Newspaper Page Text
2
MILiTAHISTS FEARING
GERMAN INVASION DF
0. S. FOLLOWING WAR
Senator Thomas Tells Senate
That Germany Is Only Nation
That Could Invade U, S.,
• Urges Army Bill
(By inotUtW Frwa I
WASHINGTON. March 37.—Senator
Cummins. Republican, offered more than
thirty amendments for the army bill
today. Senators Cummins. Penroee ami
Wadsworth proposed almost identical
plans for a section of the general staff
of five national guard officers. Senator
Cummins proposed to strike out the vol
unteer army section and extend and
strengthen the national guard provi
sions.
Senator Thomas, Democrat, urged
adoption of the bill as reported.
“If there prove to be a few defects
of the bill they can be cleared up in
• subsequent legislation." he said. “The
bill as now before the senate is the best
it was humanly possible to devise "
Senator Thomas discussed the insist
ence of militarists that the United States
is in danger of invasion. No such Inva
sion, he contended, was to be feared
• from Italy. Austria. Russia or France.
. “Is it England or Germany”' he asked
- ; •Kot England. Even Roosevelt-says we
; need have no fear of England Every
' man if he will admit it, when he thinks
-of an invasion of the United States plc-
• tures in his imagination the advancing
helmets of German soldiers
“Germany is the only nation that pos
sibly could land an army of 750,000
trained troops on our shores.
“So when Invasion of the United States
/ is mentioned by the militarists Germany
"" is the one nation that they have in
~ mind."
The senator thought if there was any
such danger it would be greater after
the war when Germany's surviving sol-
dlera would form the most compact,
best equipped fighting force ever
. known.
600,000,000 Cans
Os Soup for Army
MONTREAL. April 2.—Here’s the re
cipe for soup for British soldiers being
made in Montreal and it must be ready
. to serve within 40 days—beef, 300,000.-
OOO pounds, rice. 1.500.000 bags; beans,
carrots and onions, millions of pounds.
lt will be shipped in 6,000.000.000 cans.
*
WISE HOSTESS
Won Her Guests to Postum
‘ Three great coffee drinkers were my
old school friend and her two daugh
ters.
“They were always complaining and
taking medicine 1 determined to give
• them Postum instead of coffee when
they visited me, so without saying any
thing to them about it. I made a big
pot of Postum the first morning.
"Before the meal was half over, each
one passed her cup to be refilled, re-
! marking how fine the ‘coffee’ was. The
mother asked for a third cup and in
quired as to the brand of coffee I used.
I didn't answer her question just then,
for I heard her say a while before that
she didn’t like Postum unless it was
more than half coffee.
“After beakfast I told her that the
‘coffee’ she liked so well at breakfast
was pure Postum. and the reason she
. liked it was because it was properly
.■ ’ made
"I have been brought up from a nerv
ous, wretched invalid, to a fine con-
• dit ion of physical health by leaving off
’ coffee and using Postum.
’'“l am doing all I can to help the
world from coffee slavery to Postum
freedom, and have earned the gratitude
of many, many friends. - Name given
“ by Postum Co.. Battle Creek, Mi?h.
Postum comes in two forms;
Poetum Cereal the original form —-
must be well boiled. 15c and 35c pkgs.
Instant Poetum—soluble powder—dis
solves quickly in a cup of hot water,
and. with cream and sugar, makes a
-- delicious beverage instantly. 30c and
<-0c tins.
Both forms are equally delicious and
• cost about the same per cup.
"There‘s a Reason’’ for Postum.
—sold by Grdcers.
. t Advt.)
YOUR HEART
it Flatter, Palpitate
lar Skip Beatsf Hare you
" ■ l* hortne ** ®* Breath. Ten-
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<J3W fare eyes. Madden Mtarling
la sleep, Nerrata jrti,
• Hungry er Weak Mpella,
Oppressed Feeling in ebest, ('baking Men.
setlan la threat. Paiaful te lie en left side,
Minning er Bmethering Mensatian. Oiffl
calt Breathing. Heart Draper. Swelling
of feet er ankles, er Neuralgia around
bee rtf - If you bare one or more of the shore
symptoms, don't fall to use Dr. Kinsman's
Heart Tablets. Note secret medicine. It is
said that one person out of every four has a
weak heart. Probably threo-fourtk" of these do
aot know it,and hundreds wrongfull v treat them
selves for the Btomach, Lungs. Kidneys or
Nerves. Doni take any chances when Dr.
