Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, February 05, 1918, Page 8, Image 8
8 DR. RHODES DISMISSED IN CASE or SEIDENSERG Assistant District Attorney An nounces Physician Is Exonerated AUGUSTA. Ga.. Feb 3—Dr. R L. Rhodes, prominent young Augusta phy sician and lieutenant in th© medical re serve corps, who was arrested last Monday charged with aiding and abet ting an alien enemy, George Setden burg. alleged German spy, and held un der >SOO bond, when given a preliminary hearing Thursday before United States Comissioner Charles J- Skinner. Jr., was fully dismissed from further inves tigation by federal authorities today. Assistant District Attorney Wallace Miller this afternoon issued the follow ing statement on the case: "You are authorized to publish a statement from me to the effect that, as a result of further investigation in the case of the United States versus Dr. R. I*. Rhodes, both the United States commissioner, who-presided at the com mitment hearing, and the prosecuting officer, who represented the government, have satisfied .themselves that Dr. Rhodes is wholly innocent of any in tent to aid and abet an alien enemy in communicating, or attempting to com municate military information of value to a foreign government with which this country is at war. The warrant against Dr. Rhodes has therefore been dismissed and he stands fully exoner ated of any charge Involving, criminal conduct." Fourteen-Pound Boy Twenty Fifth Child Os Atlanta Father When the stork arrived Saturday at his home with a fourteen-pound boy. Iu C. Gentle, of 138 Curran street, be came the father of his twenty-fifth child—thirteen were boys and twelve girls. Announcement of the birth of the baby was made by Dr. J. F. Beck, who has been Mr. Gentle’s family physician for many years. Mr. Gentle is a well known driver and trainer of harness horses and is known to horsemen in every section of the south Government Drydock At Savannah to Hold Ships of 10,000 Tons SAVANNAH, Ga, Feb. 2.—Messrs. E. F. Terry and H. L. Brittain, of the Terry' Ship Building company, have been given a contract by the United States government for the construction of a drydock at Savannah to accommodate ships of 10.000 tons. The site upon which the dry dock will stand has not yet been finally selected. There are two or three locations in view. Work is to start in a short time. I / i < FILLED \v jS-X / Send No Money Send The Coupon Below And YotYll Get Them By Return Mail THIS is a straight-from-the-shoulder proposition that every man and woman | should take advantage of right this very minute. 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How mam’ years have you used glasses (if any) ? Name Post Office Rural Route.. Box No.—State 'balloon cadets Sffl i ILL NIGHT IN SWAMPS Basket Lands in Water Waist Deep and Only One Man Wades Out MACON. Ga, Feb. 2.—Pilot Jewell and I three cadets of the army balloon school ’here, wh> went upon a trial flight Fri- I day morning at 10 o’clock, spent all Fri ; day and Friday afternoon In the water !of the Ocinulgee swamps, according to ’Cadet Rawley, who t,warn and waded out i Saturday morning, leaving the other • three men. He came out of the marsh • near Camp Wheeler and immediiately : notified headquarters. A relief party went after the others, i • Cadet Rawley says after spending an I hour in the air they descended, owing to I the heavy fog. They couldn’t tell where they were or the character of the ground. The basket struck in water nearly waist deep. Most of yesterday afternoon and last night the men spent in the water. Raw ley says the party Is in no danger, but they are sujfering from hunger and cold. Professor Dugger Elected President Os Agriculturists With the election of officers for the ensuing year, the Southern Agricultur al Workers’ association, in session here since Wednesday at the Piedmont hotel, adjourned Friday. Prof. J. E. Dugger, of Auburn, Ala., was made president of the association; Prof. J. D. Eggleston, of Blacksburg, Va., vice president; Prof. Dan T. Gray, of Raleight, N. C., secretary, and W. R- Dodson, of Louisiana; H. A. Morgan, of Knpxville, and B. W. Kilgore. of Raleight, members of the executive com mittee. During their session here the mem bers of the. association discussed many features of agricultural work in the south, notable among them being the discussion of plans for the production of more food, the association’hearing an address on this by Dr. A. M. Soule, president of the Georgia State College of Agriculture and state food adminis trator, and promising their support. Drug and Whisky Held Responsible for Deaths EL PASO, Tex., Feb. 2.