Newspaper Page Text
WW
ISECRHS
■OF THE
■TRAPPERS
fi Every tripper need* V?.""'
”S this wonderful book. N^--—1
SI Tells how to increase your >4
■ catch—how to handle furs '---3
3 and wheretoahip forhighest
g| prices and No Commission Cheeped. gn
| SENT ABSOLUTELY FREE d
9 Together with Game Laws. Supply Cata- jsi
g Io?. Official Fur PricoList.fffiipping tags EM
Is SE? particulars of our 1300 00 Cash Prize sS-J
EM Otters to trappers only. Write today— E-b
B 9 use coupon or a postal card will do.
gs .. .HILL bros, fur co.
H ****•• * St, Louie, Mo. M
m HBX BROS. FUR co.™ 1 r ii
305 Hill Bldg., St. Louis. Mo. RS
■ Send me FREE "Secrets Os Big Trappers" RS
M Official l>ir Pnee List, Game Laws. eti. |sl
Num
Town.. Egl
- - „,BL F. D _|g
HmAJ Hllil
To the
phnfe South’s |
Favorite I
Fur House I
Don't ship yonr furs far awny, when your K
home fur houw PAYS TOP PRICES gives E
.OU the extra profile of Higher Grading ana sea- E
mrt markets—and PAYS you within 24 hours E
>f shipment. For proof send for price list or ship 8‘
oday to the I.
American Exporting I
and Fur Mfg. Co. g
L“9 et °r htffher prices pud u« through the New Bi
Jrleane Port.-the quickest, chaepest port to best rasrkett. RJ
l—Cut down risk of lose or spoilage in shipping. Si
St 3— Shorter distance makes less express charges.
® 4-our SquarS Deal. System of Grading guarantees yaa raj
Sri every cent each pelt is worth. *
$ s— Get y<-ur check within 24 hours-no worrying about S
■ mnn»v when ds-almsr with home folks— P
■m the South's Favorite Fur House.
t/t Ask for Southern Trappers Favorite X vw
Kj Price Liat or ship today. /|\ \ ¥<
AMERICAN EXPORTING AND
*! fur mfg. co.
Dept. R. 425 Decetur Street J
REW ORLEANS, LA. i
ROSARS
Trapper’s Guide —FREE!
Trappers and Shippers don’t wait,
write in to-day for Rogers big improved
Trappers’ Guide—it’s/ree. Tbe biggest. beM
work ol its kind-hang thy cover on your
wall— it'« full of color ana action meant
for retd outdoor men.
Complete lists of traps and trap
per’s supplies at lowest prices—
Game laws—all the haunts and habits of the
fur.bear/-.s— every trapper needs it—and
it’s FK'JE. Rogers pays highest prices,
quickettcasb, and shippingcharges on furs
—deals direct with you. the square deal way—
sradingdone by experts. No commission charged.
Write today for Trapper’s Guide—get prices and
market reports all winter through-Servica Free-.,
don't delay-send card today. Address Dept 173
ROGERS suras '
4000 i ’
TRAPPERS
CONTEST By
Jtbraham HirGz
r-
| IvX \
I contest '
I costs nothing to enter— I
1 write today for particulars. £>; v\\ . I
| Abralfam “Smoke pi
K Pump” is the greatest Zj ■7 X 3
I device for“emoking-'em-W sci z/X
I out”ever invented. One’s. -ySI 7/1M
can of Abraham Improvedi Al
“Smoke Powder”goes! *jf
with every Smoke Pump. ",.*75)
Instructions how to use j
our Smoke Pump and
reasons why ordinary
smokers are not sue- vAA/ '
cessful sent with every
order. Price $2.00 delivered postpaid.
Fist Fasts ansS Trap-
I KEiE pare’ Catalog
You must have thia new book “Fur
It Contains good trapping
ories by Geo. J.Theissen and others
nd valuable information. You get
>ur new catalog IJree also. Best
hunters’and trappers’ gt>id.e Pub
lished. Not a penny to pay for it.
Gives you lowestprices on supplies
—Traps, Guns. Knives, Hunting
Coats, Heavy Coats, Suits for all
weather, Fox Horns. Turkey and
Duck Calls—everything you want
for trapping.
Weekly Reports
—Also Free
We will put your name on our
mailing list for Abraham’s Weekly
Reports. They keep you posted—
right un-to-date on prices, etc.
Just a cost card—that’s all you need
to get all this—FßEE—Fur Facts, the
Catalog and the Weekly Reports. And
_ . M don’t forget the Pump. Ask for offer
Prloe Sz on that. Now get your post card
Postpaid into the mail— quick.
