Rosebud Sefvo
AjflXVI VCR at 2Se sack, frost rvmsdy for
wXM&ssnia. oorss, seisms, pilot, catarrh, eerne,
g^WjObeßions.ets..return Shalt Wand we will for-
fward shoos 1 handeowefola laid proElume
LWflflr X or ebons
A tress ear
hoooMooooS .t a r
6... so Maney,., wa11... Bfl ei»i
ROSE BLD PERFLNE CO. Wggr
Ha« 107. Woodsboro. Md.
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1916.
RUSSIANS PRESSING
mm ON HEELS OE
EHL IN ARMENIA
Towns of Mush and Ahlat, 83
Miles -South Southeast of
Erzerum, in Asiatic Turkey,
Have Been Captured
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—The Rus
sians are following up with vigor their
recent success in Turkish Ammenla;
Constantinople reports a reverse for the
British hi i Mesopotamia, while" Lohdofi
announces the completion of the oon
quest ‘i* the Kamerun, the important
German colony in Western .Equatorial
Africa. The immense forces massed
in the* European war areas are just now
comparatively inactive.
The latest official statement by the
Russian war office reports the capture of
the towns of Mush, in Asiatic Turkey.
S 3 miles south-southwest of Erzerum.
and Ahlat. The pursuit of the Turkish
lorces who retreated from Erzerum is
being continued and the Russians have
taken prisoner what remained of the
thirty-fourth Turkish division, with a
large quantity of war supplies. -
An air raid by a squadron of Italian
machines against Laibach, capital of
Cariola, Austria-Hungary, is officially
reported from Rome. Bombs were drop
ped on the town, and they are thought
to have done considerable damage. Aus
trian aeroplanes ascended for the pur
pose of driving oft the raiders, and six
of them surrounded one of the Italians
and brought him to earth.
Pursuit of the Turks, who fled from
Erzerum with the fall of the fortress
is being continued by the Russians. The
possibility of a stand by the Ottoman
forces west of the city is being consid
ered by Petrograd, but no reports, of
such resistance have been received. The
Russians also are active along the
Black sea coast and have reported a
landing on the Armenan literal, fifteen
miles east of Trebizond, considered one'
of the next objective of Russian land
forces by a march of about 100 miles
northwest from Erzerum. The com
pletion of the Kamerun conquest by the
| Franco-British forces was effected wi.'li
the capture of Mora, a position in the
northernmost section of the colony, the
last held by the Germans, their southern
I forces having recently retreated over
' the border into Spanish Guana, where
i they were interned. The entire protec
, torate of 191,130 square miles and a pop
ulation of 2,540,000, including about
2.000 whites, has "thus been wrested from
German control after a campaign of
nearly a year.
No very recent report of the Mespo
tainian operations is at hand, but Con
stantinople announces that when a Brit
ish force down the Tigris from Kut-El-
Amara, where General Townshend’s
army is bottled up, tried to cross to the
west bank of the river it was defeated
in a three-hour battle and fell back to
its second line positions, leaving a num
ber of dead. The defeat of a Russian
force which attacked Khengavar, south
of Ramadan, far across the Persian bor
der, is also reported by the Turkish war
office, w’hich declares the Russians lost
heavily.
From the Franco-Belgian front come
reports of important troop movements
behind the German lines but no news
of fighting on an extensive scale in any
sector. The British apparently are con
tinuing their efforts to regain their re
cently lost trenches southeast of Ypres,
I Belgian, but Berlin in announcing the
i second British attack at this point
within two days declares that it was
fruitless.
Mining operations, artillery engage
ments, small richng expeditions and
• aerial bombardments make up the list
of the-other activities in this war arena,
except a minor and unsuccessful attack
by the, Germans near Blangy in the
Artois district, announced from Paris.
A Shanghai dispatch brings the news
that the American steamer China, just
out ot Shanghai for Sah Francisco, was
stopped by a British auxiliary cruiser
I and the thirty-eight Germans taken off.
The Truth About Cancer.
An entirely new book giving the
most comprehensive explanation of
cancer and its successful treatment
without the knife ever published is now
offered for ftee distribution. Send for
your copy today. Many persons say
they have been cured by this treatment.
