Newspaper Page Text
I
“They WORK 1
, while you deep* J
/ga\>
A Dependable Physic
when Bilious, Headachy,
Constipated and Upset.
10, 25, 50c —drugstores.
ADLER
JIWtW /VO MONEY
IQ) f/V ADVANCE
Organ Offer
Tour Own Time to Pay
My 30-Day Free Trial—No Money
Down Offer—Breaking All Records —
spi Greatest Oiler Ever Made
The value of an A diet Organ in your
own home can never be measured in
dollars and cents. Because 1 want
every family to know the elevating
1 power and the delights of sweet organ
; music, I have originated the wonderful
| WAdW' plan of selling organs which has
■ mads the “Adler” a household word—
more than 100,000 of these famous organs
are in the homes of the people. Send
tB today for big, handsomely illustrated
Wk Free Organ Catalog. Learn bow you
1 B can have the World’s Best Organ— I
Stall ®wfan«r.f of highest prize at St. Louis
p-vn World’s Fair, also winners of Gold
fl.n J. Medal at National Conservation
HOSUroen Exposition at Knoxville. Tenn..
Ho Interest jp/3—sentto your home without
KoColleclon ß paying a cent for a
JXS3L A, FREE 30-Day Trial
tobuy.Thenpay B *
me at your con- % Have it a month free—it it
venience, small X d 9esnot Prove all I claim
amounts. If at the X JU3t Eh ‘P it back tome—and
end of a year the X yoor tr,al doea not co,t
“Adler "fails to make X . yOU “ Bin * Ie
good on every claim, I XU
will refund every dollar
you have paid me. The
Adler is the World's Beet a
Organ a‘ the very j X
lowest price ever
made before.* SO-
Year Guarantee. ■
I can and will save J
you $43.75 because I
sell direct from the R m\TSsl
$1,000,000 Adler Or- gUWJWfKiS. i R r£sW'«
gan Factory (great- £
est in existence) at
lowestwholesalefac
torv prices The Ad
ler Plan thorough
ly wrecks all retail
organ prices, ab- a
solutely spon ||
out all II
tween” profits.
Mail I
Coupon I
Today I H
! c. ur,
I Adler, Pres. | I V A
I Adler Mfg. Co-,
8245 W. Chestnut St. Louisville,
j Sendme—FßEE—your wonderful Organ Book. I
|”*“ •:•••{
I address. .... .................. I
Thousands Cured By
Drinkingjfcral Water
The Famous Ferlax Bfineral Springs
at Excelsior Springs, Mo., Makes
Generous offer to Sufferers
Every year as manv as 250,000 peo
ple visit Excelsior Springs, Mo., to
drink the wonderful waters found
there. Invalids from all over the
country, »given up by their home
doctors, find health and vigor in
the mineral and curative agents
compounded, far underground by Na
ture. i
Probably the most famous waters
■re those found in the Perlax Min
eral Spring, and many thousands
who have suffered from Gout,
Rheumatism, Constipation. Liver
and Kidney troubles arid similar ail
ments have been permanently re
lieved by drinking it.
So confident are the owners of
the spsipg that this water will ben
efit you. that they offer to send
a $1 carton of Perlax Mineral Salts
to anyone who will write for it.
When dissolved in water this is
equal to ten gallons of Perlax Min
eral water. Their offer is that it
is to be paid for orily # if it benefits.
The person taking it *is to be the
sole judge and report results within
thirty days’ time.
If*you suiter from any of the
above diseases write for a carton to
day. Send no money—just your
<name and address to Perlax Mineral
'/Springs, 470 Perlax Bldg., Excelsior
'Springs, Mo.—(Advt.)
Women
Made Young
Bright eyes, a clear skin and a
body full of youth and health may
be yours if you will keep your
system in order by taking
GOLD MEDAL
'The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric acid troubles, the
enemies of life and looks. In use since
1696. All druggists, three sizes.
Look for the name Gold Medal on everj
box and accept no imitation
rxn, «*»,«»• Treated One We A
II S 3 OEIMt W FREE. Short breath
-11 rifc |d B ing relieved in a few
■■ ▼ ■ ■ hours, swelling re-
duced tn a few days, regulates the liver,
kidneys, stomach and heart, purities the
blood, strengthens the entire *.ystem. Write
for Free Trial Treatment. COLLUM DROP.
BY REMEDY CO., DEPT. 0. ATLANTA. GA.
FREEMfIfiSR
■Genuine Song-o-phone comet, solid metal, highly
Biolished. Anyone can play it. Given for selling 25
Kewelry Novelties at 10c each.