I 213*215 N.M&in Sired Sept 376 §
stLvzus,ttsyt >
"Ship yotir fun to Abraham”
ts JJBMI HLtn
We give thete 4 beautiful piece* of ieWelry. nil gold shell and
guaranteed to wear, for re'l’ng only 8 boxes of our famoua
ROSEBUD SALVE at 25c a box’. Household remedy for burns,
sores, teller, piles, catarrh, corns.-bunions. etc..usedfornear
lySOyears. Easytosell. We also give watches, silverware,
lace goods, books, etc. for selling salve. Order 8 boxes on
credit, we trust you until sold. Big premium catalogue sent
free with salve. Write today.
ROSEBUD PERFUME CO. Box 113 Woodzboro, M 4.
Modli Guaranta&d Watch
Gsntjor boyeaizs openfsco plain polished electro gold plated ewe.gi: 2
dial, orgenMl6 eiaeand leadzs 6 b’:m double huntinrrov»« beautifully
csjraved.wbitoenamel dial4--wind »nu stem set, fitted with a finely
teetad movement, regulated and fully guaranteed s reliable tlmeksepcr.
A- .
AGENTS’; WAnTER.Lr: nesendyattasample r uteh
C.0.D.p.-\rcelp . 3C® : 7
and it ia yotre. Tcv c*'? mot: ?. .; t - t. - : . vutcb« 1.
Kandonatyloandr.'.ccwrnted.Glveyc-rf - xtr-'-.
Boston Jewelry Co. Chicago, 111,
E-25, 39 W. Adams St.
HOLD COTTON FOR
40 CENTS, URGES
ALGOOD OF ALA.
I
MONTGOMERY. Ala. Declar
ing that cotton will’ soon sell for
Forty cents a pound and cotton seed
will go higher in price. M. C. Algood,
commissioner of agriculture of Ala
bama, in a statement urged farmers
to hold their cotton and seed for
better prices.
Commissioner Algood sent the fol
lowing telegram to commissioners
agriculture ii? the cotton grow
ing states:
“The following, information was
gained at the World Cotton Confer
ence at New Orleans:
“Spinners Could Pay 60 Cents”
“English spinners will make ar
rangements to buy three million
bales of American cotton. Indica
tions now are less than a terr mil
lion bale crop. English and American
spinners have very little Cotton on
hand. They are making immense
fortunes on account of the high
prices received for their goods. They
could now pay the farmers sixty
cents for cotton based on the selling
price of cloth.
“Spinners "are excited over the
shortage of our production. They
have millions tied up in equipment
and thousands of workers dependent
upon them for work, and must have
cotton. The American farmers have
a limitede supply of cotton and car.
and will get forty cents if they hold
for it. It takes twelve months to
grow cotton. It should be market
ed over a period of twelve months
and not forced on the market in
three months. This year’s crop was
produced on the basis of the war
time price and with four successive
short crops, the world will face a
cotton famine next June.
Cotton Seed Short
“Thousands of tons of cotton seed
in Texas on account of the incessant
rains have sprouted and rotted in
the fields. In previous years cot
ton seed mills hav ecrushed thou
sands of tons of peanuts. Today
peanuts are selling for’sl6o a ton
for shelling purposes and mills can
not buy them for crushing purposes
Therefore, cottonseed oil will have
no competition from peanut oil.
“Heretofore, thousands of heads of
hogs have been fattened on cheap
peanuts. Peanuts will all be harvest
ed and thus the supply of fats from
this source will be curtailed. And
cottonseed oil wilj certainly be In
great demand. There will be prac
tically no peanut meal produced, an<|
thus cottonseed meal will have no
competition as a stock feed. It is
one of the tyest protein feeds on
the market and will sell for much
higher prices.
“Therefore, based on these facts.
I beg farmers to tenaciously hold on
to their cotton and seed until the
above -mentioned prices are ob
tained.”
The Saphalien Dog
Industry Prospers
VLADIVOSTOK. Conditions in
Amur province have improved since
overthrow of the Bolsheviks, and re
ports here are the dog-raising in
dustry, principal occupation of the
people, is prospering.
GOOD NEWS FOR
FUR SHIPPERS
System of Gradies’ Felts to Credit
Everything in Them Proved
Best by 34 Years’ Use
With the price of furs so attractive, with
so much money in sight, with so many
"new ones” bobbing up and making attrac
tive offers which can’t be carried out, fur
shippers, hunters and trappers should put
great faith in the honest, proven system of
grading furs for all that is in them adopted
by a great Chicago house 34 years ago.
Before making a single shipment you
should write to this house. Make sure of
utmost profits for yourself. Deal with men
who have made good with shippers for more
than a quarter of a century. Write today.
