Atlanta tri-weekly journal. (Atlanta, GA.) 1920-19??, November 04, 1920, Page 2, Image 2

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2 WILL RADIUM AT LAST OPEN THE DOOR OF THE GREAT UNKNOWN? If yon are sick and want to Get Well and Keep Well, write for literature that tells How and Why this almost unknown and wonderful new element brings relief to ao many sufferers from Constipation. Rheu matism: Sciatica, Gout, Neuritis. Neuralgia, Nervous Prostration. Higli Blood Pressure and diseases of the Stomach. Heart. Lunas. Liver. Kidneys and other ailments. Yon wear Degmen's Itadio-Aetive Solar Ped day and night, receiving the Radio-Active Rays continuously into your system, causing a healhy cir nlaion. overcoming sluggishness, throwing off impurities and restoring the tissues and nerves to a norma! condition— and the next thing you know you are get ting well. Sold on a test proposition. You are thor oughly satisfied it is helping you before the appliance is yours. Nothing to do but wear it. No trouble or expense, and the most wonderful fact about the appliance is that it is sold so reasonable that it is within the reach of all, both rich and poor. No matter how bad your ailment, or how long standing, we will be pleased to have you try it at onr risk. For full information write today—not tomorrow. Radium Appli ance Co., 12’8 Bradbury bldg., Los Ange les, Calif. (Advt.) Stem'll IB Pleasant way to breakup colds- EVERY ONE in the family can rely on Dr. King’s New Dis covery, the standard remedy for the last fifty years, to break tip coughs, grippe and stubborn colds. No harmful drugs. At your druggists, 60c and $1.20. For Dr. King’s New Discovery Sallow Skin Not Pretty Constipation destroys the complexion, aaking it yellow and ugly. Keep the jewels at work cleaning out the system aily by using Dr. King’s Pills. They p the work thoroughly and gently uy a bottle today, 25 cents. A Prompt/ Won’t Gripe JrKintys Pilis )LD STANDBY, FOR WHES AND PAINS Lny man or woman who keeps Sloan’s handy will tell you that same thing F"\ SPECIALLY those frequently p attacked by rheumatic twinges. A counter-irritant, Sloan’s Lini nent scatters the congestion and pens ,~tes without rubbing to the afflicted .art, soon relieving the ache and pain. Kept handy and used everywhere ?r reducing and finally eliminating the ’ins and aches of lumbago, neuralgia, uscle strain, joint stillness, sprains, uises, and the results of exposure. You just know from its stimulating, ■althy odor that it will do you good I can’s Liniment is sold by all drug :ts—3sc, 70c, $1.40. SloartS Liniment Stomach Catarrh a Cause- untold misery and suffering, all of which is needless Pe-ru-n» acts as quickly and surely on ca tarrh of the stomach and a* in cases of jkvL WgshluK that common form, catarrh. Wii is P i use YEARS , a sooth jSrajCTFing. healing effect up all mucous linings. Xtry Belehinit gas, sour stom ach> Nausea, vomiting, ,JSMBg>£wja' cramps, pains in the abdo men, diarrhoea, constipa t*on 310 symptoms of a catarrhal condition in the organs of digestion. BWißfrlgy/'X Don’t suffer anotherday. It is needless and danger ous. Two generations have x oun< i Pe-ru-na just the medicine needed for such disturbances. Sold Everywhere agWr? J Tablets or Liquid ■■■iiißaafcMaMMMMßMusMsii Use Electrydes for RHEUMATISM No Drugs No Dieting No Danger 1 . ♦ ELECTRYDES I • . »I«.W titcmc ryn«Kt M til If you suffer from Rheumatism, Cold Feet, Nervous Ailments or Poor Circulation, send al once for a set of Electrydes on THIRTY DAYS’ TRIAL AT OUR RISK B. F. Mettler. Postmatter. Colume. S D . eays My wife and 1 have both osed the Electrydes we receiver I frbm you about three months ago and the result was very beneficial ** Richard Pelott, Abbeville, S C , says •‘I am telling my many friends of your wonderful treat «nent.’* Try Electrydesat our risk. Send no money • •imply name and address, stating whether man ur woman. They will be sent prepaid. When they arrive eend ua 11.50. If not more than delighted after thirty eJays* use, we will gladly refund your money Descrip five literature free Send no money Write Today CLCGTRYOS CO . 404 Holland Building, Lima. O. A AGENTS WANTED li | S il cur bin $1 Bo”!e Sarsaparilla for only K fSSZSf 100% Profit IT" J run: drug lav.'. Every- ’ ... i - IV s Wr'te flf'W Mr terms. F. R. GRESNE, 3214 S. Mich Blvd., / Dept. 107. Chicago. -asthma- Cured Before You Fay. will send you a $1.25 bottle of LANE’S ; .eatinent on FREE TRIAL. When com- I ietely cured send ine the 51.25. Other -I..'fse your report cancels charge. Address D. J. LANE, 372 Lane Bldg., St. Marys, Kans. TELEgCOPS waeig Opens out over 2 feet long. You can see sbjects a mile away. Given for selling 12 pckgs. Bluine nt 15 cts. a pckge. BLUINE MFG. CO., 599 Mill St., Concord Jet., Mass. a Able-bodled men wanting positions as firemen, brakemen, electric motormen. conductors, or col ored sleeping car porters, write at once for appli cation blank, name position wanted; nearby roads: no svtke; experience) unnecessary Rail way Institute ilert. 