—A Mexican drug similar to Indian hemp, together with cheap whisky, was today held re sponsible by Coroner J. M. Deaver for the deathc of five and the wounding of a sixth person here late last night. Felipe Alvarez, crazed from using the drug, shot and killed the two small sons of Mrs. Trinidad Lucero, wounded the mother and killed Policeman Perea and Deputy City Tax Collector Juon Garcia after barricading himself in his home. Alvarez was killed when dyna mite dislodged him from his refuge. THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1918. GERMAN MILITARY DESPOTS FIGHTING I THE PLAIN PEOPLE Swiss, Dutch and Scandina vian Reports Indicate Rapid Spread of General Strikes in Central Empires I LONDON. Feb 2.—ls dispatches i which leaked through the tightly drawn | veil of censorship over the central em i pires tonight arc accurate, Germany’s I military despots now are fighting the plain people to whom President Wil son appealed to throw off the yoke of Hohenzoliernism. •* Swiss, Dutch and Scandinavian dis : patches all reported vast spread of the ' general strike in Germany and Austria- Hungary. Many carried circumstantial I stories of violence to which the govern ' ment resorted, to maintain its hold over the people. Berlin apparently s now wholly under martial law. Troops | have reinforced the police. The government has served an ulti matum on the strikers, ordering their return to work Monday morning and threatening as the alternative not civil processes, but the grim military dis cipline of the firing squad. The mob spirit was reported as hav ing broken out in at least one city— the important war center of Spandau German newspapers reported 'serious rioting there Thursday, according io Amsterdam dispatches. Strikers attack ed the police, destroyed factory and rail road property and stormed bake shops. Independent Socialists are organizing ( a national demonstration in protest against the arrest of Wilhelm Dittmann. Socialist member of the reichstag, who was seized as he attempted to address a crowd in Berlin. Imperial Chancellor Heartling refused to intervene, declar ing he was powerless to invoke civil : proceedure while the military controlled th© capital city. Bloodshed Reported A brief Central News dispatch, from Amsterdam late today reported "blood shed” in the streets of Berlin, but no details are available. Strikers and po j licemen have had frequent clashes there but. until the report, it was under stood order was being restored. The desperation of the German mili tarists is seeti in the order reducing strikers’ food rations reported through Zurich to have become effective today. This, of course, will directly affect strikers’ families and thousands of inno cent women and children are expected to bear the brunt of this retaliation. While Socialist newspapers are urging an immediate session of the reichstag to investigate the strike, junker organs op pose this, ostensibly through national istic motives, but really through fear of undue Socialistic influence. Zurich reported tonight that the Lckal Anzeiger and similar papers urged the government to drastic action, calling the strikers traitors. The Deutsches Tages Zeitung, accused Austria of responsibil ity for the movement, owing to its in sistence on shipment of flour from Ger- I many to Austria. The Rheninsche Zeitung. Socialist, de nounced the government for compelling* publication of "false” news concerning ' the strike. The storm has been brewing in the central empires for many months. Its premonitory outbreak came first in Hun gary. Budapest and Prague were the first cities to report a strike—where men. women and children paraded the streets shouting for bread and for peace. Vienna was next affected. Spreads to Germany Then the unrest spread into Germany. Munich was one of the first cities which I felt it. Next cam#' Berlin itself, center of the gigantic German military ma chine. President Wilson made his first ap peal to the people to rise and throw oft th© yoke of militarism when America cast her lot with the hosts of democra cy, April 6, 1917. Junkerdom in Ger many hooted at the possibility of the masses they had deceived ever seeing the light. The seeds of