Get prices and full information for ship
pers from Becker Bros. & Co., Dept. 4117,
420 North Dearborn St., Chicago, 129 W.
29th St., New York; 200 Decatur St., New
Orleans.—(Advt.)
DontSend
a Penny
Just write stating
ft ' size and width—that’s all. We’ll
Ben< l the shoes by mail. We
tfi want you to see these shoes
8 at oar r ' E k. Examine them,
\Sj-ziSKtry themon—and then de
-38 to whether or not
.e\ 6; \.y° u wish to keep them.
Our special bargain
69 Per
/SsSrar>.gSxx'is only pair
® while they last. Sea
eon’s greatest bargain.
s send them to y«u.
5® not a cent in advance, so
w with any $7 or $8 shoes. If
? ou don’t think this the
V biggest shoe bargain you
anywhere, send
l,le shoes back at our ex
's4?Ea4lSl pense * You won’t be out
a cent.
amination 'f R Stylish and
hnd them Durable
the great* L-v- Made of genuine
est shoo 'i. leather in gun
bargain of metal, popular
the year. Broad way toe
return and last. Blucher
baek goes style. Comfort-
able, substan-
No obliga- tial, long wear-
tion, no risk ing, genuine
to you. But oak leather
you must send asoles rein-
at once. A a forced shank
like this soon sells x and cap. Mili-
the stock. tary heel. Best
Pay C 69 for expert workman-
only I T. shoes ship. Black only,
when they arrive. Sizes 6 to 11.
QENn lIAUI Just your request. No money now.
vSIw nVH Wait until they come. Pay when
ehoes arrive. Keep them only if satisfactory in every
way. Give size and order by No. A15105.
Leonard-Morton & Co., Dept. Chicago
Boys’ Air Rifle
fine Rifle free for selling
iy 15 pieces of our Jewelry at Wc
each. Write for Jewelry - todav. CO
LUMBIA NOVELTY CO., Dept. 245, East
Boston, Mass.
Beds 25-lb. $9.95 : 30 lb. $10.95 , 35-lb. $11.95; 40-lb.
$12.95: two 3-lb. pillows $1.75. All new leathers best
ticking We havesl.ooo cash deposit in bank to guar
antee satisfaction or money back. Mail order today
or write for catalog which also contains bargains in
'tugs Curtains Counterpanes Blankets Comforts etc.
SANITARY BEDDING CO.,
Dept. 105, Charlotte, N. C.
Mew Father Beds only $11.25
Foaibor Pillows 82.15 per pair. New Feathers, beat
tlclripß. Satisfaction guarant'oed. Write for new Catalc?
5 ESTHER £ PILLOW CO. ,€esh 15 GrcMsbcrt.K '
Big cut
IN ENGINE PRICES)
KEROSENE-GASOLINE
lb g 2t030H-P.
I Immediate Shipment
In Stationary. Portable or
||. Saw-Rig—all at greatly
I reduced prices. Best En
gine—longest record—
fi strongest guarantee. Choose your own terms. N’o
|i cut in quality, but a big cut in price for quick ,
F action. Write for new cut-price catalog—FßEE.
| postpaid ED. H. WITTE. Pres.
' WITTE ENGINE WORKS
i » 265 7|Oak!and Avenue, Kansas City. Mo. i
|IX 2Gs7.Xnipire Building. Pittsburgh. Pa. |.
WEEKLY .TOURNAI’. ATLANTA. GA. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 24, T9IO.
.... .... . . - * -. ...
FAIRBURN BANK
!CASE WILL BE
HEARD SATURDAY
The next important development
in the Fairburn bank case will
come next Saturday before Judge
George L. Bell in the superior
court, when a hearing will be Jield
tc decide whether a permanent re
ceiver shall be appointed for the
property of Mrs. Catherine Queen
Eradstreet and William B. Green.
The hearing was set by Judge
Bell when he appointed James H.
I-ongino, of Fairburn, temporary re
ceiver for their property soon after
their arrest. Since then thousands
of dollars worth of property be
longing to Mrs. Bradstreet has been
taken from her hotel and from
the home of her father, A. P. Queen,
in Panthersville, and stored in safe
deposit and in warehouses in At
lanta. Green’s property also was
taken in charge by Receiver Longi
no.
At the Saturday hearing, it is
understood, the entire question of
whether the prosecution in the
Bradstreet case has a right to
teize this property, will be threshed
out. Such a right, must be shown, it
is said, before a permanent re
ceiver is appointed, and in order
to make such a showing it may
be necessary for the prosecution to
r.rove that there was a shortage >n
the bank’s affairs and also prove
that she property owned by Mrs
Bradstreet was bought with monet
furnished her by Green.