I Eagle Watch Co.. Dept. 461. East Boston. Mass.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
Rescues Girl; Wins
Cash; Gets Bride
SPRINGFIELD, Mo.—William*
(“Hos”) Faach, thirty-two, a
newsboy of Springfield, is cele
brating his rise from a home in
the street to wealth.
“Hos,” as he is known in
Springfield streets, came to wealth
through the oil-game, although he
knew nothing of his fortune until
the first semi-monthly check for
$1,500 came yesterday .from a
Dallas law firm. The check was
the first dividend on an interest
in a 3,000-fbarrel well in the Bull
Bayou field in Louisiana.
Nine years ago Faach rescued
I eleven-year-old Mary Roberts
from a burning house at Clare
more, Okla. J. J. Roberts, the
girl's father, deeded the oil stock
to Faach as a reward, And to put
a “movie” climax to his fortune,
Faach said he was to marry the
girl and the wedding has been set
for October 24.
COTTON MEETING
SCHEDULED HERE
FRIDAY,SATURDAY
Plans* for the annual meeting of
the Georgia division of the American
Cotton association were announced
on Monday by R. W. Mattux, state
president. The meeting is to held
in the house of representatives, in
the state capitol, next Friday and
Saturday, and will be attended by
delegations representing every coun
ty in the state.
Importance of storing cotton in
bonded warehouses, as distinguished
from non-bor.ded warehouses, will be
a leading subject of discussion at the
meeting. For several months the
cotton association, with co-operation
by the state market bureau and the
state department of banking, has
been advocating the use of bonded
warehouses by farmers storing their
bottom As a result, a large number
of warehouse owners have complied
with the terms of the United States
bonded warehouse law and bonded
themselves. A bonded warehouse re
ceipt makes a better piece of col
lateral for a bank loan than a non
bonded warehouse receipt.
Other subjects to be given a prom
inent place on the program of the
meeting are county organization, co
operative marketing societies, organ
ization of an export corporation,
warehouse construction, etc.
Senator Thomas J. Heflin, of Ala
bama; Senator E. D. Smith, of South
Carolina; ex-Governor R. I. Manning,
of South Carolina, and Senator Hoke
Smith, of Georgia, will be among the
speakers. J. S. Wannamaker, of St.
Matthews,. C., national president
president of the American Cotton as
sociation, will also be on the pro
gram.
George Johnson, Judge,
Fines George Johnson,
Prisoner, in Liquor Case
Recorder George Johnson Monday
morning fined Georgd Johnson sll
and bound George Johnsoff over- to
the state courts under a bond of SIOO
on charges of having whisky in his
possession. , . . „
“Good morning, George Johnson,
said Recorder George Johnson, when
George Johnson answered the call
of the clerk. I ■
“Good morning, Judgb George
Johnson,” replied George Johnson.
The Georg” Johnson who was fined
and bound over by Recorder George
Johnson was arrested Sunday in a
room at SO Armstrong street, follow
ing a disturbance he had created
among several people living in the
neighborhood. It was also claimed
that almost a pint of whieky was in
the possession of -George Johnson.
George Johnson is a negro, and
gave his address to the police as 98
Central avenue. ___ j
GALLSTONE TROUBLES
A new booklet written by Dr. E. E. Pad
dock, Box 55201, Kansas City, Mo., tells
of improved method of treating catarrhal
inflammation ofxthe Gall Bladder and Bile
Ducts associated with Gallstones from which
remarkable results are reported. Writ»»for
booklet and free trial plan.—(Advt.)
Service Men Urged to
Secure Victory Medals*
All officers throughout /the coun
try who have charge of the distribu
tion of victory medals among the
ex-service men have been requested
to make tlje utmost effort to in
crease the number of applications
for medals and to reach all who de
serve them. It is estimated that 3,-
757,624 men w£o served in the army
are entitled to medals, but to date
only 379.214. or About ten per centy
of the number have applied.
Three Yukon Boats
Are Frozen in River
JUNEAU, Alaska, Oct. B.—Three
Yukon river boats, the last of the
season from Fairbanks, Alaska, to
Dawson, Y. T., and carrying capacity
lists of passengers and mail, «.re re
ported frozen in below Eagle,
according to advices reaching here
today. The pasenger steamer Seattle
111 is frozen at Rampart, and the
steamers Kostrel and Washburn,
somewhere between Eagle and Circle.
Ice conditions are said to be worse
than last year.
lust Send Us
Your Name and Address
You promise nothing, spend nothing,
nothing, put yourself under no
obligation of any kind.
•
We will gladly eend you the most
beautiful assortment of cloth earn* IBS EM
Ries, the finest style book ever pub-
shed, and the lowest prices on m
earth for guaranteed tailoring.