27 Indianapolis. Indian* THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. Says Doctor Left Forceps in Body MILWAUKEE, Wis.—A pair of forceps six Inches long Were overlooked by physicians and sewed up in her, after an opera tion. according to a suit for $20,- 000 damages filed by Mrs. Ida Zentner, against Dr. William Wegge. The physician is charged with carelessness in an operation per formed June ", 191*. The forceps were recovered aft er a second operation, Oct. 8. 1918. VALUABLE RELICS FOUND IN ARCHIVES OF STATE CAPITOL Some of the most interesting and valuable old historic records and relies in the possession of the state have just been discovered in reno vating the archives department of the secretary of state’s office. One is a book, brown with age and frayed at the edges, in which are recorded “an account of certificates granted for bounty lands to refugees and citizens." These grants were made to soldiers of the American Revolution, and in the book are two or three hundred names of such sol diers which are not ■believed to be recorded in any other Rvolutlonary roster. The book has been turned over to Dr. Lucian Lamar Knight, state historian. The entries are made with pen and ink, evidently an old-fashioned quill pen being used. The handwriting is perfect as script, and the captions and capital letters are made with beautiful flourishes Every entry in the book is clear and legible In spite of its age. Another is a book, similar to the one just described, in whioiii are entered “A list of the warrants is sued by the land court for the county of Washington from its es tablishment to August 6. 1787.’’ This also contains the names of many Revolutionary soldiers. The third very interesting relic is a blank form of land grant used by King George the Fourth of England, for granting lots in “the town of Savannah in our province of Geor gia.” These grants were made when Georgia was a colony of the crown, before the Revolutionary War. They were made in a form characterized by most superior and condescending phraseology, wherein the King “of our special grace, certain knowledge and mere motion, have given, granted by these presents for us, our heirs and successors, do give and grant unto,” etc. There were found a large stack of these blank land grants, all perfect ly preserved, the paper as white as new, the ink as black as the day they were printed on a flat bed press, the type old-fashioned and the forms of spelling odd and peculiar when compared with modern dic Irish Question in American Campaign Gets British Comment LONDON, Nov. 2.—The Irish ques tion in America’s presidential cam paign drew comment from the Brit ish press today. “Once the election is over there should be a marked return to sta bility,” the News said. “It will not be necessary to dangle baits for the pro-THsh vote or to play counters with the League of Nations. There is no reason to believe the United States will attempt to maintain its austere isolation; in 1917 the country took a step which never can be re traced.” Two factors will determine the speed and extent of American co operation, the News 'said—the com position of the new cabinet and the impression created by Europe’s han dling of their own affairs. The Chronicle asserted the worst feature of the campaign was the' fact that many prominent politicians have tied themselves down with pledges that may embarrass them later. When they come to re-examine European affairs on their merits, they may find it impossible to do what was promised, it said. APPENDICITIS Appendicitis attacks at any moment, even persons seemingly in good health. Usually, however, it is preceded by stonj ach trouble or constipation. Many people have a bowel movement every day, but it is not a COMPLETE movement and much old, stale matter stays in the sys tem to ferment and cause trouble. Often there is only a small passage in the cen ter of the bowels while the sides are cov ered with old, hard matter which sticks to the bowels and often poisons the sys tem for months, making you feel\ tired all the time and “half-sick.” Even if your bowels move slightly each day, that is Sot enough. There must be an occasional THOROUGH, complete cleansing ■ to bring out all the accumulated, poisonous waste matter. Appendicitis is an intestinal infection spreading to the appendix, and it can be guarded against in the same manner in which you guard against the spread of throat infection (sore throat). When you have sore throat, you