Kinsman's Heart Tablets are within your
reach. More than 1SO» endorsements furntsbeo.
FREE TREATMENT COUPON
Any sufferer mailing this coupon, with their
. name and P. O. Address, to Dr. F. <•• Kins
men. Box MH4. tugusia. Maine, will re
- £ reive a box of Heart Tablets for trial by return
J mail, postpaid, free of charge. Delays are
- dangerous. Write at once—to-day.
fs| bottled inbond
1• 1 a
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||gj
'■ II-
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• JUL
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’ & Guaranteed
I by Government
> OLD BOLRBON
?F>tt e 1 Short Quart .55
| 2 •• “ 1.10
4 “ “ 205
ir you prefer Corn,
• Hye or Gin, drawn di-
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? wp w ’" s h>P at same
< P rlce ' Order today.
Rush Distilling Co.
Ja< ksonvillc, Ha.
CHARGE VILIA RAIDS
WERE FINANCED AND
PLANNED BY WALL ST.
Interests Seek to Force Amer
ican Intervention to Keep
Land From Peons, Author
ity Explains
BT EDGCTTMB PINCHON.
■ Author, with L. C. De Tara, of ‘Tiie
Mexican People: Their Struggle for Free
dom.’* the book which has been said to have
influenced Preaident Wilson In establishing
his “Watchful Waiting’’ Policy.
Wall Street planned the Villa raid and
paid for it. The American monopolists
of Mexican land, oil and mining conces
sions and hennequin plantations have
everything to lose by the present demo
cratic regime in Mexico, which boldly
proposes to restore the land and its re
sources to me whole people on equal
terms. The monopolists have now but
one recourse—to force American inter
vention In Mexico to destroy the new
popular government and reinstitute the
reign of privilege under the American
flag and backed by the American army.
To bring this about in the teeth of
the common people of this country they’
have employed every device—short of
Inciting Mexican invasion of American
territory. Now we have the Villa raid
—th.e last desperate trick of balked
greed.
Villa’s ignorance, daring and execu
tive ability marked him from the first
as the fittest possible tool for the Wall
street purpose. Long before he broke
with Carranza he was surrounded night
and day by the agents of the ’’lnterests.’’
They flattered his vanity, nurtured his
ambition, goaded his avarice, while the
same press which is now shouting for
his blood lauded him as the coming
“strong man of Mexico," “the true suc
cessor of the mighty Diaz.”
But the Mexican peons have become
wise. They care little for leaders. It
is the land they want When Villa fell
under their suspicion they deserted him
promptly and flocked to the banner of
Carranza. The attempted counter-revolu
tion failed for lack of men. Os money
it always had enough and to spare. Wall
street changed its methods. The first
indication was the massacre of a score
of Americans at Santa Ysobel in Sonora.
Flaring headlines, pathetic sob-stories,
penny-a-line indignation articles filled
the press. The administration and the
American people sat firm. Then as a
man tempting another to fight, wal
street turned from this slight tap on
the nose and hit the American people a
blow square In the face. It ordered
Villa to raid an American army amp
and kill United States soldiers in uni
f°rm WILL TRICK WORK?
Will the trick work? That is the
only question Wall street is asking it
self today. And who is Wall street.
Wall street is the land, oil,
hennequin monopolists of the I * n‘ted
States. Who is supremely interested in
Mexican oil concessions? V*ho is it
covets the control of the hennequin
plantations, whence comes the fiber ror
harvester twine? What great newspa
per owners 1 hold enormous haciendas in
Mexico? Answer these questions and
vou lav vour hand on those responsible
for the killing of a acore of United
States soldiers and the would-be spon
sors for the death of several hundred
thousand more.
Can Wilson stem the tide? Interven
tion means the assured safety of all
the great blood-wrung concessions own
ed bv the Interests in Mexico —and it
means the abortion of a struggle for the
land which the Mexican people have
waged unceasingly for 100 years!