Address O. A. Johnson, M. D. r Suite
486, 1320 Main St., Kansas City. Mo.
(Advt.)
England Buying
No More Horses
In United States
(By Aaiociated Frees.)
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 18.—No
more American horses for use of the
British forces will be purchased for
some time at least, according to Major
General F. W. Benson, of the general
staff of the British army, who is in
charge of the purchase of horses.
General Benson, who today went to
Lathrop, Missouri, to inspect a band of
horses purchased some time ago, said
the affairs of the remount service in
this country would be closed up within
a short time.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
Cured HisRUPTURE
I watt badly ruptured while lifting a trunk
aeweral .rears ago. Doctors said uiy only hope
of a cure was an operation. Trusses did me
no good. Finally 1 got bold of something that
quickly and completely cured me. Years have
parsed and the rupture has never returned, al
though I am doing hard work as a carpenter.
There was no operation, no lost time, no trou
ble. I have nothing to sell, but will give full
iuformation about how you may find a com
plete cure without operation. If you write tv
me, Eugene M. Pullen, Carpenter, 622-B Mar
cellus Avenue, Manasquan. N. J. Better cut
out this notice and show it to any others who
are ruptured —you may save a life or at least
stop the misery of rupture and the worry anu
danger of nn operation.—(Advt.)
LIQUORS
ItMIVEMAL I■ PORT CO. 18W »r< n . Cincinnati, 0.
GERMANY HAS FILLED
ALL SOUTH AMERICA
WITH VAST COLONIES
State Department Has Infor
mation That Footholds Quiet
ly Established Would Grave
ly Imperil Monroe Doctrine
WASHINGTON, Feb. 19.—" Pan-Ame
rica” is in peril!
Information in possession of the sen
ate’s foreign relations committee indi
cates a great German influence in Latin-
America —influence amounting to the
establishment of footholds in several
American republics that would gravely
imperil the Monroe doctrine.
Brazil, Paraguay' Chile. Colombia,
Nicaragua and the Danish island of St.
Thomas, now under German -lease, are
the localities in which Teutonic power
is unmasked —and even Argentina,
strongest of the South American repub
lics, has an army made up on German
models and containing many German
military instructors.
A "LITTLE GERMANY.”
Southern Brazil has a “Little Ger
many”—the states of Parana, Santa
Catharina and Rio .Grande do Sul—con
taining 400,000 Germans.
Villages in these states, which are the
southernmost of Brazil, resemble little
pieces of Germany; German is the lan
guage used; the customs are German.
In 1825 the immigration of Germans
to Brazil started; once the republic, in
alarm, imported large numbers of Rus
sian Poles and Italians, of whom 100,000
came in 1889 and 1890. But the govern
ment was unable to finance these whole
sale immigrations, and the German pre
ponderance grew.
Adjoining "Little Germany” on th?
west is the republic of Paraguay, in
which German influence now leads; for
Germany organized and officered the
Paraguayan army.
GERMANIZED ARMY.
Argentina also has a Germanized
army, but the German population here
is not proportionately large. Paraguay,
however, is a perpetual threat on Ar
gentina’s northeast border, with her
tiny but efficient army to prevent any
anti-German action Argentina might
care to take. , ,
Chile .across the Andesc form Argen
tina, cotnains several German colonies,
one of which. Valdivia, is as German a
city as Berlin. It has 120,000 people;
the province in which Valdivia is situat
ed also has an important Teutonic ele
ment. Germans have tried to control the
Chilean army.
Germans established a colony on the
west coast of South America, not far
from Valdivia, in the sixteenth century;
but they were driven oft by the Span
iards. The Germans now in Chile are
immigrants of recent’ years.
COLONY JN 1528.
In 1528 the Welsers, wealthy Ger
man merchants, who had their head
quarters at Augsburg, sent a fleet to
the west coast of South America, under
comman I of one Dalfinger of Ulm. Dal
finger founded this town.
Latei, ntaring of the golden shrines
on the Incas, in Peru, he led an ex
pedition into that country. Cruelty prac
ticed against the Indians led to his death
by a poisoned arrow. Most of his
followers were
pWelsers retained of Chile un
til the colonists tfere drivecn out by the
Spanish. . .