discontent had been sown in Hungary even before this. The Russian overthrow of czarism in March, imbued the ever-restive Czechs-Slavs with ambitions to become independent. Then came the Bolshevik government lin Russia, which from its outset, un dertook to follow President Wilson's plan of appealing to the people them- I selves. Austrian and Bulgarian troops I ion the northern battle front became I "tavarish” (comrade) to the Russians. The Muscovite democracy of the ex treme found disciples. Inevitably this I yearning for freedom must have spread i back into Hungary and Austria and I Germany. There were some observers here to night who speculated on the likelihood | that Germany’s military masters had j themselves assisted in the growth of this great weapon against themselves. 1 The Teutonic military strategists vio- I lated their armistice pledge to Russia ' by sneaking their choicer troops on that front back home, remoulding them into divisions, and sending them to the west front. These pien may have earned I back to their homes and to the workers I In th© war plants the dreams of full de : mocracy. More than that. Germany must now be feeling tightly the pinch of Amer ica’s embargo. It is midwinter. Long, lean months are ahead—and Germany’s submarine war which was to snatch a victorious peace from the enemy in three months is still far from this end. Socialists United FY>r the first time in Germany’s his tory, Socialist strength is united in op position to the militarist policies of annexation and indemnities. Even Phil ip Scheidemann, the majority Social ist leader, always suspected of being a mere tool of the government, because of his willing acquiescence in every pre vious governmental scheme, is now ac tively working with Ledebour. Haase, Dittmann and others of the extreme Socialist type. One other factor in the situation as London observers saw it, was the likeli hood that the German people have now fully awakened to the bold dictum of annexation and indemnities pronounced at Brest-Litovsk by the German peace delegates. Germany has long been re ported as looking longingly in her hun ger at the fertile fields of Russia, bare ly touched by the plow, andcapable un der Teuton efficiency of producing the food for which the peoples stomachs I yearn. When Russia indicated her de sire for peace, it is possible the Ger man people foresaw the future when German experts teach Russia how best to cultivate her lands and German "kultur” should cement the Muscovites to the Teutons. Then came the German terms, showing Germany’s dictating military masters wanted more than this. Spain Demands Answer LONDON, Feb. 2.—The Spanish note sent to Berlin protesting the torpedo ing of the Spanish steamer Giralda re quested an answer within 48 hours, a Madrid dispatch to the Daily Mail as serted today. FHVSICIL EXAMINATIONS ME TEMPOfIURILT STOPPED Major Mallet Orders State Boards to Wait for New | - Instructions Acting on instructions from Provost ■ Marshal General Crowder, the selective ' service law officer for Georgia, Major Joel B. Mallet, Saturday ordered all local boards in Georgia immediately to discontinue physical examination of registrants until further notice. The step was taken because of the fact that an entire modification of the rules governing physical examinations has been made. The new regulations arc now on their way to Major Mallet and. I until they are received, no examina tions will be made in Georgia. Men or dered to report next week are notified that they need not report until a later date. The new regulations so modify the physical requirements that it is ex pected a very large per cent of the men in class one will be available for serv ice. Men with minor physical disabili ties, which ordinarily would be suf ficient to disqualify, will be put in the nonconibatant branches of service, thereby releasing more able-bodied men for fighting duty. It is expected tfcat all men who al ready have been pronounced physically deficient will be re-examined under the new regulations unless their disabili ties were of very serious nature. GEORGIA POTfiTO KILN 15 GOVERNMENT PLIN Appropriation of $50)000 Is Considered by Senate Committee BY RALPH SMITH WASHINGTON. F©b. 2.