can often prevent further trouble by using an antiseptic wash or gargle to destroy the germs, and a laxative to carry off the poisons from the body. Very similar treatment is neces sary to guard against appendicitis. But in stead of an antiseptic wash for the throat, an INTESTINAL antiseptic is necessary and a COMPLETE drainage of the bowel system. INTESTINAL ANTISEPTIC There is now offered to the public a preparation having the DOUBLE action of «n intestinal antiseptic and a COMPLETE system cleaner. This preparation, known as ADLER-I-KA, acts as follows: It tends to destroy or remove harmful germs and colon bacili in the intestinal c-antfl, thus guarding against appendicitis and other diseases having their start here. It is die most COMPLETE system cleaner ever offered to the public, acting Kill That Cold With CASQkRAKZQUiNINE FOR AND Colds, Coughs La Grippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous Take no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks up a cold in 24 hours Relieves Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for Headache Quinine in this form docs not afiect the head—CascAra ia best Tonic Laxative—Opiate in Hill’s. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT As premiums for selling only a few boxes of our famous Roiebud Salve at 25c per box. Ro>ebn4 (Lr») Salva has been giving relief and satisfaction xjey tor 25 years to millions of users for burns, tetter, sores, piles, catarrh, corns, bun ions, etc. Easy to sell. We send 12 fAy ' boxes postpaid on credit, trust you un- til sold. Big catalog of other prem t o> "} iums. Jewelry, Lace Curtains, Phono- vtASMKABiBgM** 1 graphs, etc., sent FREE with salve. (D jgatTK today aup orr STAwnto. Rosebud Perfume Company. Box ot Woodsboro, Morylabd BAKER’S SON CARRIES HIS OWN WIRELESS OUTFIT ON HIS BIKE WASHINGTON, —Anything that has to do with electricity com mands the interest of Jack Baker, son of Secretary of War Baker. His particular hobby is the wireless and he carries his own outfit with him every time he takes a trip on his bicycle. He has rigged up an outfit on his bike and he claims he can pick up messages from the big Arlington towers. You Can Buy a Good Meal For Four Over in Moscow For 800,000 Rubles LONDON, Oct. 3.—The correspond ent of the Daily Telegraph at Ber lin sends the following dispatch: One of the most Eminent Hus sion surgeons, who has just arrived here from Moscow, throws interest ing fresh light on the social condi tions in the realm of the soviets. His earnings in the period before his de parture averaged about 500,000 ru bles monthly! Os this. 30,000 rubles was for salary from the Soviet, and the remainder the proceeds of his private practice. For a simple op eration he sometimes received as much as 100,000 rubles. With his 500,000 rubles he was able to live very comfortably in his own villa. As a person of value to the Soviet government, he had no difficulty in obtaining enough fuel to keep his house properly warmed during the winter. Among his charges was that of chief surgeon to the principal military hospital, which is fitted up for 2.000 patients, but generally has to accommodate at least twice that number. He wished to resign this past, nnd was asked the reason. His reply was that .. the journeys on foot to and from the hospital took up too much of his time. He was at once told that he should have a carriage, and on the following day a smart equip age, with a couple of fine horses and an admirable coachman, was put at his disposal. Although restaurants cannot ex ist openly, a few carry on a clandes tine existence. The surgeon was invited to dinner by a patient at one of these. The meal began with a white seal vodka, comprised cavalre, en BOTH upper and lower bowel and bringing out foul matter which poisoned the system for months and which noth ing else can dislodge. It brings out all gases, thus immediately relieving pres sure on the heart and other vital organs. It is astonishing the great amount of poi sonous matter ADLER-I-KA draws from the alimentary canal—‘matter you never thought was in your system. Try it right after a natural movement and notice how much MORE foul matter is brought out which was poisoning your system. In slight disorders, such as occasional consti pation, sour stomach, gas on the stomach and sick headaches, one spoonful ADLER- I-KA ALWAYS brings relief. ADLER-I-KA is a constant surprise to people who have used only ordinary stomach and bowel med icines and the various oils and waters, on account of its rapid, pleasant and COMPLETE action. REPORTS PROM PHYSICIANS “I have used Adler-i-ka in my practice and have found nothing to excel it.” (Signed) DR. W. A. LINE. “I have found nothing in my 50 years practice to excel Adler-i-ka.” (Signed) Dr. James