Valdivia, the present foothold of Ger
many in Chile, lies 450 miles south ot
Valparaiso.
ST. THOMAS LEASED. :
The island of St. Thomas, belonging
to Denmark, and lying just east of the
American possession of Porto Rico, is
under lease to > Germany, which has
established an important base there, In
a position of strategic value because of
its nearness to the Panama canal. lshe
United States once tried to buy St. 1
Thomas from Denmark, but the fell
t'irough because of German objection.
Germany also has important holding
in Colombia and in Nicaragua. Private
companies have bought up lands, the be
lief in Washington being that it is in
tended at some date to construct, in
one country or the other, a German rival
of tne Panama canal.
It will be remembered, also, that Ger
many once tried to control the customs'
department of the Haitien republic, and
to establish a .bast at Mole St.
This point dominates the Windward pas
sage. between Cuba and Haiti, through
which most traffic from the United
States passes to the Panama canal.
Seventeen Fires
In 12 Hours.
Make Record
Seventeen fires in the 12 hours from
7 a. m. to 7 p. m. Saturday established
a new "fire record” for Atlanta.
Incidentally Chief W. B. Cody and his
men are patting themselves on the back
because the loss in no case is said to
have been more than 1100.
A large majority of the fires started
when the strong wind blew sparks from
chimneys to adjoining roofs. A fire in
a plot of woods in Ansley park threat
ened several houses.
The following Is a list of the fires:
Residences, Charles Kemp, 17 Hogue
street; William Rogon (colored), ia ’
Mangum, street; Mary Jones (colored),
250 Glenn street; Georgia Pruitt (col
ored), rear 123 Capitol avenue; E. V.
Lassiter, 44 Dunn street; W. T. Ander
son, 1 East Fair street; Lizzie Johnson
(colored), 61 Lovejoy street; Irene Jones
(colored), rear 400 Peachtree street; M.
C. Putman, 81 Powell street; W. B. I
Barnes, 148 Well street; L. A. 'Carra-;
way, 143 Hunnicutt street; G. W. Pate,
716 East Fair street: Robert Cunning
ham (colored), 64 Yonge street; Lula
Taylor, 62 George street! W. C. Cham
bers, 696 South Pryor street, and fire in
wJods off Westminster drive and Pied
mont place and burning grass plot in
Grant place.
Woman Aids in
Holding Up Two
White Strollers
After being accosted by a pretty
white woman she wanted to
know their names and just a little bit
about them. T. R. Matthews and R. R.
Waggers, farmes living at Decatur, were
assailed by six white men at the corner
of Hilliard and Decatur streets shortly
after midnight, and beaten with consid
erable vigor. The victims of this strange
assault were rushed to the Grady hos
pital where their wOunds were treated.
Matthews is suffering from a severe
cut on the right side of his head and
also carries a black eye. Wagges sus
tained a deep cut in back of his left ear.
The injuries were painful but not con
sidered to be serious.
Both men declare that they can iden
tify their -#silants.
Bigger Profits
; Season ; -
I] iLlidifev You CAN get better P rices for y° ur crops* You
4 i CAN have more money left over at the end of
jf * the year. You CAN save your horses, live , $
•» —a I easier, be in instant communication with the
S uP!)i doctor, the stores, crop buyers and friends. The
- ONE BIG NECESSITY for ail this bigger profit " * %
and pleasure is to get a k
iifSr Western Electric..
• Rural Telephone „ ■'
IT IS NOT HARD TO GET. IT DOES NOT COST
/// //y U I MUCH. YOU AND YOUR NEIGHBORS CAN PUT UP
■ THE LINE YOURSELVES - ■
If you’ll fill out and cut the coupon, paste it on a post card and 1
. rnail to our nearest house, we’ll help you to get the simple, re
-7 M • liable equipment, and tell you how to put it up. We’ll send
/ ' 4I y° u details by return mail. ,
/ * WESTERN ELECTRIC COMPANY
A SOUTHERN HOUSES:
SaraMzk Cißoaaati Ku«m City Ddht
*7 _ / / , Rick»wi N«wOrk«*. St. Ura OMakußaCity HmmCm
/ EQUIPMENT FOR EVERY ELECTRICAL NEED
Bystander Only
Person Injured
In Pistol Fight
The innocent bystander was the only
victim of a shooting affray in front of
the Hollis saloon, 10 Walton street,
about 11 o'clock Saturday night, accord
ing to a police report.