Non-intervention means that hence
forth every Mexican or foreigner in
Mexico may have to occupy twelve acres
of suburban land or eighty acres of
rural land which he can neither sell,
rent, nor lease, nor mortgage, but which
is his to use and live upon so long as
he will and for his heirs after him. It
means free education, the organization
of labor, high wages, the government
ownership of all railroads, telegraphs
and telephones. In short, it means the
development of the first great industrial
democracy’ the world has seen. Will it
be permitted to live?
This is not the first “Villa raid” in
the hihtory of Mexico. It is an old
trick. Seven times the peons have risen
in massed revolt in the past hundred
years—with one demand, “La Tierra,"
"The Land." Seven times they have
been crushed and beaten back to peon
age—not by the Mexican plutocracy, but
bv that plutocracy leagued first with
Spain, then with the United States —in
the Texas imbroglio, and the American-
Mexican war. then with England, France
and Spain in the joint invasion under
| Maxim IllUn. then again with United
States supporting the petty army re
volt which placed Diaz in power and ex
pelled the Liberal President Tejada.
Now the “Villa raid” is repeated. The
peons ha\e won. They have the land
for which they have fought So valiantly
and long. Now the cup of freedom is to
be dashed from their lips and Ameriacn
intervention forced upon them by this
last desperate trick of raising the cry.
“American blood has been shed on Amer
ican soil by Mexicans."
In IfclO the peons first rose in revolt
demanding the land. The Mexican land
owners called in the aid of Spain. The
revolt was crushed by 100,000 Spanish
regulars In 1824 they rose again. Mex
ico was now independent. This did not
prevent the same landowning element
from inviting Spanish Intervention. They
got it and the revolt was aborted.
In 1835 again the peons rose. This
time in greater passion and power. At
the same time the American south was
casting longing eyes on Texas. It want
ed “slave” votes to buttress its waning
power in the senate. A pact was made
between the Mexican landourners and the
southern planters. Santa Anna headed
a "Villa raid” into Texas. A war began.i
I endin.g in the massacre of Alamo and
I the cession of Texas—a cheap price in
i the eyes of the Mexican plutocracy for
tne heading off of domestic revolt.
In 1846 the peons again rose, demand
ing the land. Again, also, the south
wanted slave territory. Again the pact
was renewed. "War is better than re
volt," thought the landowners, “foreign
invasion better than yielding our great
estates to the peons.” War, ending in
J the American acquisition of New Mex
ico. Arizona and California, followed.
The inciting incident was an unprovok
ed American foray into Mexico —a “Villa
raid. ’
In 1854 the peons rose again in a
spontaneous unorganized mass move
ment of such intensity that it swept
them into power and enabled them to
establish the first constitution in the
world to be based on the rights of man
as opposed to the rights of property.
In August. 1867, Juarez became the
first president under the new regime of
induetrial democracy and free land.
In October of the same year fought
again to secure their right to free land
and representative government—and
won
For ten years Mexico enjoyed an era
■f prosperity and peace. Three million
THE ATLANTA SEMI WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA.,
Five Men, Three
Americans, Are
Killed by Vilia
Bandit Keeps Woid at Minaca
to Kill Every “Gringo” That
Fell Into His Hands, Says
El Paso Report
(By Associated Pre**.)
EL PASO, Tex., April 2.—The stoiy of
the murder of three Americans, a Ger
man and an Englishman at Minaca was
brought here today by Americans ar
riving from Chihuahua City and was
accepted as authentic by federal of
ficials.
The bandits' victims were Benjamin
Snell. Dr. A. T. Stell, Lee Lindsley,
Americans; Herman Blankenburg, a
German; Donald McGregor, also known
as Bruce, a British subject. Two other
Americans. Henry Acklin and Frank
Woods, were in Minaca at the time, but
their fate has not been determined. The
news was brought to Chihuahua City by
J. H. Locke, the only American known
to hjjve escaped the maasacre.
According to the story. Villa cap
tured Minaca, Cuerrero and San Isidro
last Monday. Everywhere he went he
announced his intention of putting to
death every “Gringo’’ that fell into his
hands, and he carried out his intention.