Thus, it is possible that much
of the evidence already gathered by
the prosecution will be made pub
lic in court then instead of wait
ing until the Monday following,
when Green, Mrs. Bradstreet. Clar
ence F. Bradstreet and the negro
chauffeur Robert Ellison, come, np
for commitment hearings in Camp
bell county before Justice of the
Peace Homer McDaniel.
It is possible that by the time
for this hearing the audit of the
.bank’s books will be completed, al
though W. O. Martin & company,
appointed by State Bank Examiner
W. J. Speer to perform the audit,
will make no statement ori the stat
us of their investigatoins until
their report is ready.
W. T. Roberts, president of the
Fairburn Banking company, told
The Journal Tuesday that the audit
■ had not progressed far enough for
any statement on the bank’s af
fairs to be made. He reiterated his
previous statement that no depositor
will suffer a penny’s loss in the
event a shortage is discovered. \
Mrs. Bradstreet still is at trie
home of her parents in Panthers
ville. She was in Atlanta for a
little while Monday, conferring with
her attorneys, but was not ex
pected in the city Tuesday. Her
husband still is at the tower a"d
the chauffeur, Ellison, is in jail
at Fairburn.
Macon Fair Open;
Exhibits Are Fine
And Crowd Good
MACON, Ga., Oct. 22.—With pros
pects that it will be the greatest in
the history of the association, the
Georgia State fair opened at Cen
tral City park here Wednesday morn
ing and will continue ten days.
Practically every county in
south and central Georgia and
several in the northern part of the
state have entered the county exhibit
contest. This 'has been an annual
event for years and keen rivalry is
aroused between the counties. Hand
some cash prizes are offered.
Every day of the 1919 fair will be
a feature day. Friday will be agri
cultural day, when farmers from all
parts of the state will gather here.
Saturday, Governor Hugh Dorsey and
his staff and members of their fami
lies will be guests of the association.
The grounds will be opened Sunday
and a concert will be played by the
Rainbow Division band. The band,
which will also play concerts every
afternoon and evening during the
exhibition, is composed of veterans
of the forty-second division and
served nearly two years in France.
The One Hundred and Fifty-first
Machine Gun battalion, composed
largely of Macon soldiers, was a
member of the division and many of
the musicians are personal friends
of the Macon soldiers. Tuesday of
next week will be Rainbow Division
day, and members of the former na
tional guard units will attend.
The races will start Saturday of
this week and continue through Fri
day. The card provides for harness
races only, but it is probable there
will be several running' , events if suf
ficient entries are obtained. Many
of the horses that contested in At
lanta at the Southeastern fair will be
here. Most of them have arrived.
Several celebrated stables winter at
Central City park, and all have en
tered horses in the races.
Next Monday will be cattle day, and
awards in many live stock depart
ments will be* made. Live stock men
will have their inning in earnest Wed
nesday when the Georgia Swine
Breeders’ association and the Cattle
Breeders’ association will hold their
annual conventions here and spend
most of the day seeing the exhibits
at the fair. At night they will be
guests of the fair association at a
banquet.
Thursday will be tractor day. The
national farm power machinery
demonstration held here last spring
has increased interest in this region
in power machinery, and practically
every make vof tractor in the coun
try will be demonstrated. A Ford
son tractor and complete set of farm
ing implements has been offered as
a prize in the boys’ pig club Contest.
The offer was made by the manu
facturer.
The children’s qjlhbs have sent
many exhibits, which are in charge of
officials of the State College of Agri
culture of Athens. They include
practically all of the 14,000 school
children in Bibb county, and many
from other counties will attend.
The faiq will close on the night
of October 31.
To Go Deep Into
Wilds of Brazil
RIO JANEIRO.—The interior of
western Brazil is being tapped oy a
railroad connecting tbe rubber for
ests and ore deposits of this wild
region. •
Loses Pet Dog but
Meets Her Sweetheart
NEW YORK.—Miss Kathleen Mar
tyn has a sweetheart and a pet dog.
She took the dog down to the pier
yesterday to meet her overseas lover
and left it with a ,boy. Both dis
appeared. Reward $250.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
n Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the /'Z-' -
Signature of
PACKERS REAP THEIR BIGGEST PROFITS
IN BY-PRODUCT INCREASES
BY MILTON BRONNER
WASHINGTON, D. C.—ln fight
ing Senator Kenyon’s bill to curb
them by a federal licensing system,
the big packers have engaged in a
huge advertising scheme to show
how little profit they made out of
meat.