Yow Own SuH FREE. Mfch
A real, genuine, high class, guar- £ ' " ■’ ‘ '
anteed, made to measure suit, a ! 7'7.'-:. :
beauty in every respect, and far' MgriggL"'
ahead of ordinary tailoring. All we :
ask you to do is wear and show tBKrMn
your suit to friends and neighbors,
advertise our handsome tailoring, sgSkjg®; ,
take the orders that come your way. " ■
ahd make $lO a day.
SIO.OO a DAY.
SIO.OO a day Is dead easy. Many
make more. One man made $426.00
last month. Fred Jones. Columbus,
Ga., made $63.25 the first day. 18,000
ethers make big money. Nq experi- O jM®®.
ence needed, no money needed. We O
teach you how and furnish every- ‘ !
♦Mng free. Your own suit »nd our feig
liberal offers get the business.
Everything shipped on approval We SSi '
pay delivery charges and guarantee i
satisfaction. No sale unless custo- *
mer is pleased.
WRITE US TODAY. MBKISIb
A postal wlJ] do. Send no money—
just your name and address. No matter where you live or what you
- do. writs -us a <a»rd at ones, before you -turn thts Prige.' before you do
another thing. Do not delay or you may forget all about it and lose this
wonderful opportunity. Remember, everything free, and no obligation
on your part.
nEPIUMaTAILNIHCO., 753 SfeJsaga
Baby Gets 600-Mile Joy Ride in Go-Cart
Pr?.nk 'fyrovm. & lairaj”
* r * &
"
’HHKifeißi «
WLjo&y- 4 -
MONMOUTH, Ore.—“lf we just had something on four wheels
we could taka a summer outing,” said Frank Brown, of aSn Fran
cisco, to his wife.
“There’s the go-cart,” she replied, and so they packed the
kitchen utensils and food and their eleven-months-old baby into it
and set out. They arrived here, having gone 600 miles withbut a
blowout or engine trouble.
—— l ■ ll 11 ' ■
Wants to be President
. On “5-€ent Beer” Platform
DALLAS, Texas. —Plenty of beer,
the old kind with five per cent of
kick, at a price not exceedindg five
cpnt<j a glass, is the inducement
James E. Ferguson is holding ' s out
for for president of the Unit
ed States.
The convention which nominated
Ferguson has a set of electors in
structed to vote for him for presi
dent. He is running on a beer and
trine platform in Texas. Tiis elec
tors will be on the ticket in no other
except Texas.
“I will guarantee, if beer is
brought back, the price will nqver go
above five cents,” says Ferguson.
“The brewers would not have been
profiteers, had they not been put
out of business.”
Ferguson . was impeached as gov
ernor of Texas three years ago be
cause he would not tell the source of
$156,000 he received. It was later
proven the money came from the
breweries.
Following his impeachment he
was defeated for governor. Now he
is running for thn presidency on
the American Party, which he organ
ised.
Long Hike Behind Wheelbarrow
Brings Health to Invalid
When a millionaire finds that his
gout interferes with his enjoymdnt
of life he embarks on* his palatial
steam yacht and goes a-cruising out
on the bounding billows in quest of
the place where everybody’s young.
And wlren his wife finds that she can
no longer get anything more thrill
ing .than a headache out of rubber
of bridge she orders ,out her limou
sine and travels far and wide in the
hope that she’ll hit on the royal road
to health. a
Which is all very well'for those
who like such things—and can afford
’em. But J. T. Jenison, aged seven
ty-three, has a panacea which he
declares makes steam yachts and
/limousines look like patent medi
cines. It is the lowly wheelbarrow.
Last June, Jenison was feeling, as
ESH'-
M £ -
XX
he put it, “a little peaked.” His
children had married, and there was
nothing to hold hjm to the littlfe home
he .had occupied at Eagle Harbor,
Wash., for fourteen years. So there
was no reason, if he couljn’t find
health in Eagle Harbor, why he
shbuldn’t hit the open road in search
of it.
And that is precisely what he did.
He was embarrassed for the mo
ment for a means of carrying bis
sleeping and cooking’equipment—but
not for long. trundled out an old
wheelbarrow, packed bed and stove
and cooking utensils into it and ven
tured forth. And, since June 30 he
has been continually on the “wheel
barrow route.”
Through Tacoma, Everett, Arling
ton, Big Lake, Bellingham, Mount
Vernon, Anacortes and Marysville he
has passed, and finally he reached
Seattle. That there really is some
thing In his panacea was betokened
by the healthy flush in his cheeks
and his virile stride. He says he’s
feeling twenty years younger today
that he was when he started out. He
is accompanied by his faithful shep
herd dog, Master, and he says Master
has enjoyed the trip as much as he.