As far as the Mexicans were concerned
the bandit promised safety to all those
wlio did not take up arms against him.
No quarter was shown to the Carranza
troops, who attempted to resist him, it
was said.
The one gleam of light in the dark
story is the probability that Villa's ac
tivity is what enabled Colonel Dodd to
deliver his crushing ’blow at San Geron
imo ranch two days after the crime of
Minaca, a blow that has raised high
hopes that the brigand’s days are num
bered.
According to the refugees General
Luis Herrera left Chihuahua City Tues
day with a large number of troops. His
destination was not made public.
There were numerous reports In El
Paso today that Villa was already cap
tured. Some of these were circumstan
tial and not one of them could be veri
fied.
VILLA SHOT IN KNEE.
It was in the raid on Guerrero last
Monday that Villa was wounded, being
shot in the knee, according to a message
received today by General Gavira at
Juarez from General Gutierrez, tele
graphing from Chihuahua City.
Gavira had asked for further informa
tion about Colonel Dodd’s battle. Gutier
rez explained that the wires were work
ing badly on the southern loop and he
had only the bare details of what had
been accomplished by the Americans, but
the telegram received said that Villa
broke into Guerrero at 3 o’clock Monday
morning. The garrison engaged the as
sailants in heavy street fighting. A num
ber were killed on both sides. Then the
Villa forces looted the stores but made
off as soon as the Americans approached.
Villa was wounded In the knee.
Telegrams received from Chihuahua
City in Juarez today said that a freight
and passenger train on the Mexico
Northwestern railroad had been wrecked
some weeks ago between Minaca and
Chihuahua City. Twenty-seven Mexi
cans, including women and children, were
killed. One American was on board but
escaped uninjured.
The same advices said the paymaster
of the El Potosi Mining company had
been robbed by bandits three miles from
Chihuahua City three days ago. There
were twenty in the band and they let the
paymaster go after taking seven hundred
pesos from him.
PREPAREDNESS!
To Fortify The System Against Grip
When Grip is prevalent LAXATIVE
BROMO QUININE should be taken, as
this 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. Grave’s
signature on box. 25c.—(Advt.)
ROOSEVELT’S SECRETARY
IS RELEASED ON BAIL
Supreme Court Justice Grants
Reasonable Doubt Motion
for McGrath’s Appeal
(By Associated Press.)
NEW YORK, April I.—John W. Mc-
Grath, private secretary to Colonel
Roosevelt, was released on bail of 31,000
today after Supreme Court Justice Scud
der in Brooklyn had granted a motion
for a certificate of reasonable doubt as
to his guilt of the charge of assault
for which he was sentenced to thirty
days recently.
His cousin, William Powers, who was
convicted for the same offense, also was
released on bail for a -similar amount.
Both men had been in jail since Tuesday
when they were found guilty of assault
ing Charles Lighte, Jr., in a Brooklyn
case last June.
MANY PERSONS KILLED IN
POWDER FACTORY BLAZE
(By Aasocieted Brest.
LONDON*. March 31.—A Reuter dis
patch filed at Oldenzaal, Holland, Wed
nesday. says many persons lost their
lives in a fire in a powder factory at
•Troisdorf, near Cologne.
peons had become landowning farmers
and free men. The finest system of edu
cation yet seen on the North American
continent was instituted.
Wall street cast longing eyes on Mexi
co with its rich land and mines and
forests and labor supply. Diaz, a mutin
ous and Ignorant army officer, proved the
“Villa” of nte time.
Backed by the same elements that are
now clamoring for intervention, lie
gathered a small force of malcontents
and seized Mexico City. Recognizing
that back of Diaz and his petty army
lay the economic and military might of
the United States, President Tejada,
rather than subject his bleeding country
to a new invasion, abandoned the capi
tol. Diaz installed himself at the point
of the bayonet and remained in the
presidency, except for one brief inter
val. thirty-four years.