• They discreetly keep silence about
what they make out of hides, oleo
oil, oleomargarine and tallow, which
are among the principal packing
house by-products.
Every person who buys shoes, or
anything else made out of leath
er; every person who buys soap
or candles, pays tribute to the big
packers. Oleo oil is largely used
in making oleomargarine, soap and
leather. Oleomargarine is, of cours
a substitute for butter, made out of
oleo oil, neutral lard and some veg
etable oils. Tallovz is used in mak
ing candles and soap.
The department of labor has been
making a study of comparative prices
at Chicago over a period of years,
which shows indirectly what prof
its the big packers nave been taking.
The average price paid at Chicago
in 1913 for good choice steers was
8 1-2 cents per pound. This rose
as high as 18 6-10 cents in March,
1919, and sank to 16 9-10 in July-
The fresh carcass from these cat
tle sold at 13 cents per pound in
1913. July last, it sojd for 20 8-10
cents per/pound.
According to these figures, while
the cost of cattle rose 98 per cent,
the selling price of be.ef carcass rose
only 60 per cent. But other prod
ucts more than saved the day for
the packers.
Hides rose from 18 4-10 cents per
pound in 1913 to 48 cents in July
of this year, or over 160 per cent
increase.
Oleo oil rose from 11 1-2 cents
■to 33 8-10 cents, or over 195 per
cent increase; oleomargerine rose
from 16 3-10 to 35 1-2 cents, or
118 per cent; tallow increased from
All Fur-Bearing
Animals Are in
Demand Just Now
AU of the trapper’s work isn’t con
fined to the three oF four months
when he is out running his lines and
engaged in trapping operations prop
er. No, there’s a whole lot of pre
season activity which the careful
trapper will not neglect.
No trapper ever lost anything by
being prepared ahead of time, but
there are plenty all over the coun
try who could trace big or little losses
to their having delayed' too long. So
the sooner you get everything ready
for trapping, the surer you are of
avoiding disappointments and, per
haps, losses later.
It’s a good plan to decide at an
early date just what animals you’re
going to go after when the season is
on, for then you’ll know just what
preparations to make. If you know
in advance that you won’t be able
to devote a very great amount of
time to trapping that’s no reason
why you can’t go in for it at all.
It simply means that you will have
to have a shorter trap line and con
fine your operations to the immediate
vicinity of your home. But it doesn’t
mean you can’t -get your share of
pleasure and profit out of trapping.
Skunk and civet cat, especially, are
two fur-bearers that seem to have
little fear of man, and they often
locate right on your own Tiome lot.
Dens of skunks are often discovered
under houses and barns, near old hay
or straw stacks, old trees and hedge
fences; and the civet has been found
to be even less particular on ho-r
close he gets to man.
So with a little reconnoitering and
study of the ground ip your
neighborhood, you will be able to
single out their dens, runways and
tracks and then you get a clear idea
or just where to set your traps. If
you can’t leave the home territory
to any great extent, set more traps
right in your own neighborhood. Get
plenty of traps and bait and have
everything planned before the sea
son begins.
If, however, you have the time t■>
go into trapping on a bigger scale,
then it becomes all the more im
portant that your preparations are
thorough and complete in every re
spect. Plan your trapping lines ac
curately, and know beforehand where
you are going to make your sets and
what animal each trap is expected
to catch. * .
Here is the big thing that every
trapper—especially he who traps on
a large scale—wants to impress on
himself. After the season opens in
full swing, you need all the time
that you set aside for trapping for
making j/our sets and running your
line, skinning, casing and drying your
catch and shipping it away. There
won’t be any top much time left
then to get new traps in order and
make your outfit complet and to be
cide on the best places for making
sets. For time lost on hurried prepa-i (
ration after the season opens, means
so many dollars out of your pocket.
“Hold Peanuts,” Is
Advice of Field Agent
ALBANY, Ga., Oct. 18.—“ Hold your
peanuts and get $240 a ton for
them,” is the advice given to Georgia
farmers by W. W. Webb, of Hahira,
field agent of the state bureau of
markets, who was here for a short
time yesterday. Buyers from Vir
ginia and Carolinas are in the
Georgia market this year, says Mr.
Webb, and they will pay twelve
cents a pound for this year’s Geor
gia peanut crop if they have to.
There is a wide difference in prices
paid for peanuts in different parts
of the state, says Mr. Webb, rang
ing from $l2O to $145 a ton, but in
every case the price paid is far be
low what the grower should receive
and will receive if he holds his pea
nuts. The crop this year is a small
one and an abnormal demand will
prevail for seed peanuts next spring,
is Mr. Webb’s opinion, which is an
. other reason for holding.