—As a result of development at a hearing this after- I noon before the senate committee on agriculture, it is regarded as certain that the federal government will expend approximately >50,0000 in the erection of a plant in south eGorgia for the pres ervation of sweet potatoes. The com mittee heard experts on the practicality of preserving fruits, potatoes and other fresh vegetables by means of a new drying process. Senator Hoke Smith de veloped that the process is especially adapted for thus preserving sweet pota toes and it was tentatively agreed that a plant should be erected in south Georgia for this work. Ground Hog Fails To See His Shadow; Outlook Promising With 41 for the lowest temperature in the past twenty-four hours and with a variance between 45 and 50 degrees pre dicted for Sunday, it was evident at i noon Saturday that the latest long ex < pected cold wave has simply refused to add to Atlanta's record-breaking win ter. “There will b© no chance for the ground hog to, see his shadow at any time today.” said Prof. Von Herrman, "so the future seems bright, if the old superstition about the annual weather oracle is true.” Sunday there will probably be a lit tle rain and a great deal of clouds, ac cording to the weather bureau. The rain will be less than that of Saturday. Fuel Oil Industry Will Be Taken Over By Government Soon WASHINGTON, Feb. 2.—The govern ment today took the final steps toward taking over administration of the fuel oil industry. By presidential procla mation. to be issued soon, the industry will be placed under the fuel adminis tration and be conducted under license. Gen. Wood, Wounded in France, Leaves Hospital PARTS. Feb. 2.—Major General Wood, who was wounded by a shell splinter while visiting the American forces re cently, left the hospital here today. General Wood's chief of staff and two French officials, who were accompany ing the American officer, were also se verely wounded, it was announced to day. WHILE AT WAR Women Suffer at Home. Tenn.—’This Is to certify that I have used Dr. Pierce’s Favorit* B Prescription alsc the Golden Medica Discovery and find them to be as repre seated. When suf fering with nerv ous prostration ‘Favorite Prescrip tion’ cured me when other medi cines failed. I think it is a grand medicine and never fail to recommend it to suffering women."—Mm. Rosa Lee Hogan, Route L Sylacauga. Ala. —■ I have used Dr. Pierce’s Remedies and they are fine. I used the Cough Remedy myself and W_V my wife has used > Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription with good results. More WA ’ than once she used ywßw this medicine when ~ in a delicate condi- ' 4C taou.”—W.B.Grajh’. " Favorite Prescription,” the ever famons friend to ailing women, and 'Golden Medical Discovery,” the great est general tonic, are both pnt up in liquid and tablets, and are to be found in nearly all drug stores. They have enjoyed an immense sale for nearly 50 years, which proves their , tn erite as well as the statements made by users. If not obtainab'e at yc.ur dealer’s send 10 cents to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and he will mail trial package of either tablet®. BAIL COHTBOL BILL WILL HE EXPEDITED IT M'WS REQUEST Amendments Will Limit Oper ation and Measure Provides for Compensation to Stock ; Holders in Various Cmpanies I WASHINGTON, Feb. 2.—The admin- I istration railroad bill, limiting the pe j riod of government control of the rail j roads and providing for compensation ! to the stockholders will be reported to : both houses of congress next week. At the urgent request of Director Gen eral McAdoo, administration leaders will make every effort to expedite pas sage of the measure. senate interstate commerce com mittee voted today to report the meas ure favorably Monday with amend ments limiting government control to eighteen months after the close of the war and giving the president power to initiate rates subject to appeal to the interstate commerce commission. The committee's action was not unanimous, Senators Cummins and Republicans, anouncing that they would submit minority reports. The house committee by a vote of 15 to 6, approved an amendment providing for termination of government control two years after peace is declared. Chairman Sims later announced that his committee would complete consid eration of the measure Tuesday or Wednesday and that he would ask unan imous consent for its immediate pas sage. Tour Amendments Offered Four amendments to limit the time of government control were offered in the house committee. One by Repre sentative Esch fixed the time at one year after the war, another