Weaver. “I use Adler-i-ka in all bowel cases. Some require only one dose.” (Signed) Dr. F. M. Pre tty man. “After taking Adler-I-ka feel better than for 20 years. Haven’t language to ex press the AWFUL IMPURITIES elim inated from my system.” (Signed) J. E. Puckett. “Thanks to Adler-i-ka I can sleep all night now. something I could not do for years.” (Signed) Cora E. Noblett. Adler-i-ka is sold by leading druggists everywhere or sent all charges prepaid for $1.20 (large bottle, enough for full treatment). Write for free booklet about appendicitis. Adlerika Company, Dept. D., St. Paul. Minnesota, sturgeon, rastegai (fish pastry) of the finest quality, and freshly-boiled ham, and was washed down with real Frendh champagne. The cot for four persons was the trifle of 800,000 rubles. Recently the surgeon spent a few weeks at the country mansion of his cousin, a count, who belongs to one of the oldest families of the Russian' aristocracy. He found his kinsman still in possession of between seven ty and eighty acres of his estate. This he was allowed to keep, but he was compelled to cultivate it Irim self, as the hire of labor, was ab solutely prohibited. Another cousin, a prince, was act ing as ploughman, and all the light labor on the farm was being done by the women of the family. The sergeant gathered that many members of the landed aristocracy were living quietly on their estates on similar terms. According to the surgeon, the edu cated classes in Moscow do not hope much from General Wrangel, who, they believe, will collapse in the same way as did Kolchak and Dinikin. They are, however, as little Bolshe vik as ever, thpugh nearly all of them are compelled by hunger to serve the Soviet government. As a body they are practicing a system of passive sabotage, which is rendered easy by the elaborate sys tem of checks and counter-checks routine by Bolshevik suspicion. There are plenty of opportunities for put ting on the drag when an official’s request for a lead pencil has to pass through forty departments before that article is issued to him. It was a sense of moral oppression and not of physical discomfort which drove the surgeon from Russia. The strain is such, he says, that all the people are driven to extremes, and become either saints or scroundrels. There is no place left in Russia for moral mediocrity. He had little dif ficulty in obtaining a pass for him self on some scientific pretext, but it was a more arduous problem to obtain one for his wife. They solved it by divorcing one another, which is one of the few things really easy to do in Bol shevik Russia. It was then a simple matter to find an Austrian war pris oner, who for 50,000 rubles agreed to go through a mock marriage with the woman and take her with him on his repatriation. The surgeon and his wife are now reunited in Berlin. Limousine Party Held in Dublin for Philadelphia Police DUBLIN, Ga., Nov. 2.—Three white men and two women, giving their names as George Allen Bruce, T. W. Bourne, William Reick, Le onoa O’Toole and Miss Moloy, are in jail here on instructions from po-A lice at Philadelphia charged with stealing a big limousine and a quan tity of diamonds and watches. Several days ago this party reach ed Dublin in the limousine, and as they entered the business section let the car get from under control. It smashed a large plate glass win dow and they were stoppde by the police. It developed that the entire party had not enough cash to pay damages and get out of town, so they stopped here while they-tried to sell some diamonds to raise cash. Selling was slow and they were still here when the Philadelphia police traced them to Dublin. They are held pending orders from that city. Macon Packing Plant Closed for Repairs MACON, Ga., Nov. 2.—As a result of the closing of the plant of the Macon Packing company, three hun dred employes have been thrown out of work, temporarily, it is said. There have been reports in circula tion for some time that It was the intention of the Allied Packers, who are the owners, to close the Macon plant permanently. However, there is no verification of this. Officials of the company say the closing is necessary in order to make some much needed repairs to the machin ery. The plant of the Macon Packing company represents an investment of a million dollars. Until two years ago, it was operated by local interests. From the time that it was taken over by the Allied Packers, until the middle of last summer, the plant had bee. operated regu larly, but since that time it has been run with reduced force. Alaskan City Suffers Decided Depopulation SEATTLE, Nov. 2.