Marshal Petain
For Parliament
PARlS.—Marshal Petain, once
commander-in-chief of the French
army, will be a candidate for elec
tion as senator from the department
i of Pas de Calais, where he lives.
First Flyless Town
SARANAC LAKE, N. Y.—The
health authorities here claim that
the town is the first to be “flyless’-
in the world.
Despite the unusually hot weather
during the summer there were hard
ly any more flies than most places
i have in January, and the prediction
lis confidently made that next year
• there will be none at all.
It cost the town about SI,OOO to
i eradicate Bhe fly nuisance, which was
; accomplished by requiring that ma
nure be screened and frequently re
; moved.
THETIR_ THEIR_
/CHARGE CHARGE TOR/K
/MEAT ADVANCED HI DEC ADVANCEdX
/ ’ 60% 60% X
/ /PACKERS' paidK\
/ \ 1
/ their. / \charge FOR
[CHARGE / | OLEO OIL
FOIO i
GLYCERINE I ,
[ADVANCED I _ O.iimii J / 1 5/o
\ RIBT 7 /
\ / i
\ /^T’H El h ar gel /
x/CHARGE FOlcT FOR TALLOW /
\ OLEOMARGERINEL ADVANCED 7
X ADVANCED v /
\116% 180%/
The above diagram pictures
by-product.
7 1-10 cents per pound to 20 1-2 cents
or over 188 per cent.
A study of prices in by-products
of packing houses made by the- war
industries board also throws an in
teresting light on how things re
bounded to the profit interest of the
big packers.
Home production of tallow great
ly increased during the war. In ad
dition we imported more than usual
* Forget “Math” at Bank
PHILADELPHIA.—"Students are noto
riously poor bookkeepers and very often over
draw their accounts,” says Alfred W.
Wright, assistant cashier of the Centennial
National bank here, which many of tbe stu
dents patronize. “These freshmen young
sters especially have to be warned that their
accounts are not desirable should they tall
below a certain amount."
M 'WillK
20 skunkßi B| jMI- hA i
caught in one week by [A ffcA pOi A l ”' -I feiMk
Claude Scott of Rocky bl s?] •■agtifl. r- 'j I \
Ford, Colorado using H DfeW 21 sets 1/^'IL I '
Fursten Animal Baits Lt& WC'.-T dg ® /*yr BW m Mdwl ’
and traps. gR WmfiWU
' . Ml® 11
h’ 1
•i , 7MyWrf i wMy^r^^TWTWv ■ •
iAdi
I &gB CMOOI ‘
MSJmrB |g|i IBM mIOMm 1
; ?|>Vl wjfi?„ cJHmiffiJj &/ \wmeS« < / r/ih v»» 13
zo Stak!
Catch ' '
With
FUNSTEM
Animal BaiCf &&
Irresistible! Draws animals great distances to your traps. Earns
its cost with first pelt taken. Bottle makes - more than 100 sets. Dif
ferent bait for every kind of animal.
Bargains in rwirm®
Trappers’ Supplies |K |C fOM. 1
Et»XXXX°X Wpers’ Guide
your pelts. Deal with “The World’s' '
Largest Fur House.” B ig « 3 in p> Book free.
Victor Traps Funston Perfect Pictures of animals in col
eF aino u s Victor Smoker ors Charles Livingston
Traps, best in the ~ , - , . « <•.
world; au sizes NO. d e e T n ery “ out of Bull, America’s greatest
0 to No. 4. Every ..
trap guaranteed per- onlr"" animal Hrtist. SUCCCSSfuI
feet. Sure to go; fuU f urre d
sure to bold, with maleg ’ nn(l 7fjP trapping methods, how to pre-
chains. Lowest prices. No. 1 Victor . t vi t ? Jr Jr
Trap, for Muskrat, etc., single and fe- pare and ship fIITS, etC. CcltH-
spring, jaw spread 4-in. Price per , dr p . . .
doz. ? 1.98. Postage extra. Wt. 7% “Xpe jf P"ha?ejj? lo £ S tra PP m £ SU PP IieS and & IV£S
SiZeSPriCedeq " ally,oW: nX. * eXtra * game laws. Also get on our
seif on first den you visit. list for free Market Reports and
IK Universal Fur Stretcher Water Sets Shipping Tags. Write today.
Il tj Glow fish coat-
A Stretches pelts -««* s 0
I M ll’ ' USt nßht ‘ Im ’ in dark. “Suri! EPOS: Gl23232323253S2E3SEBHSE3MSS3
' 11 II proves skins. Ketch” Fish, E K
/ II IB; quickens drying. 7.n£i [ S'UJISTSH BROS. & CO.