To the victor the spoils Diaz ousted
the 3.000.000 farmers from their home
steads. massacring hundreds of thou
sands of them in the process, carried on
a large and flourishing slave traffic in
the peons who refused to resign them
selves to his will, parcelled up tl.e land
and forests and oil territories among
the foreign interests who had placed
him in power, and retired at the end of
his career with 60,000,000 pesos in cash
England, France and Spain signed a
compact to invade Mexico and put down
the new constitution at the point of the
bayonet.
It remains to be seen whether Wilson
will be strong enough to prevent the
United States army from being used by
the Diaz concessionaires to retain their
strangle-hold on the lands and re
sources of the peons, and to recover
what they have already lost by the In
stitution of the single tax tenure of
land.
CMU IS SINCERE
FRIEND DF I). S„ SAYS
ONE WHO KNOWS HIM
I Prof. J. W. Slaughter Depicts
First Chief of Mexico as
Man Who Is Honestly Striv
ing for Reforms
BY KENNETH W PAYNE.
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.. April I.—Cous
in Carranza! What is he really like?
What good is lie actually going to ac
complish in his turbulent cauldron of
a country? ,
Officially o. k. d by Uncle Sam, our
de facto cousin has remained to most
Americans as grim a puzzle as the Mexi
can muddle itself.
j Prof. John Willis Slaughter hasn't any
j ax to grind, but he has a personal ac
| quaintance with Carranza. This cele
brated student of politics and sociology
believes the coming presidential cam
paign, America's future trade and peace
with South America, and in fact the
happy solution of some of the biggest
problems of the day, are all bound up
wth an intelligent understanding of the
Mexican situation.
“When I went to Mexico,” said Dr.
Slaughter to me, “I expected to find
Carranza the same kind of pompous
revolutionary figurehead I had met oft
en in my years of experience in South
America. I was convinced the old man
is an able, straightforward leader of a
permanently established cause, and that
justice and patriotism are on his side.”
Moreover, Carranza is sincerely friend
ly to the United States, according to
Dr. Slaughter who, with Lincoln Stef
fens, has been investigating conditions
in Mexico City and throughout the re
public.
“Everything Carranza does is abso
lutely above board. Everybody knows
where he stands, and what he is going
to do. He has no private intrigue. No
foreign Interest has ever had the nerve
to rpproach him with a bribe, although
every general in his army and every
member of his government has been so
approached.
"On a train trip with Carranza I saw
him painstakingly getting acquainted
with the people, the leaders and the
peons. In every village he got out and
-walked among them, learning their wants
and hopes and • making himself solid
with them.
“At Mexico City 1 learned the other
side. Interventionists talk about the
need of the iron hand over the Mexican
people. The iron hand ought to grip
not them but Mexico City.
Mexico City is the nest of a crowd
of petty intriguers, the small fry re
maining from the Diaz regime, who are
almost alone responsible for the strife
which has cost the lives of thousands
of innocent peons.
"If Carranza should order General
Obregon to set up a guilotine in Mexico
City and execute some 2,000 of these
well-dressed traitors to their country,
he would accomplish more toward the
restoration of good government in Mex
ico than could be by any other single
measure.
"Slowly the first chief is proceeding
with the needed reforms, breaking up
the great estates and restoring them to
their rightful owners where they were
unjustly appropriated, establishing
schools, replacing the military rule with
civil machinery.
“When this work is finished he will
step aside, 1 am sure, wanting nothing
more than the knowledge that his job
is well done, and will leave the admin
istration to an honestly, legally elected
civil government.
“A rash step leading to intervention
by the United States would work in
calculable harm not only to Mexico and
the peaceful accomplishment of her
economic freedom, but the Lnited States
as well, for it would deprive us for
generations of the friendship of all
South America."
TWO WRECKED TRAINS
WERE RACING, HE SAYS
(By Associated Press.,
CLEVELAND, March 31.—Both sec
tions of train No. 86 were late and were
racing to make up lost time, F. E.
Bauscch, night dispatcher, testified to
day at the first formal hearing into the
wreck of three New York Central trains
near Amherst early Wednesday. Bausch
also said the road had experienced diffi
culty several times during the past win
ter. principally in bad weather when the
signals either failed to work or did so
inefficiently.
A. H. Ernst, signal towerman, testi
fied that the block signal system was
defective and said it was impossible that
he was responsible.