by Repre sentative Barclay at three years, a third by Representative Parker at 18 months, and the fourth, by Represent ative Montague, at two years. Chairman Sims vigorously opposed the two years’ limitation as adopted, declaring that it would affect the val uation of railroad securities. Repre sentative Montague insisted that at least two years would be required for the railroad interests to adjust them selves after the war. Those voting 1 for the two-year amendment were Mon tague. Rayburn, Coady, Dewait, Snock, Sanders, Esch, Hamilton, Parker, of New Jersey; Parker, of New York; Win slow, Dillon,* Sweet, Stiness and Coop er, and those voting against it were ' Sims. Doremus, Stephens, Barkley, Decker and Dale. The senate committee left unchanged the original provision in the bill fixing the rate of compensation on the basis of the annual railway operating income for the three years ending on June 30, | 1917, and the house committee also is I expected to agre to this provision which was suggested by the president Amendments forbidding increas i ed compensation to roads based on their earning's or surplus accrued during the period of government control and put into the property were accepted. The action authorizing the president to purchase and construct canals was amended so as to permit only of their utilization. The section providing for an appro- I priation of >500,000,000 to be used as a revolving fund from which to pay any defiiciencies that may result or to pro vide tor additional facilities, was re tained by the senate committee. The fund would provide the government with working capital for the operation of the roads. Tn providing for the termination of government control eighteen months after the war the senate committee further amended the bill so as to au thorize the president, if in his opinion necessity for further control should I terminate, to relinquish supervision over all roads before that time. Discre tionary power to determine up to July 1. 1918, what roads are necessary in the government operation plan also is I placed in the president, but after that time he could not exclude from govern ment control any road without its con sent. The amendment authorizing the presi dent to initiate rates permits appeal either by the carrier or shipper to the interstate commerce commission which is to investigate and determine their fairness. This section and the one fix ing the time of government control were bitterly debated in the committee and, owing to the wide differences, an ad justment was effected only after the questions had been submitted to a sub committee. Williams Brothers Are Arrested at Quitman In Blind Tiger Crusade QUITMAN, Ga, Feb. 2.—Sheriff J.’P. j Wade has put the blind tigers of neigh boring counties on notice that they can not ship whisky to Quitman. After wait- I ing for hours for the belated train, he I arrested the three Williams brothers, of I Thomas county, yesterday. One of the brothers, Arthur Williams. | met the train with a Ford truck. The sheriff and his posse of four officers were concealacl and arrested Arthur Wil , Hams just as the train came. When ■ Tom and Arch Williams stepped from I the train with six suitcases containing between >4OO and >SOO worth of liquor, the officers seized them. Tom Williams attempted to draw a gun, but was dis armed and the trio were carried to the jail, where they spent the remainder of the night. The Williamses are very well-to-do farmers who live in the western part of Thomas county. Sheriff Wade also arrested a white man, Briggs Simpson, of Morven, and IJ. J. Hendry, of near Morven, charged with being implicated in blind tiger leases at Cecil. Sheriff Nix and a posse | raided the train at Cecil when a crowd of about eight alleged blind tigers were coming in with loaded suitcases. The men abandoned the suitcases and fled, 1 and Sheriff Wade was advised to look out for these two. He arrested them and turned them over to Sheriff Nix. It is reported that blind tiger whisky is now selling at >5 to >8 a quart. Negro Confesses He’s Wanted For Murder 10 Years Ago Willie Mosely, a negro, walked into the police station Friday afternoon and declared that he was wanted for failing to answer his questionnaire and also for the murder of a negro in Greene county. Ga., about ten years ago. Mosely had been using the name of John Preston, and had registered un der that name. “I can’t fill out this thing without swearing to a lie. and T want to live right, so here T am,’’ he told the police when he entered the desck sergeant’s of fice. " 5,5.50L01ER5 KILLED, SIX WOUNDED, IN ACTION Casualty List Covers Recent German Raids on the American Trenches j WASHINGTON, Feb. 2.