AJJU-kJ Adjustable. Made ."'D?.Veo»; .n7.t». Mo I
of Strong Steel and verv durable. <>r animals. Glow Fish, each . I >67 -
~, . ‘ , , , . 10c. doz. $1 postpaid. “Sure- g ~ g
All sizes. See catalog for prices. Ketch,” doz. 35c., 3 doz., sl, G Please send me FREE Trappers’ Guide, a
postpaid. g Game Laws and Supply Catalog.” Also put g
„ B my name on list to receive free Market Reports a
AS Ws* a and Shipping Tags.
Fttnstea Bros. & Co. A 4 !
167 Funsten Building St Louis, Mo. 9 Address- |
’LI CT ——
packer' profit-taking in meat and
from South America and exported
far less. But tallow kept going up
for the reason that the by-product
of tallow obtained in making soap
is glycerine.
Glycerine is one of the most im
portant ingredients in cer
tain kinds of high explosives. Glyc
erine rose in price from a pre-war
figure of 18 cents to a war-time
charge of 56 cynts per pound.
Turtle an Old Settler
CHRISTIANA, Pa.—Charles (J. Sweiher,
finding a large turtle that appeared very
old, turned it over and found carved on tbe
breast of its shell: J. Homsher, 1840.” Mr.
Homsher, who was for many years a promi
nent citizen of lower Lancaster county, died
years ago.
RESERVATIONS
IN UNIFICATION
URGED BY KILGO
At the close of a strong speech by
Bishop J. C. Kilgo against the pro
posed unification of the northern and
southern branches of the Methodist
Episcopal Church except with the
provisos that local self government
.be preserved, that the rights of mi
rorities be safeguarded, and that ne
groes be kept as they are in a sep
arate church of their own, the At
lanta Methodist Stewards’ Associa
tion, meeting in quarterly session
Tuesday night at Park Street Meth
odist church, adopted resolutions
urging the southern members of the
joint committee on unification to ap
prove no plan of unification which
may be presented at their forthcom
ing session unless that plan mbod
les each and everyone of these pro
visos, especially the one relating to
rhe negrp.
Bishop Kilgo, whose home is in
Charlotte, N. C., is a former presi
dent of Trinity College, and is one
of the strong men of southern Meth
odism. He spoke Tuesday night to
the stewards of Atlanta with great
eloguence 2nd power. His address
was a general arraignment of radi
calism in all fields of thought and
lines of endeavor. Nothing, he de
clared, is safe from the rising tide
that threatens to sweep away insti
tutions of religion, education, Indus
try, and politics. It is time for con
servative men to set themselves
against the forces of destruction
falsely claiming to be the forces of
progress.
Judge Howard E. W. Palmer In
troduced the resolutions adopted at
the close of the bishop’s address.
They were adopted by a rising vote
on motion of Asa G. Candler. They
called upon the southern members
of the unification committee to gov
ern themselves in accordance with
the declaration of principle adopted
by the general conference of south
ern Methodists in Oklahoma City in
1914 and subsequently reaffirmed by
the general conference in Atlanta in
1918. This declaration embodied the
above provisos.
Markets Century Old
HARRISBURG, Pa.—-This city has
markets which are probably the old
est in the United States. Public rec
ords' show that they have been con
tinuously in operation for 190 years.
BACKACHE AND
HEAVYFEELING
Weak,, Nervous, Restless
Woman In Arkansas Hears
of Cardui, Tries It and
Is Greatly Benefited.
Now Recommends It
To Others
Peach Orchard, Ark.—Mrs. Nonie
High, who lives near here, states.
“Sometime ago I began to have trou
ble with my back. I would ache ana
I could hardly get up when down. 1
was so weak I would just drag
around and did not feel like doing
anything at all. I was so nervous 1
felt I could scream, and , . . such
a heavy feeling I could not rest at
all. It looked like I was going to
get down in bed . . .
I heard of Cardui and thought 1
would try it and see what it would
do for my case. After taking a few
bottles Ij grew stronger . . . The
bloated, heavy feeling left me. i •
wasn’t so nervous, in fact, felt better
all over. I took twelve bottles and
certainly was greatly benefited ana
can recommend it to any one as a
tonic or builder. I often tell others
how it helped and strengthened me.”
Cardui is a mild vegetable tonic,
with no bad. after-effects. Its ingre
dients act in a helping, building way,
on the womanly constitution.
Ask your druggist. He knows
about Cardui. Some druggists have
sold it for forty years.— (Advt.)
CATARRH
Stop catching colds, stop the offen
sive discharges from nose and throat,
quit swallowing the poisonou* mucus.