HAS A CURE
FOR PELLAGRA
Parrie Nicholas, Laurel, Miss., writes:
"Seems to me if I had not obtained your
remedy when I did I would not have
lived much longer. J am glad you dis
covered tills wonderful remedy that will
Cure Pellagra. W’hen I began taking
Baughn’s Pellagra Remedy my weight
was 60-odd pounds: now it is 90-odd. I
would like to have this published and
sent to sufferers of Pellagra."
This is published at her request. If
you suffer from Pellagra or know any
one who suffers from Pellagra, it is
your duty to consult the resourceful
Baughn, who has fought and conquered
the dreaded malady right in the Pellagra
Belt of Alabama.
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; indiges
tion and nausea; either diarrhoea or
constipation. There is hope. If you
have Pellagra you can be cured by
Baughn’s Pellagra Remedy. Get big
free book on Pellagra. Address Ameri
can Compounding Co., Box 587-L, Jasper.
Ala., remembering money is refunded
in any case where the remedy fails to
cure.— (Advt.)
jgVs Hundreds of women have proven
__\ by experience that dread and
fear are unnecessary. Pain
1A can now be reduced toalmost
» > fl nothing by discoveries of Dr.
£ X J- H. Dye. life-long specialist
in such cases. Book ex
‘. L\ plainingfully how to bring
strong, healthy children
into the world with al-
IMBL most no pain, sent free
in plain wrapper and postpaid to any woman
who will send her name to Dr. J. H. Dye
Medical Institute, 64 Lincoln Bldg., Buffalo,
N. Y. Write for it today.
t
BDRAH TELLS SENATE
NATIONAL GUARD CM
SOT BE FEDERALIZED
Declares Constitution Offers
Insurmountable Barrier to
Proposal Carried in Pending
Army Bill
By Associated Press.)
ASHTNGTON, April I. —The senate
debated the army increase bill again all
day today without any indication as to
when work would begin on the mass of
pending amendments. As yet Chairman
Chamberlain, of the military commit
tee, has made no effort to limit general
discussion, which began yesterday, and
it probably will continue several days
at least before amendments are taken
up.
Senator Borah told the senate he had
found an unsurmountable constitutional
barrier against the proposal in the bill
for federalization of the national guard.
He made many legal citations to support
his contention that under the consti
tution congress has no power to enforce
the- discipline it has authority to pre
scribe. Should any state refuse to ap
point officers or to train national
guardsmen, he said, congress would be
without any recourse. It could neither
provide for the training of the guards
men or compel the state to act and it
could not empower the president to ap
point officers or compel the state to
appoint them.
Senator Cummins and Senator Lewis
sharply disagreed with Senator Borah.
Senator Lewis attacked the senate bill
provision for a force of federal volun
teers, saying it was aimed at the na
tional guard and would destroy it if
enacted. The Illinois senator asserted
that the ambitions of regular army of
ficers to rise to deserved promotions
was wholly responsible for the volun
teer army proposal. Because the na
tion was resolved not to maintain a
large standing army and since the con
stitution barred graduates of West
Point from commands in the national
guard, he said, they naturally sought
an avenue of escape from their limi
tations.
Senator Pomerene defended his
amendment proposing creation of a na
tional guard section of the army gen
eral staff. While regular officers look
ed with disfavor on the guard, he said,
no accurate report as to the guard’s
condition and fitness could be expected
from them. Only by appointing national
guard officers to the staff, he added,
could the full use of the state soldiers
be assured.
Senator Brandegee added to the mass
of amendments now pending by a pro
posal to make the maximum peace
strength of the army 250,000 instead of
180,000 as proposed in the bill. Senator
Gore submitted as an amendment his
bill proposing that a military training
course be provided for any high school
with an attendance of more than 50
boys above 16 years of age, the govern
ment to pay two-fifths of the salary of
a military instructor. More than 100,-
000 boys w’ould be brought under train
ing in this way, he said.
Senator Smith, of South Carolina, of
fered as an amendment the measure re
ported yesterday from the agricultural
committee appropriating 315,000,000 for
erecting five government water power
plants for production of nitrate and au
thorizing the president to designate wa
ter power sites. He proposes to urge
his amendment as a substitute for the
Underwood amendment authorizing an
investigation as to the best available
sites and most advantageous method of
producing nitrate.