—Nome, Alaska, which during the gold rush of 1900 had a population estimated at fif teen thousand, was left with only 200 Inhabitants when the steamer Victoria, the last boat of the sea son for the states, sailed from there, according to passengers whe were here Tuesday. The Victoria 1 rought 523 pas sengers from Alaska, 350 of whom were from Nome. Many of these declared they would not return. Gets Liquor Back; Thieves Get Busy PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—Liquor thieves did some fast, snappy work during the night at the sa loon of John P. McShea, 1438 Glenwood Avenue, stealing 150 cases of whisky from the cellar, according to a report made to the police today by McShea. The liquor valued at SB,OOO. was part of a lot of 350 cases of ; whisky returned at 5 p. m. yester i day by government agents. The ; whisky had been seize t d when the : saloonkeeper was arrested for i selling it Illegally. The federal i grand jury refused a charge against McShea. The liquor was ordered returned. The saloon-keeper told the po lice the thieves entered his place by breaking the glass on a side door and then slipping back a bolt. McShea’s living quarters are over the" saloon. OIL DISCOVERED IN ARCTIC CIRCLE BY EXPEDITION NEW YORK.—Details regarding the discovery of oil within the Arctic Circle, in the northwest territory of Canada, by the Imperial Oil company, limited, a member of the Standard Oil group, were told by C. O. Still man, president, on his arrival in New York last week. If petroleum is found in sufficient quant' in this region to warrant further develop ment, Mr. Stillman said, it would cost approximately $50,000,000 to put into operation the necessary pipe line to bring the oil to a market. The new oil discovery is at Fort Norman, about 1,500 miles north of Edmonton, and about 1,200 miles from the nearest railroad, which reaches Mac Murray, on the Athabas ca. Two of the company’s geologists lost their lives from exposure in their search for deposits that indi cated the presence of oil. A party of drillers was started for Fort Norman early in July, 1919 and it was with the greatest difficul ty that they got the necessary skele ton equipment and supplies into the district by the following September. The driller crew remained in camp throughout the long Arctic winter, in order to be on hand to begin work in the spring of the present year. Since then drilling operations have been pushed as rapidly as possible. “We found a little oil at a depth of eighty feet,” said Mr. Stillman, “and again at 200 feet and 425 feet, but at the latter stage the produc tion was only about eight barrels a day. However, on August 25, at a depth of 783 feet, oil in some quan tity was found and began flowing out of the six-inch pipe. After thirty minutes it was shut off and there were no facilities for accurately measuring the flow. It is the opin ion of the drillers that the well ought to prove Jgood for something between 1,000 and 1,500 barrels a day. • “This is the furthest point north at which oil has ever been located, and it is, of course, too early yet to speculate on the probable value of the discovery. Many months must, elapse before other test wells can be sunk to prove or disprove the theory that petroleum exists in this district in sufficient quantities to justify the enormous expenditures which will be required before any return on the initial outlay may be expected. From a commercial point of view, however, it is not of immediate value, on ac count of its remoteness from any refinery outlet.” Young Woman Hiker Here on Her Way From Boston to Florida Having walked all the way from Boston. Mass., Miss Nell Walker, a young woman hiker, arrived in At lanta Monday morning on her way south. Miss Walker says she has been a disciple of the broad high way since April, when a physician advised her to take open air exercise for her health. She decided to see the country while doing so, and since then she has walked an aver age of twenty miles a day. She expects to hike from Atlanta to Macon, and from there down to Florida and thence . west. She car ries a light pack weighing about ten pounds and containing food, cook ing utensils and pneumatic bed, be cause sometimes she has to spend a night in the open. Her income is derived from work on the farms en route. She is an expert fruit pick er and can do other farm work. Her former occupation was factory work, but she gave this up when her health was threatened. Miss Walker has always travele-d alone, and she says that her life on the road is pleasant and in no way difficult. When she cannot find shelter she has a camp of her own, and her expenses amount to only a little over one dollar a day. She thinks that southern people are the best people on earth, and was much impressed with her first visit to Atlanta. She wears heavy men’s boots, and warm clothes, and car ries her camping equipment