Jenison has riot finished his wan
derings, for, incidentally, he is look
ing for a place where he can feels
well without his wheelbarrow. When
he finds it he will buy a little tract
of land and settle down.—Seattle
Post Intelligencer.
Limburger Has Been
Robbed of Its Odor
MILWAUKEE, Wis. —No longer
will father have to avoid crowds
and hang his coat out for an
airing. a(fter he has carried home a
chunk for
burger cheese nas been found.
The H. B. Stanz Cheese company,
of this city, claiiris to have turned
out the product with as much lu
sciousness, but without the time
worn identification mark.
Game Rooster Decides
Court Controversy
GREENILLE, S. C., Oct. 12.—A
game rooster, claimed by two
negroes who brought charges and
counter charges against each other
alleging larceny, alone decided the
case when the judge ordered that
the chickens be carried to a point
of eQual distance betwen the houses
of the two claimants, a mile apart.
The owner of the house to which the
chicken went to roost wa s awarded
the bird.
Fed Chickens Hop;
Says Roosters Cackled
SAN FRANCISCO.^—C. Zepporini is
suing his neighbor, Gus Ruske, be
cause his, Zepporina’s chickens in
vaded Ruske’s garden. The chickens
came back but they were never the
same, according to the story the
court heard. The roosters cackled
and the hens crowed and neither of
’em would lay eggs. ‘‘He fed ’em hop
when they went for his cabbages,”
Zepporin’ declared. . <
Strange Illness Is
Gripping Young Girl
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—M i s s
Joan Lippincott, known as one of
the most beautiful girls in Phila
delphia’s younger set, has for over
forty day's been suffering from a
strange illness.
Since middle summer she has
baen lying in a lethargy at her
dome. She is conscious at long
intervals, is completely paralyzed,
and cannot talk. Specialists have
been unable to diagnose her case,
although her illness has been
referred to as sleeping sickness.
“The day she was stricken she
had been sewing with me,” her
mother says. ‘‘She was bubbling
over with fun. Then suddenly she
looked up and gasped:
“ 'Mother, mother! Oh, mother,
are my eyes crossed? I simply
can’t see a thing.’
“Occasional periods of semi
consciousness allow nourishment
to be administered. She can’t
even tell us when she is in pain.”
COTTON DECLINE
LAID ON FAILURE
TO SIGN TREATY
The failure of the United States
senate to ratify the peace treaty’is
one of the main factors responsible
for the drop in the price, of cotton,
according to William G. McAdoo,
formerly secretary of the treasury,
in a letter written by him to J. S.
Wannamaker, president of the Amer
ican Cotton association, and given
out in Atlanta by Harvie Jordan, na
tional secretary of the association.
Mr. McAdoo’s letter to Mr. Wan
namaker is as follows:
October 5, 1920.
My Dear Mr. Wannamaker:
I confirm the telegram I sent you yes
terday as follows: , C
“Answer to your letters has been
delayed on account of absence and
pressure of many engagements. I\ am
deeply concerned about the disquieting
conditions you describe and wish I had
power to intelligently assist in cor
resting them. I am under engagement
to leave on 11th or 12th inst., for art
extended speaking trip under auspices
of national committee, which will take
me to the Pacific coast and back.
These arrangements cannot now be
changed and force me to give up all
my own business and everything else
until November 2. I shall be glad to
do anything in my power but, having
no longer any authority, I do not see
what, as a private citizen, I can ac
complish.”
I feel deeply concerned about the pros
perity of the farmers and producers of
the south,’ and I am greatly distressed to
learn that the cotton market is again in
such a demoralized condition, and that the
cotton producers are facing such serious
losses as those you indicate. While no
single cause is responsible for this con
dition. nevertheless I do feel that the
failure of the senate to ratify the peace
treaty and to set in motion, so far as this
country is concerned, the provisions of that
treaty and to make the United States an
active participating member of the League
of Nations, has had a very serious effect
upon our export trade, especially on our
export trade in cotton and other products
of the soil. \
Central European Situation
Revival of industry in Eujppe, especially
in the central powers, which v-onid have
opened up large markets for our cotton
and other supplies, was dependent upon
the prompt ratification of the treaty, and
it, is undoubtedly true tliat the demoraliza
tion in the exchange situation would have
been greatly relieved, also by the prompt
ratification of the treaty, with a resulting
advantage to American commerce.
The deplorable situation has resulted
from the partisan attitude of the Republi
can majority in the senate, and is a ve F y
large contributing factor in producing a
cotton situation tiiis year which is, in many
respects, analogous to that which faced
the country after the outbreak of the Euro
pean war in 1914.