Another feature of national prepared
ness was considered today by the house
commerce committee with Secretary
Redfield testifying in support of the
CASTO RIA
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pense, with the Flower Garden, as shown above,
thrown in for good measure? See our offer below. I
Feterita, the new cereal. This new grain is proving itself lobe of wonderful
io all parts of the country. It n ill grow and mature a big crop vs k ra>n in from 7; to !H) <la.vs Bfiih 'jKeßigMEgjaE'JgW
Hme One will mak- a plant having from five to ton -talks ami .-a-h -talk will carry a b<-»<l
of seeil. the larger on>*« weizhin- a pound each. 1 bos,, beads
of grnlii are easily gathered and Mored and have a variety of valu-
able llSes. Crush th- sralus <■’ ■ ool; tfi-m whole rite same a- wheat
am! vou ha-e a umst .lolmhtful breakfast ,or-al. I tie kind that -7- ffg**
■ - -■« , nuk , , , hiidron ■■ 1 f m-c-e lak- ti>- L-ram jg”.
>'>'i ha >' it --ound iut- flour and i> mnk-s- -v -IK-tit
• ■ t r i : u- - ('.---in- i.a- t ;'* ?
' k-' W SAbHOSoI.
tor I .'’’off&m - ■ > <- -
TK rat’d i k -mail f-t rm’-.zh k U? EW
~vk-n- ’■ niak. -w >
horse. ' f
')• -at.: » ' >u- ,'WMMBDE
Bm®*’
'ii.’k.'to <m
plant
‘ Sudan Grass. Thi' v underfill nr\\ hay < rop i-
'/• !,!■-; all ■ts f '"•'>> / -
''Z'W w i ’ -i- fS■ Sg
- ■'‘jr " r
1,1 1 - B 1 ",
'<l ' ' ,r <* Utto Im t” '-r '■ sr.-’ " ’ll-' t-ar; I- at ■ jßroffiWß
--H-- sq-
vS|5 v. o v MI.: f.. f ' Sje ' '
4> ;-'an< a 7 -.1 i’l l— ••■ttr'i -.e’-’im., !'- ■■>. s trial '- ' KFS'
■ . ■ Bg ~ ■ T?| ar- rai .ecu - • ■ q
-13 belu'- . ~ “r- - -JjE
~ ! *■ Our Floiver Garden. X\<•alxsa y-<i i < I ;«• Iniire ;i K
flower garden and in this 'pecia! bed we have
-jßßlß’f . r i:u dtfi-tr nt -.ario(i<- of -•»' at.mrti- f‘a- - I -■ t- ■***<,. -J
" <9 ll’- ''■ '-10..n ».a>on ' 4 >'‘ Iffiy! SEyMB
fail. This fl’.-or 1..-1 will ..-rrntant f ;r’ and a “
11 ,T 111 t" v ’ >!l a ' ’he dl fferet.t varieties -nine into id-oni.
Wo'want t< «end you a large package ”f s ■ ntntsth Cant OkgKaJr. A MyiFlr AstiAM L
■ bed a rod long.
Send us SI.OO today and we will send you The Semi-Weekly Journal 18 months, with House
hold Journal and Farm Life, each 12 months and send you absolutely free the big collection of
seed as shown above. This is —————————————————
the rrvoaipst nffpr ever made and The Semi-W eeklv Journal, Atlanta, Ga.
the greatest oner ex er maae, auu Enc * sed flnd $1 00 . • Send nie S emi-w«ekiy journal, is months.
We want thousands Ot iarnicrs to Household Journal, 12 months: Earm Life, 12 months, and the Seed Col-
take advantage of it because it lection Free. ;
not only gives them three good x ame
papers but a collection of seed
that will be appreciated by every P. 0
one - R. F. D. State
light house appropriation bill. The
secretary said the 25 sea-going buoy
boats now in service would be available
as mine layers or (.sweepers in time of
war. Their drag equipment for locat
ing pinnacle rocks, be added, would be
invaluable for mine sweeping or to trap
hostile submarines. >
The house naval committee was not
in session. Secretary Daniels is ex
pected to conclude his testimony Mon
[ day when the hearings will be brought
to a close. Chairman Padgett hopes to
i have the navy bill before the house two
I weeks later.