Overcome catarrh of the head and
deafness or head noises. No need to
dose yoiA-self, use soothing, healing
medicated vapor. Get DR. BLOSSER’S
CATARRH REMEDY at the drug
store or send 10 cts. (silver or stamps)
for Health Book and free Proof Pack
age to Blosser Co., CA-11, Atlanta, Ga.
Many reports of amazing relief after
years of suffering after all else failed
Keep and show others this adv’t
FREETFREE!
Remarkable Discovery
for.PELLAGRA!
10,000 packages of Argallep have been set
aside for free distribution to pellagra suf
ferers. We want to prove to this many suf
ferers at our own expense that Argallep is
the only safe and sane method of overcoming
Pellagra. No matter what ybu have used or
how many doctors have told you that you
could not be cured, send for the frse package
of Argallep and be convinced.*' Send no
money, simply your name and address and
tne FREE package will be sent at once in
plain wrapper by prepaid parcel post.
Read These Symptoms
Thousands of people who are in ill health
really have Pellagra, but don’t know it.
Watch for these symptoms: Sore Mouth;
Lips, Throat and Tongue inflamed; Tired,
Drowsy feeling; Frequent Headaches; Rough
ness of-Skin; Hands red; Eruptions; Indi
gestion; Diarrhea or Constipation and many
others. If you have any of the above symp
toms, act immediately. Send your name and
address for a free supply of Argallep and we
will also send you a free booklet fully de
scribing Pellagra and telling how,you can
overcome it in the shortest possible time. ■
Send today sure. ARGALLEP CO., Dept.
202, Carbon Hill, Ala.
60 Days’ Trial
If you suffer from Debility, Nervousness,
Insomnia, Lack of Vigor, Rheumatism, Lum
bago, Lame Back, Poor Circulation, Dyspep
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trouble due to low vitality, send for our Free
Book telling all about the genuine Sarden
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This is an opportunity you should not miss,
You are fully insured againt failure and
take no risx whatever. The Sanden Her
culex Belt is the best in the world and our
offer is absolutely genuine. Write for Free
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THE HERCULEX CO., 1416 Broadway,
New York (Dept, M,),
NEGRO SOLDIERS
IN OUR WAR
(Ntw Book, With Peace Terms)
Tells all about the wan; it is fair to
colored people. A tremendous seller.
Price only $2.50. Agents 'making $8
, to »15 a day. Send 15c postage for free
outfit. •
JEITKINS-AUSTIN PUB. CO.,
Washington, D. C.
YOURHEART
a Try Dr. Kinsman’s
Heart Tablets '
In use 25 years. 1000
Reference. Furnished. SI.OO
per box at druggists. Tria
treatment mailed free. Addrus
i
, Dr. F. G. Kinsman, Box 865, Augusta, Maine
F X • NERVOUSNESS
( FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE J
XtO ALL SUFFERERS’ DON’T DESPAIR Z
/io, SEND AT ONCE ■TO DAY
* S - 4 ALlAheseFlV® 'V
Ml W premiums given for A
iffl in g 8 gold decorated
boxes Beautifying Face (Ml
■'oWf Cream at 25c. each. Write AJA
. ' for Cream. We trust vou.xyx
T CHEM CO. A
Bri'lgevater, Cena. J
G 00&C'OOOOCOCX>OOOOQOQn (
—-tooocooocr
f^iL-Also Lace Curtains,Rogers
a "'J'-'''itf/'A. Silver Sets, fineLockeU,
IMs'l:®'** KijK MBmLaValliersandjnanyoSher
' lo’zMSSw’' Fv4lu * ble P r " Bnt * for • ell-
our beautiful Art & Re
ligious pictures nt lOcts. .nch.
$2.00 and choose premium wanted, according to biglist.
KAY ART CO., Dept. 34 CHICAGO,ILL.
■J J'JT.vb, l??y: YES I Tbe« two pair
a beautiful Nottingham t F'O, U, Rl
ftLR’fSUT Lace Cuitnins willbeL/|fjr;gWy
ii".M(P-|PJ youssjustfosselbngout
IF Er IF.fi ■ lona famous ROSEBUD .Al
SALVE.l2scU.nbos. CUkTAIRS
i Recommended for thir- V
S£*gr.. X»SSy ty yean for bums, tetter, W J'ssJ A-
wr«. piles,
coms, bunions, etc. Everybody knows it. everybody b»X e -
We also give watches, jewelry, bookt. Bible, toys, etc. lot
•-Hing salve. Aik today fol eight bole on credit; we trust
you uutil Big ptemium catalogue »ent free with •***«.
ROSEBUD PERFUME CO box 253 WoMibwo. MX
3