The necessity of extending foreign credits
so as to enable these foreign countries to
buy our products has been imperative all
along, but no organized effort along that
line appears to have been made. The Edge
bill, passed by the last congress, was a
wholly unsatisfactory and ineffective rem
edy. A very strong and powerful credit
organization should have been effected a
long time ago, and I am sorry that the
original plan for the creation of an export
cotton association with a capital of SIOO.-
000,000 or more, which was under con
sideration in the south more/ than a year
ago. was not perfected.
Declining Export Trade .
Our declining export trade is not a sur
prise to anyone who has n any sort
of a comprehensive view of our situa
tion, and has looked even a short way into
the future.
The reaction of Ml these things upon
oiir domestic situation has been unfavor
able, and I fear will be more unfavorable
as time-goes on.
I have no doubt that the deflation policy
has been, as you say, a serious factor
in the present distressing situation in the
south, but it would be a mistake to assume
that it is the only one. I have been out
>f public office so long, and have been
confining myself, as you know, to the
.practice of my profession so exclusively,
that I am not able to form a definite judg
ment either as to all of the causes which
have led to the present condition of af
fairs, or to be able to offer any satisfac
tory judgment as to what the proper remedy
may be, but you know, of course, that
while I was in office I felt always that
every reasonable assistance in the way of
credit should be extended to the farmers
during the crop moving and crop marketing
season, to enable them to dispose of their
crops in an orderly manner, so that they
could have the fullest opportunity to re,*
ceive reasonable prices instead of being
forced to sell under pressure and at unnec
essary sacrifices.
I note what you say about the proposed
organization of an export corporation.
I presume tiiis is substantially the
same suggestion as that which was put
forward in the sprihg of 1919. I should
think that such an export corporation would
be of great value, if organized along
the right lines and sufficiently capitalized,
but your difficulty is to get it organized
in time to meet the emergency which is
upon you. I shall be very happy,
however, to help in any way in my power in
the way of advice, or counsel, which is
freely at your service and without charge.
As I said in my telegram. I am obliged
to leave on the 11th and 12tb inst. for a
speaking trip, which will take me to the
Pacific coast and back. I do not return
until November 2, but after that date I
shall be very glad to render any service in
my power. \
With all good wishes, I am
Cordially yours,
(Signed) WM. G. McADOO.
J. S. Wannamaker, Esq., President American
Cotton Association, St. Matthews, S. C.
Dunwoody Farmer Is
Fined; Policewomen
Make Charg es
The arraignment of J. B. Belton, a
farmer, of Dunwoody, in the
recorder’s court Monday afternoon
brought to light a story of a wild
ride on the night of September 25
in which two policewomen are said
to have figured. Belton pleaded guil
ty to a charge of reckless driving of
an automobile and was fined $26.
In preferring charges against the
farmer. Miss Martha Dupre and Miss
Rora Lee Vause, two Atlanta po
licewomen, said that they attempted
to place two young women under ar
rest whom they said they found in
the company of two men in an auto
mobile on the night of September 25.
Instead of cajling the patrol wagon
the party got into the automobile
upon the alleeged promise of Belton
to drive them to the police station,
and instead of going to the station,
it was claimed by the policewomen,
the car sped out Peachtree street to
North avenue, where the policewom
en were allowed to get out minus
their prisoners. The number of the
car was secured and a few days ago
Beltofi was arrested. One of the
girls was a’so said to have been
recently taxen into custody and fined
in police ,court
Mississippi Plans
To Hold Cotton Meet
JACKKSON, Miss., Ott. 11.—Five
hundred bankers, planters and bus
iness men from all sections of Mis
sissippi will hold a mass meting
here tomorrow to take action favor
ing the proposal of the American
Cotton association to hold cotton for
forty cents a pound.
In addition to the association the
following organizations will be rep
resented: Cotton seed crushers, gin
ners, bankers and retail men.
THURSDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1920.
Viodel Sues for
Half a Million
a •<.
SSN|L
' Ji
■mBMI c
m ,y j
NEW YORK. —Robert Bar
bour, miflionaire manufacturer,
made desperate love to Miss May
B. Rollins, an artist’s model, and
then tried to dodge wedding bills,
alleges Miss Rolling in a half
million dollar suit for damages
fied here. Barbour is said te
have fled to Europe in disguise
to escape arrest. Miss Rollins
asks $250,000 for the alleged
breach of promise and 1 an equal
amount for her injured feelings.