DRUGGISTS HIGHLY RECOMMEND
DR. KILMER’S SWAMP-ROOI
Satisfied With Results.
I have been selling Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root for six and one-half years
and my customers are always satisfied
with the results obtained from the use
of the medicine and speak favorably re
garding it. I have used it for "pain in
the back.” and a bottle or two put me in
good shape and made me feel fine again.
I believe Dr. Kilmer s Swamp-Root will
cure any cases for which it is recom
mended if they are not of too long
standing.
Very truly yours,
FRANK JENKINS, Druggist.
Pilgrim. Texas.
November 11th. 1915.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You.
Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size
bottle. It will convince anyone. You w ill also receive a booklet of valuable in
formation, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and
mention The Atlanta Semi-Weekly Jo urnal. Regularly fifty-cent and one
dollar size bottles for at all drug -stores. —(Advt.) ’ »
GREAT SPECIAL OFFER
To commemorate our 50th Birthday ikf X'Xl
* —to celebrate our half-century of
unparalleled success —we present the \ A/
greatest offer in our entire history.
SEND US YOUB ORDER FOB
Four Full Quart Bottles C 20 //WIvU'UJH
Hayner Private Stock
Bottled-in-BondWhiskey
at our regular price of M i..;
AND WE WILL INCLUDE Ul mW
Gue Pint Bottle of ffIEE
Hayner Golden Jubilee fa M 111
Whiskey (value 75/) I !!■■■■ MjlWLq
Express Charges Paid by Us. I
NTothing to compare with this offer has ever : fl
IN been known. Hayner Private Stock J
Bottled-in-Bond Whiskey is the greatest • Wj
value in America at our regular price of
$3.20f0r FOUR full quarts, delivered—the WHISKEY j|l
only Bottled-in-Bond whiskey of this de- BOTTLED IH BONO ■- s
lightful quality to be had anywhere at the i|l i
grice we name. And now, in honor of our f
)th Anniversary, we include, without
charge, a full pint bottle of Hayner Golden
Jubilee Whiskey—a rare, old whiskey we
have been reserving for this occasion, and
which would sell regularly for 75? a pint.
With every EIGHT 40 Wilh TWELVE SQ.6O
QUART order at QUART order at
We will send you ONE FULL QUART We will send you TWO FULL QUART
bottle of Golden Jubilee Whiskey bottlee of Golden Jubilee Whiskey
FREE—9 quarts in a11—37.90 value for FREE—I 4 quarts in a11—312.60 value
only 36.40—express charges paid, for 39.60—express charges paid.
Patrons west of the Rockies—write for prices to your territory.
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO.-Dept. G-26
Address our nearest office
Dayton, Ohio; St. Louis. Mo; Boston, Mass; Washington, D. C.; New Orleans. La.
Toledo, Ohio; Indianapolis, Ind; Kansas City, Mo.; St. Paul, Minn.; Jacksonville, Fla.
Distillery at Troy, Ohio. ESTABLISHED 1866 Capital *500.000 Full Fold
Prominent Young
Canadian Killed
(By Associated Press.)
MONTREAL. April 1. —Word was re
ceived here today that Captain Fred
Shaughnessy, second son of Lord
Shaughnessy, head of the Canadian Pa
cific railway, had been killed in action.
Captain Shaughnessy was an officer in
the Sixtieth battalion, a Montreal regi
ment.
! Customers Speak Favorably
We have been handling Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root for fourteen years, and
during all that time we never had a
dissatisfied user of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-
Root: all of our customers speak very
favorably regarding it. We know of
cases of Gall Stones, Gravel, Catarrh
or Inflammation of Bladder and Rheu
matism where it produced the most ben
eficial results. We believe it is a good
medicine for the diseases for which it
is intended.
Very truly yours,
McCUNE DRUG CO..
By N. E. McCune,
Bridgeport. Texas.
November lljtli. 1915.