in a small haversack. Novelist Looks for A “Perfect Lover” PHILADELPHIA. The perfect lover has an American address which Elinor Glyn, the English wroter who stopped in Philadelphia recently Is going to locate in one of the city di rectories of the U. S. A. before she goes back to England. “I do not know from what class or part of the country my new hero will come,” said- Mrs. Glyn. “The finest men I ever saw lived in the mining camps of the west, but men tally they were unpolished. It is my hope that this same type of perfect physical man will now be widely ed ucated and cultured through the growing spread of college training in the United States. “I should be bored to death in three days with the most perfectly built man in the world if I felt he was my inferior in interllect. "Prohibition will bring about a new breed of finer men in this country, once the sinews of the na tion have been hardened by a period of abstinence.” Fewer Persons Killed On American Roads WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Fewer persons were killed on railroads dur ing 1919 than in any year since 1898 and fewer were injured than in any year since 1910, said a statement is sued today by the interstate com merce commission. During 1919 a total of 6,978 per sons were killed and 149,053 injured, compared with 6,859 killed in 1898 and 119,507 injured in 1910. Os the killed during the year, 273 were pas sengers and of the Injured, 7,456 were passengers. Employes killed during 1919 numbered 2,138 and 131,018 were injured. Fewer trespassers on railroads were killed in 1919 than during any year of the commission’s records which go back to 1890. Last year 2,553 trespassers were killed and 2,658 injured. Railroad officials said there were less persons out of em ployment and fewer tramps than for merly because of the war, Yallest Man Dead TEXARKANA. Tex.. Nov. 2.—J W, Patterson, reputed to be the tall est men in the United States, died of Bright’s disease last night at his home in Bloomburg. He was seven feet, five inches tall. CASTORIA For Infants and Children n Use For Over 30 Years Always bears Signature THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1920. Tiny Black Beetle Kills More Trees Than Forest Fire \ / ,7 s-- lwll'1! iiH W OMI ® If s. glov'd I Ring an.l arrow show trees killed by the bug, pictured above, enlarged, and (smaller) life sije. Judge Fixes Fine Through Crap Game KANSAS CITY, Kans.—-Judge A. J. Herrod has founded a new method of judgment against dice players. Fred Doney and H. M. Bagby were arrested for shooting crap. The court orde-ed the pair to “roll the bones” and fined each prisoner one dollar for every point made. Doney’s dice came up nine and Bagby’s five. Chinese Are Shot ,In Mutiny on Ship; Two Badly Wounded NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 2.—Eleven Chinese members of the crew of the British steamship Elm Leaf -were wounded early today when guards resorted to pistol fire to quell a mu tiny aboard the vessel. Twenty-four Chinese participated in the riot, which was precipitated when officers of the ship announced that in compliance with federal regu lations no shore leave would be granted. According to reports submitted at the customs house the Chinese armed themselves with knives, pieces of pipe and scrap iron and rushed from the forecastle in an effort to over whelm the guards. A number got over the ship and hid themselves in the woods bordering the river. The rapid firing of the guards influenced most of those not wounded to sur render. Two of the wounded will die, according to reports. The Elm Leaf is anchored at Good Hope, about fifteen miles above New Orleans. The vessel is operated be tween New Orleans and Tampico. ISperienosd Adfeere iodnewdomof nature More IT is natural to think of the ex pectant mother’s influence up on the unborn babe. Her food, her habits, her hygiene, and even the condition of her mipd, all have a part in determining the well-being or ill-being of her in fant before birth. No woman awaiting the joys of coming motherhood should allow the days to pass without giving nature a helping hand— because the conditions of pending mother hood, existing as they do, over a protracted period of months, cre ate almost a new state of being for a woman. WARNING: Avoid using plain oil», greases and substitutes — they act only on the skin and may cause harm without doing good. f , , ’ BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., 4^l Th I ’ Dept. 27, Atlanta. Ga. ’ Please send me your FREE book- > ! let on MOTHERHOOD and The BABY. J i N -” i Used by Expectant A lot hers • _ for Three Generations. Dr. J. Bradfield’s Female Regulator This tonic, for women only, is based upon the prescription of a famous physician, who made the