HARDING CALI ED
BUSH LEAGUER BY
INTERROGATOR
CHICAGO, Oct. 12.—The question
of whether the members of the
League of Nations would accept a
new “association of nations” was
put to Senator Harding today in a
statement issued here by Congress
man Frank E. iboremus, chairman
of mid-western headquarfters of the
Democratic committee.
‘‘Senator Harding is again talking
vaguely about an association of na
tions,” ignoring ttye fact that the
League of Nations Is already set up
and includes forty-one countries,”
says the statement.
“Does Senator Harding thing these
forty-one nations will disband and
join his association? l»
“The only Inference that can be
drawn from the senator’s remarks
is that he is a bush leaguer, playing
with Mexico, Turkey and Bolshe
vistic Russia.
Seven Men to Pay
Death Penalty in
Chicago This Week
CHICAGO. Oct. 12.—With the time
set for their dea«tli only a ’few days
away, seven men convicted of murder
and sentenced to hang here* today
were fighting desperately for their
lives.
Unless they succeed in obtaining
court ord®-s staying execution, or
are reprieved by Governor Lowden,
five of the men, will be placed in
death cells tomorrow. The other
two, scheduled to hang Friday, will
be sent to the death cells Thursday.
The five scheduled to hang Thurs
day are:
Nicholas Viana and Frank Cam
pione. members of an alleged gang
of mpreierers; Sam Ferrara and Joe
ConstAqza, convicted of murdering a
hold-up victim, and J. H. Reese, ne
gro, who killed his wife with a
hatchet.
The two to be hanged Friday are:
Frank Haensel, convicted of killing
his wife, and Frank Zagar, convicted
of killing two men in a hold-up.
Originally twelve men were sen
tenced to hang on Thursday and Fri
day of this week, but reprieves and
commutations have cut this down to
seven.
Girl Workers Strike;
Refuse to Wear Pants
NEW ORLEANS, La., Oct. 12.
Thirty-two of 122 girls employed by
Penick & Ford, Ltd., big molasses
packers, said today they arri on
strike, because they objected to wear
ing pants, a part of the khaki uni
form that the concern’s rules say
all employes must wear. L. E. Will
son, the manager, says that the girls
did not strike, but that he discharg
ed them because they did not obey
the company’s rules.
Iron Will
That great strength of mind and
body, that exhaustless energy, that
IRON WILL that make a famous
merchant out of a humble clerk, a
M millionaire out of a penniless immi
tW g ran t, a Lincoln out of 'a wood
chopper—often come from red blood
—rich in iron. (
“Do you- lack power of decision,
energy, and stamina? Are your
gsSa \y/' * Z ambitions greater than, your
pC strength? You need not be dis-
Ziyi couraged, says Dr. James Sullivan,
5 formerly of Bellevue Hospital (Out-
> door Dept.), New York, and West-
S cheater County Hospital. “By feed
jE ’ n g the blood pure organic iron—
CgL Nuxated Iron—many a weak, run-
r*sglL - X 1 ~ " down, discouraged man has changvd
to a red-blooded American, full of
force and energy that win success.”
\ Nuxated Iron is used and endorsed
f a I 9 former United States Senators
I vSf' an d Members of Congress, and by
I‘ z w such world-known men as Pader-
Wml fewski, ex-Premier of Poland. It
~ often increases strength and en-
durance in two weeks' time.
NUXATED m©K
Used By Over 4,000,000 People for
Red Blood, Strength and Endurance
Posing as a Man
She Marries Girl
PHILADELPHIA.—The strange
story of how a girl, posing as a
man, married another girl and
how the two lived as "man” and
wife for four years was revealed
by Jacqueline Gay, who is prose
cuting a man on the charge of
selling narcotics.
Jacqueline is the “man” in the
case.
She says she is an Oklahoma
Indian.
Jacqueline told how she had
adopted masculine attire to avoid
the perils of the tenderloin after
she had gone into rescue mission
work.
While engaged in helping young
girls who had fallen victims of
the drug habit she became ac
quainted with twenty-year-old
Winnifred Vaugh.
Winnifred fell in love wit K the
supposed man and records show
that the two secured a license to
marry on September 30, 1916.
WOMAN HELD AS
SUSPECT CHARGED
WITH KIDNAPING
NEW YORK, Oct. 11.—Miss Betty
Brainard, twenty-five, was committed
to jail here today pending arrival of
extradition papers from Tacoma,
Wash., charging her with being a fu
gitive from justice and with suspi
cion of kidnaping.
The young woman, who is a free
lance newspaper writer, was ar
raigned before Magistrate Joseph
Schwab in city court today following
her arrest yesterday by a city detec
tive on the strength of a telegram
from the chief of police at Tacoma.