—Two Ameri can soldiers were killed in action, Jan uary 30, ami six were wounded in action the last few days, General Pershing ca bled the war department today. The killed: Corporal Erwin March, Slayton, Minn., and Private George A. Haugh, 713 Fourth avenue, College Point, New York. The six slightly wounded were: Pri-{ vates Herbert C. Minniear, 504 East i Washington street, Bluffton, Ind.; Clar ence A. Larson, Tunbridge, N. D.; Theron i Parkes. Übion, Tenn.; Raymond J. Gil-1 lette, Minot, N. D., Clarence King, 2847 ! Ambia Annex, Toledo, 0., and Harry Dil- I ley, Col©' Harbor, N. D. The casualty list covers the recent j Teuton raids against *he American > trenches. , Private Minniear was wounded in V l © first raid which started on the night of January 28, in which the Germans cap tured one of our outposts. The others, with tTie exeeption of Private Dilley, were presumably caught in the subse quent attempt of the Germans to cap ture portions of trenches recently taken over by American soldiers. Dilley was wounded January 31. General Pershing also cabled two I deaths from gunshots, one suicide and I eleven deaths from illness. Privates Peter Trogan, Meadow! street. Philadephia, and John Thomas, j 746 Eighth street, Reading, Ta., died from gunshot wounds. Private James Kolar killed himself, i His home was at 3424 South Troy street, Chicago. Those that died from sickness were: i Corporal Elmer H. Van Fleet, 752 Ep- I worth avenue, Cincinnati; Privates Al- I sled, West Barron, Wis.; Rufus Gra ham, Colon, Ga.; John Proctor, 148 ! : Washington street, Jamaica, N. Y.; ■ Emil A. Engstrom, McCloud, Cal.; Har- | vey Nagels, Orlando, Cal.; Thomas Mur ray, 10 Chestnut street, Charleston, S. ; C.; William M. Hastie, East Luray street, Philadelphia; Aleck Cummings, Sandersville, Ga.; Willie Caldwell, 1317 ' Ninth street, Augusta, Ga.; Manuel • Monese, Echo, Ore. STUDENTSDISMISSED FOLLOWING TRAGEDI Young Men Erred in Admitting Unmarried Couple to Room, ! It Is Held F ■ . ATHENS, Ga., Feb. 2.—Recommenda tions of the prudential committee of ■ the University of Georgia, that th© three L students be dismissed, who were in the room with Jami© Johnson and Belle . Hill last Wednesday morning when . Johnson killed the girl and then him > self, was approved by the faculty this [ afternoon. The students are Alva Pen dergrass, Howard Dadisman and Thomas . Holliday. . The students claimed that they ad . mltted the young man and young wom an to their room after the two had found it necessary' to leave an Athens t hotel. Johnson had begged shelter, they . claimed, and they were asleep when he fired the fatal shots. They woke up just in time to see him fall across the . prostrate body of the girl, they said. The committee held “that th© stn ! dents, by knowingly permitting an un married couple to enter their room and disrobe for the night and occupy said . room with said students, were guilty ’ of such a breach of discipline that they should be dismissed from the universt- I ty, and the committee recommends that ! j the faculty take such action.” Fireman Killed and Two Proably Fatally Hurt in Rail Wreck NASHVILLE, Tenn., Feb 2.—Will I Eddings, fireman, of this city, was killed i tonight when his freight train crashed i into another freight train, which had • stalled on a steep grade on the outskirts . of the city on the Nashville, Chattanoo- ■ ga and St.. Louis railway. His body was; buried beneath the engine and freight ’ cars and has not been recovered. Charles Yarbrough, engineer. Nash- ’ ville, and G B. Bailey, brakeman. Ten nessee City, Tenn., were slightly in jured. E. N. Richards, fireman, Nash ville, and Eugene McSweeney, engineer, Nashville, were seriously injured and will probably die. | Workman Is Held For Selling Blue Prints NEW YORK. Feb. 2. —The naval in telligence bureau today caused the ar rest of Hyman Lubarsky, known by ’ the name of "Harold Barr,” at the ship telegraph and signal apparatus manufacturing plant of Charles Cory and Son, in this city, where he was em ployed, on the charge of disposing of important blueprints of government work to persons not entitled to receive them. He was held in >5,000 bail by a United States commissioner, accused of violating the espionage law. The complaint charges that the al leged offense was committed on Janu ary 26. The federal authorities de clined to give further information in I the case other than that Lubarskys arrest is considered “important.” Steamer Montreal Sunk LONDON, Feb, 2.