11. C. Clarke, aged 31 years, a carpen
ter of 193 East Fair street, was shot in
the right leg, just below the knee, as he
and W. D. Smith, of 560 Simpson street,
stepped out of the saloon door.
According to the police two men, one
about 50 years of age, and the other a
youngster, were engaged in a list fight
in front of the saloon. Just as Clarke
and Smith stepped from the doorway,
the report says, the young man drew a
revolver and fired two shots. Neither
bullet struck the man with whom he had
been fighting, but one lodged in Smith’s
legs. • Both belligerents fled, and the
young man was followed by bystanders
until he -boarded an Inman Park trolley
car.
Detectives Rosser and Cochran, rushed
after the car in a police Automobile, but
failed to get the man.
Clark was carried to the Grady hos
pital, where his wound was dressed, and
about midnight he left for his home.
G. W. Lane, thirty-flve years old, a
resident of Griffin, was arrested by Pa
trolmen Powers and Lassiter about mid
night in connection with the shooting.
A .32 calibre revolver was found in
his posession. He is being hfeld at po
lice headquarters charged with disorder
ly conduct.
SWORD FROM CEDAR
IS SENTJIO WILSON
(By Associated Press.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. A. Wal
den, a Confederate veteran of Murfrees
boro, Tenn., who wrote that he was
sixty-nine years old but not too old to
fight, today sent President Wilson a
sword made of cedar from the Stones
river battlefield as an evidence of his
interest in the preparedness program.
HEiaiCHV, COSTIVE,
BILIOUS,-“CISMKTS”
Sick Headache, Bad Breath,
Sour Stomach, mean Liver
and Bowels are clogged.
Cheer up!
Get a 10-cent box.
Sick headache, biliousness, dizziness,
coated tongue foul taste and foul
breath—always trace them to .torpid liv
er; delayed, fermenting food in the bow
els or sour, gassy stomach.
Poisonous matter clogged in the intes
tines, instead of being cast out of the
system is re-absorbed into the blood.
When this poison reaches the delicate
brain tissue it causes congestion and
that dull, throbbing, sickening headache.
Cascarets immediately cleanse the
stomach, remove the sour, undigested
food and foul gases, take the excess
bile from the liver and carry ’out all
the constipated waste matter and poi
sons in the bowels.
A Cascaret tonight will surely
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you sleep—a 10-cent box
from your druggist means your head
.clear, stomach sweet and your live;
and bowels regular for months.
’ , (Advt.)
Good for U
coughs, I
colds and H
S ri P» and I
correct catarrhal n
~-w’ conditions wher- U
ever located. Try I
I Peruna in tablet form, j
U convenient to carry, |J
I easy to take and effect- I
fl ive. Fifty doses for |
U fifty cents. U'
If your druggist cannox I
R supply you, write the Pe- H
I I runs Co«« Columbua, O. I I
Made-to-Measure
Express Prepaid $075
\ Penta cut in the latest agro
Bilij 10 style. Made-to-your ~ |
ijfl individual measure. Fit, vrork-
[NK manship and wear guaranteed. |
£xt>,a Charge I
for P e k tops, no matter how
extreme you order them. .
BtttJWMl Aoasndn A «°° d 11,9 bustler tn
isl 7L7 T j «’« r y ,own to t*' l *
W>tww WftlOl ’Vtsmwcr orders for oar ••!•-
(K britwd madi-to-mesrure clothes.
WpHE Samples of all latest materials Fre».
ggfiF Wu Pay Bia Mono*
OfM to our acenta everywhere. Turn your
■H spare time into cash by taking orders
W for our stylish clothes. Write today
flg for beautiful FREK outfit.
M WL THt WOCSrs, TAtLORINQ CO-
Dapt. gOQ Chlcaga. HI.