Magistrate Schwab decided he had
no jurisdiction to set bail and or
dered Miss Brainard sent to jail
pending the arrival of papers from
the Tacoma autohrities. Edgar D.
Shaw and James p. Watson, New
York newspapermen, and Miss
Brainard’s attorneys, Jerome, Rand
& Kressel, decided to ask a judge
of general sessions to set ths bail.
The application was to come up later
in the day.
Miss Brainard, according to the
telegram from Tacoma, is charged
with assisting in the kidnaping of
Robert Stagg, two, son of George T.
Stagg, a New York new’spaper man,
who, It was said, formerly lived in
Seattle and Tacoma. In the latter
city his divorced wifs and son were
said to have resided.
The police here are seeking Stagg
to determine what light he can throw
on the case, although he has not
been charged with complicity in the
kidnaping.
/ Miss Brainard fainted when being
arraigned in court today.
She was arrested at Grand Cen
tral station yesterday), when she
applied at the baggage office for her
trunks that had followed her from
Washington. She had arrived here
Thursday and was staying at the
home of Sigmund Saxe, whose
daughter had married Miss Brain
ard’s cousin in Richmond, Va.
Noted French Author,
Anatole France, Weds
TOURS, France, Oct. 12.—Anatole
France, noted French author, was
married Monday to Mlle. Emma de
Prevette. Their engagement was
recently announced. The people of
Tours turned out in large numbers
in honor of the event, and the aged
author (he is seventy-six years old),
was cheered by great crowds when
the wedding party appeared.
PELLAGRA
CURED WITOUT A
STARVATION DIET
AT A SMALL COST
If you have this awful disease, and
want to be cured —-to stay cured—
write for
TREE BOOK
giving the history of pellagra, symp
toms, results and how to treat. Sent
in plain, sealed envelope. A guar
anteed treatment that cures when
all others fail. Write for this book
today.
CROWN MEDICINE COMPANY
Sept 93 Atlanta, Ga.
30 Days Home Trial
and Two Years Time to Pay
If you don’t want to pay cash. That’s the way you
can bay a THIER Y PARLOR ORGAN—Che real M mmk-maker*
of all organs. Now's the time to boy, too—ibices are coins up
—yoaTl have to pay $15.00 to <25.00 mWe six month b from
now. Take your choice of Thiery Oryam shown tn the color*
printed Thiery Orxan Catalog—then take 30 dayttrUHn your
Bi me to prove thatit ’a the real
nusio-maker** of al I orsam-4
en. after the trial, you can pay
sh in full or boy on little *>ay*
rats—two years credit if you
uit it.
Save $25 to SSO
Thterr Ortua are aaalky
enana—eon pared with other
onana you eaaily save S2SXM*
to *60.00. More than SO.OOO
homes are now enjoying
Tbiery Organa—all shipped
oa trial—all p.rchaaed
dtrtet.
WRITE TODAY
Doni wait for prices tn
so up farther. Buy now.
Send today for Catalogue.
Trial Order Blanks and Di
rect to Yon Prices. Send
coupon below and fall par
ticulars will be sent you by
return nail postpaid.
J. B. THlEßYMilwaukee,Wis.
to aw m awe. furnd, Pns CmMmm aW tanfhlt io.
\
Xdd>ess_.
(Advertisement)
Mas. .ROSE E. TUTTLE,*
of Portland, Maine, who
says she feels like she has
taken a new lease dn life
since taking Tanlac. Her
rheumatism and other troubles
have been overcome.
w 35*9
f
“Tanlac Is the grandest medicine
on earth, and I just -wish it was so
every woman who suffers like I did
could know what it will really do,”
said Mrs. Rose E. Tuttle, of 293 Con
gress Street, Portland, Maine, re
cently.
“No one will ever know how I suf
fered,” she said. “My stomach was
so disordered I-had to be very care
ful about what I ate. Potatoes and
other starchy foods would complete
ly upset me. Frequently after meals
I would have terrible pains in my
stomach, my breath would get short,
and I would have a depressed and
uneasy feeling about my heart. Oftfen
I was troubled with pains under my
shoulder blades and I frequently had
bilious attacks.
“I also suffered with rheumatism,
and this, together with my other
troubles, was simply, wrecking my
health. I felt weak, nervous ajid
rundown all the time, and seemed to
beAlosing weight and strength every
day. My sleep was poor, and often
I was in such misery I wouldn’t close
my eyes all night long. ,
“Before I finished my first bottle
of Tanlac I realized I had at last
found the right medicine. My con
dition improved dally as I continued
taking Tanlac, my appetite picked up
and I was soon eating three hearty
meals every day without suffering
in the least afterwards. That horri
ble indigestion has disappeared, I
am no longer nervous, I sleep sound
ly all night and feel splendidly all
during the day. My strength has
been increased until I can now do
all my housework with ease. I am
praising Tanlac every opportunity I
have.”