disorders of women his life study. That is why it has proven a blessing to so many thousands of women. It has given them the right start. It will do just that for you. If you need this service, get Dr. J. Bradfield’s Female Regulator now, TODAY, and you will never cease to give thanks for the suggestion that brought to you "-■ ' - r bv tP] drugstores in SI.OO bottles. BMCHAIN AND d no money—-amply name and address —merely give away f iful Art Pictures wi:h 12 Boxes oi our famous White fl e, which you sell at 25c each- W e will send you this Genuine >; 7 stch. also Cham and two Gold Shell Rings, according to f I Ternium Catalogue which you receive with the Salve. Millions are ustng f j or cuts, | A FMCC I You CAN ALSO EARN ..LALUCO.' A BEAUTIFUL DINNER SET I OB SIX LACE CURTAINS" and many other beautiful premiums. Out plan is the easresl and absolutely square. Wnte quick—Pictures and Salve sent promptly, post-paid. Be first in your town. , , THE WILSON CHEMICAL CO, Get-Rich-Quick Idea Costs Him Bank Roll NEW PHILADELPHIA. Ohio. Jacob Ballentine today has re ported to the police that he has been robbed of $20,500 in cash. Ballentine, according to the po lice, drew the money from a bank to finance a get-rich-quick scheme of two strangers, and for safe keeping deposited it in a brick wall of his cellar. Police believe the two strangers shadowed him ind got the money. BEN HILL BUREAU TO HELP FARMERS HOLD COTTON FITZGERALD, Ga„ N«>. i.—With co-operation among' the farmers for the common benefit as the prevailing keynote of the meeting, the advisory council of the Ben Hill County Farm Bureau Federation Thursday voted to make arrangements for relieving distressed corn through the medium of established warehouses and the banks to co-operate to the fullest degree with the Peanut Growers as sociation in pricing and marketing peanuts and to enlist the aid of the Fitzgerald Woman’s club in estab lishing a curb market in Fitzgerald next spring or earlier. A comittee composed of C. L. Pres cott, Wesley R. Walker, and C. T. Owens, will make arrangements with cotton warehouses to store corn which otherwise would be thrown on the market at low prices. Warehouse receipts will be issued and accepted as collateral by the banks for loans to tide the farmer over the present depressed period in the corn market. The Peanut Growers’ association will be invited by the farm bureau to organize a branch in Ben Hill county. Queries for quotations on peanuts that have been received by the bureau will be answered with the statement that the farmers here .will, adopt the price fixed by he as ’sociation. The plan for a curb market in Fitzgerald will be presented to the Fitzgerald Woman’s club at its next meeting by Secretary C. T. Owens Ben Hill county is the first in which the project for a curb market has originated with the farmers. Else where, the housewives of the city have made the first move. The county federation now nas a membership of 264 paid up members, according to the report by J. E. Tur ner. treasurer. Co-operative curing and storing of sweet potatoes, look ing toward co-operative marketing in the spring, the purchase of hay bailing wire in a lump for all mem bens, and liberal suoport to live stock and corn club work among the boys are three of the features of the work up to date. . Sparta Attorney Fires At ’Possum Hunters And Shoots Friend SPARTA, Ga., Nov. 2.—When At torney R. B. Harley, a well-known Sparta lawyer, fired into a party of oppossum hunters on his farm two miles east of Sparta last night, with a shot gun loaded with bird shot, E. W. Harrison, stock dealer and promi nent farmer of this county, was shot in the face. Messrs Harley and Har rison are neighbors and the best of friends and had Mr. Harrison's identity been known to Mr. Harley he would hot have been shot. While painfully hurt, Mr. Harrison sus tain ed no permanent injury. Public Debt Reduced Nearly Billion Dollars In Month of October WASHINGTON, Nov. 2.—Treasury operations fur October resulted in a further reduction in the public debt, according to figures made public to day showing the gross debt to be $24,062,509,672. This represents a reduction of $24,846,455 during the month. Just as she prepares hersdf for so will most favorable conditio:n prevail when her child is bom. Mother’s Friend is a balm for the nerves, an intessley penetrat ing lubricant that softens the muscles, relaxes tension of the delicate organism involved in ma ternity, and prepares the way for an easier, Quicker and practical delivery. Get a bottle from your druggist today. For valuable booklet — “MOTHER HOOD and The BABY”— free, fill in coupon below and mail direct to makers of MOTHER’S FRIEND. Lungs Weak? Generous Offer to Tuberculosis Sufferers of Trial of SANOSIN