Minister Urges
AU Girls to Take
Lead in Proposing
OAKLAND, Cal., Feb. 19.—’Girls, take
a good look before ybu leap—then leap.”
This is leap t year advice of Rev.
Francis Van Horn, pastor of the Oak
land Congregational chtfrch.
“Why shouldn’t girls propose?” he
asks. "We read in the Bible that R*uth
proposed to the man of her choice. If
Ruth of the olden days could propose,
why souldn’t the Ruth of 1916 have
the same privilege?
‘I am encouraging all the unmarried
women in my church to ‘pop the ques-
“Get Duffy’s and Keep Well”
For tho coßYonieaco of our patrons, who for various reasons
are unable to purchase Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey in their lo
cality, we have arranged with the reliable concerns mentioned
below to fill all orders promptly at the following prices t
JLJkJLJLJLA
HI 1 Bottle, SI.OO (Express Collect)
K 4 Bottles, $4.00 6 Bottles, $5.75 T<,
fl 8 Bottles, $7.50 12 Bottles, $ll.OO |
Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey
should be in every medicine chest, especially at this season of the
year when colds, grip, pneumonia are prevalent. The system
that is kept in good condition is invariably able to resist and
throw off the disease germs created daily. A healthy stomach is
the key to health as the majority of physical ills are the rault of
poor blood caused by the improper digestion of food. Duffys
Pure Malt Whiskey is a valuable aid to digestion if taken in table
spoon doses in equal amounts of water or milk before meals and
on retiring. It is made from the choicest of grains thoroughly
malted and readily assimilated as it requires little effort of the.
digestive organs. Duffy’s must be good or the public would not
continue its liberal patronage. Cut this advertisement out and
send your order today.
Send your order to the dealer nearest you as mentioned below,
accompanied by P. O. Money Order, Express Order or Registered
Mail, and the genuine Duffy’s Malt will be shipped you promptly.
B. M. Mose Co., Chattanooga, Tenn., and Jacksonville, Fla.
Paul Heyman, Chattanooga, Tenn., and Angmsta, Ga.
Atlantic Coast Distilling Co., Jacksonville, Fla.
D. F. & C. P. Long, Jacksonville, Fla. • -
Chattanooga Distilling Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
Brown fc Hagin, Chattanooga Tenn.
Charles Blum Co., Jacksonville, Fla.
B. B. Betterton fc Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
Solomon Shad, Jacksonville, Fla.
Harrington Distillery Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
‘--Here is a big club com
bination offer that yon
cannot afford to miss—
Six good papers one year
for only SI.OO
Let us have your order today for this big bar
gain clubbing combination—for only one dollar it
will give you six fine papers for one year. Notice
that it will give you a high-class news and farm
paper, a fine story paper, a ’good farm magazinfc
and three magazines of particular interest to women.
Here’s the list: ...»
The Semi-Weekly Journal — Household Journal and
The Best News and Farm Paper Floral Magazine—
In the South —twelve months. a Magazine Devoted to Household
• Affairs and Flowers—twelve
Every-Day Life— ' months.
A Fine Story Paper—twelve Home Life—
months. A High-class Home Magazine-
twelve months.
Farm Life— - Gentlewoman—
A Hlgh-clasw'Farm Paper—‘twelve A Woman’s Magazine of the -Best
months. • Class —twelve months. :
Sisn thi» coupon and mail your order now. ________________
The Semi-WeMjJy Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
Enclosed find sl, for which send me the “Big Six” Com
bination.
Name '
P. O. T
R. F. D ... State....
tion.* If a girl sees a man whom she
admirers— one whom she believes she
can make happy—why should foolish
convention refuse her the right to ex
press her love? Before the year iff
out, I hope that every single woman iff
my congregation will have found hei
mate?” ’*
Plan Exploration
Trip by Aeroplane
. PITTSBURG. Pa, Feb. 19.—Six prom
inent Pittsburgers are to explore inte
rior Colombia In an aeroplane, seeking
oil fields. The party will include S. B.
McCormick, chancellor of Pittsburg uni
versity, and Ledyard Blair, -New York
banker. They will start at Barranquilla
and fly 300 miles up Magdalena river.