—The steamer Mon treal was sunk in a collision Wednes day, it was announced today. 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It robs the hair; of its lustre, its strength and its very I life; eventually producing a feverish | ness and itching of the scalp, which : if not remedied causes the hair roots Ito shrink, loosen and die —then the hair falls out fast. A little Danderino ! tonight—now—any time—will surely I save your hair. ’ . Get a small bottle of • Knowlton’s Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and after the first application your hair will take on that life, lustre and luxuriance which is so beautiful. It will become wavy and fluffy and have the appearance of abundance, an in comparable gloss and softness; but what will please you most will be after Jusb a few weeks’ use, when you will actually ■ see a lot of fine, downy hair—new hairs I —growing all over the scalp.—(Advt) Not >I.OO. not even 50c, not one eentcoet to you under our easy conditions. No extra charge for fancy, swell styles, no extra charge for extra big, extreme pearl buttons, tunnel or fancy beltZrX loops, no extra charge for anything, ail FREE. Before you take another wQit order, before you bny a suit or pants, gy get our samples and new offer. Agents of other tailoring houses please write, we have anew deal that will open your eyes. We ask every man to answer this, Mkiliia every boy in long pants, every man. everywhere. No matter where you live thUtiM orwhatyoudo.writeusaletterorpostal ■ ’3 and say “Send Me Your New Free QV i OjTer” the big, new different tailoring n W I deal.Costsnothingandnoextracharges. Fg W Write today, thia minute. KNICKERBOCKER TAILORING CO. Oapt. 907 Chicago, HL Ends the Misery Os Wearing Worthless Trusses Away With Leg-Strap and Spring Trusses So l»r as we know, o':r guaranteed rupture bolder is the only thing of any kind for rupture that you can get on fio days' trial—-the only thing good enoogb to stand such a long and thorough test- It’s the famous Clutbe—made on an absolutely new principle—uaa 18 patented features. Self-ad justing. Does away with the misery of wearing oelts, leg straps and springs. Guaranteed to no Id at all times. Has cured in case after case, that seemed hopeless. | Write for Free Book of Advice—ClotEbonnd, 104 pages. Explains the dangers of operation. Shows just what’s wrong with elastic and spring trasses. Exposes the bumbugs.—Shown bow old-fashioned worthless trasses arc sold un der false and misleading names. Tells all about the cere and attention we give you. Endorse ments from over 5,000 people, including physi cians. Write today. Box 672—Cluthe Co., 125 E. 23rd St., New York City. DEARLY MED OF PELLAGRA Used to Pray She’d Paas Away, But Happy Now site’s Cured Mrs. Barna Jacobs, Garnsey, Ala_ writes: ‘T was a constant sufferer front that dreadful pellagra for four long years. My case seemed beyond my. doc tor’s reach and in July, 1910, he said he could do no more for me. I would even find Ynyself praying to die. I suffered so much. Finally my husband ordered a trial of Baughn’s Pellagra Treatment and in three weeks I could see a great change and I am well today. I say to all. take Baughn’s Treatment and be cured, for my case was bad and of long standing.” That testimonial says more than we could say, except this: We can cure pellagra and will undertake to cure any case, no matter how long standing, on basis of refunding the money if w© fail to effect a cure. To get informed on the subject write today for Baughn’s big booklet on pellagra, sent free. Writ© American Compounding Company, Box 587-1* Jasper, Ala.—(Advt.) FMac> WehawanmWp Hg neats ol cases tree I »*ioos. after ustag Mk StTS S 3 EwM HB EXPRESSAGE <m HSWssw? vow letter. Give age. Hundreds of tesftmontale on file. F. HARVEY ROOF CO., Dept- F. 1433. G. P. 0. New York. KTj I i All New. Un, Clean, Sanitary Feathers, I East grade feather proof tkkinß. Satietac- I PRHBBlißmfll tion guaraataad. Write far catalog. | CAROLINA BEDDWfi CO., Dept-110 Greaisboro. N. C. | A Journal Want Ad will reach thousands of readers.