Tanlac is sold by all leading drug
gists.
K to S4O a
a Big Money- Be Your Own Bova
urrier* for vur mad* <o-men«
men • emtha** fr«m» •»««• large tx>ok ot
Kina valwan No eatm for full,
<o<» pantM, opei. welt -r»mr f»nc* pnrbo-t
• etc -all fr»«* p**t -xprcsn •*»
Youv pmfite are clenr Wr <i.. ranre*
'*<*• c it and M»ftufartinn r<, aver* rwah 'nrr
w- ■will not MCrniH nn* penny of r<»ur
icy You take no risk «re back you up
EXPERIENCE NEEDED. Wl MAIN YOU
Will furnish •*«ofvshin|t tr»*. and
> y<»*» tn »ak»* ••Mera »*nd mnke hia riaah
Itn no matter •■■hsi y<»« have heer rlninf
w* Ou* b»i4 comi’iete FREE ..*.»<!» eon
• toll «ia« t-sl ckvih •••mple*. lat*w* ••■»*-
* tape line, order blanks. •rattane*v etc
’▼thing rnmoleu* wire telling
exactly h’»'» to take he big •»'d
MAKE SSO 00 A WEEK EASY
<O WO CASH The romniro money-usaktng
tfit und tnwrructioni* Mt** voura absrhitalv
Thin i» ymir hie rbance C*»afM row
rihfng -brings vou r>ab—makes wou Inde
pendent. Write today Onn r delay Simply
cay, * Send me big free outfit ‘ If means
•nay atone» for ymi Write
ssternTailoring Co
“Pain’s enemy"
““/77 say it is!
VYZHEN you want qufcfc eom
” sorting relief from any
‘external” pain, use Sloan’a
Liniment. It does the job with
out staining, rubbing, bandag
ing. Use fnelu for rheumatism,
neuralgia, aches and pains, jMKK
sprains and strains, backache,
sore muscles. jW/ As
Lungs Weak?
Generous Offer to Tuberculosis Suf
ferers of Trial of SANOSXIt SAMO
LEUM Embracing Europe's Re
markable Expectorant, SANOSXIt
Noted medical scientists—Doctors Dane
lius, Sommerfield, Wolff. Noel, Gauthier,
Essers—declare SANOSIN most valuable
treatment for Pulmonary ailments. Felix
Wolff, Court Physician, Director of the
Sanitarium for Consumptives j- Reibolds
grun, Germany, highly recommends it. SAN
OSIN has been officially recommended to
the Berlin Medical Association. Dr. C. W.
A. Essers, Amsterdam, Holland, declares it
a “Moral obligation to make SANOSIN
known to the whole human race,” Amer
ican sufferers, rich or poor, can use this
remarkable home treatment that has met
with such success in Europe. SANOSIN
SANOLEUM is designed to produce calm,
restful sleep without Morphium or similar
deadening drugs, and to bring almost Im
mediate relief from coughing, blood spitting
and night sweats. SANOSIN WSANOLEUM
is an inexpensive home treatment of genu
ine merit -and is proving a blessing to all
suffering from Tuberculosis, Bronchitis,
Asthma, Catarrhs, Whooping Cough, etc.
Send for FREE BOOKLET (with testimo
nials) explaining this treatment and how
a trial can be made in your own home at
our risk. Address SANOSIN-SANOLEUM,
222 N. Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111., Dept. 953.
SHOW THIS TO SOME OFORTUNATE.
RHEUMATISM
RECIPE
I will gladly send any Rheumatism suf
ferer ? Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free
that Completely Cured me of a terrible at
tack of muscular and inflammatory Rheu
matism of Ipug standing after everything
else I tried liad failed me. I have given
it to many sufferers who believed their
cases hopeless, yet they found relief from
their suffering by taking these simple herbs,
it also relieves Sciatica promptly, as well
as Neuralgia, and is a wonderful blood puri
fier. You are most welcome to thia Herb
Recipe if you will send for it at once. 1
believe you will consider it a God-Send after
yoq have put It to the test. There is noth
ing injurious contained in it, and you can
see for yourself exactly what you are tak
ing. I will gladly send this Recipe—abso
lutely free—to any sufferer who will send
name and address, plainly written.
W. G. SUTTON, 2650 Magnolia Ava,
Los Angeles, California.
feci., Mentbo.Nov> s7r„ £S e
3