SANOLEUM Embracing Europe’s Remarkable Expectorant, SANO SIN Noted medical scientists—Doctor# Dane- Uus, Sommerfield. Wolff, Noel, Gauthier, Essers—declare SANOSIN most valuable treatment for Pulmonary ailment#. Felix Wolff, Court Physician, Director of the Sanitarium for Consumptives in Reibolds grun. Germany, highly recomtneiids it SANOSIN has been officially recommended to the Berlin Medical Association. Dr. C. W. A. Essers, Amsterdam, Holland, de clares it. a “Moral obligation to make SANOSIN known to the whole human race.” American sufferers, rich or poor, can use this remarkable home treatment that has met with such success in Europe. SANO SIN SANOLEUM is designed to produce calm, restful sleep without Morphium or similar deadening drugs, and to bring a> most Immediate relief - *rz?m blood spitting and night sweats. Sa.’usTl'N SANOLEUM is an inexpensive home treat ment of genuine merit and is proving a Hissing to all suffering from Tuberculosis. Bronchitis, Asthma, Catarrahs, Whooping Cough, etc. Send for FREE BOOKLET (with testimonials) explaining this treat ment and how a trial can be made in vour own home at onr risk. Address SANOSIN SANOLEUM, 222 N. Wabash Ave,, Chicago. 111., Dept. 997. SHOW THIS TO SOME UNFORTUNATE (Advt.) DONT DESPAIR If you are troubled with pains or aches; feel tired; have headache, indigestion, insomnia; painful passage of urine, you will find relief by regularly taking COLD MEDAL The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles and National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Three sizes, all druggists. Guaranteed. Look for the name Gold Medal on every boa aad accept no imitation Cured His RUPTURE I was badly ruptured while lifting a trtnk several years ago. Doctors said my only hope of cure was an operation. Trusses did me no good. Finally I got hold of something that quickly and completely cured me. Years have passed and the rupture has never re turned. although I am doing hard work as a carpenter. There was no operation, no lost time, uo trouble. I have nothing to sell, but will give full Information about how you may find a complete cure without oper ation, if you write to me. Eugene M. Pullen. Carpenter, 189-G Marcellus avenue, Manas quan, N. J. Better cut out this notice and show it to any others who are ruptured— you may save a life or at least stop the misery of rupture and the worry and danger of an operation.—(Advt.) RHEUMATISM RECIPE I will gladly send any Rheumatism suf ferer a Simple Herb Recipe Absolutely Free that Completely Cured me of a terrible at tack of muscular and inflammatory Rheu matism of long standing after everythin! else I tried had failed me. I have giver it to many sufferers who believed theil cases hopeless, yet they found relief frou their suffering by taking these simple herbs It also relieves Sciatica promptly, as well ns Neuralgia, and is a wonderful blood purl tier. You are most welcome to this Herl Recipe if you will send for it at once, believe you will consider It a God-Send afto you have put it to the test. There is noth ing injurious contained in it, and you ea: see for yonrsolf exactly what you are tai. ing. I will gladly send this Kectpe—al>» ’ lately free—to any sufferer who will se 11 ’ name and address, plainly written. W. G. SUTTON, 8650 Magnolia Ave. Los Angeles, Calif or .in 80% OR MORE SAVING ® n Se,ect Fresh Rubber Tires R iS//4j£X\ Do not clan th*te ai Recondt. as they ££ ///JFa formerly sold for nearly three time t K //JR'A the price we ask and wer* fiuaran ff \ tee 1 F()R 0000 M,L E S You la * appreciate the remarkable Suvmg IT j/F-R ontil you see them sis **i I i a TIRES TUBES a«£ 1 ® 30x3 $ 8.90 (2.35 K 4=- H 30x334 965 265 If •“* ■ 32x334 1195 2.80 ® ■ 31x4 13.35 310 cm U 32x4 13.95 330 K fl 33x4 14 75 363 E? <E3O K 34x4 15.65 385 B SiBY Si-: 34x4 K 16 85 4.35 B tt ' hi®'! New ,resh tubc * «‘d. standard rnako a X 7 Send No Money *• ‘fc~ R I vrtte itatinc number of lire* Wknu d Wo W Vk of examination. Y»u be the judge if Rot wk f oatUfied after in*puctmll that inis »• the / areateat t<re bargain rv*r offered, feuira / them at oui expense Order lode* X/ggr Indiana Tire & Rubber Co 102 SL. H—■■■<. la*. DEAFNESS ’.Mfect hearing It now •> SffagMWa being restored in every tgEajgfin condition of deafness o defective hearing from fi/W’ causes such as Catarrhal jltql • J\l Deafness, Relaxed or ; tfcxAK rEfx Sunken Drums, Thickened Drums, Ronrlng and Hlsx Wholly or Partially De- ? stroyed Drums, Discharge from Ears, etc. < WILSON COMMON-SENSE EAR DRUMS < “Little Wireless Phones for the Ears,” re quire no medicine, but effectively replace what is lacking or defective in the natural ear drums. They are simple devices, which the wearer easily fits into the ears, where they are invisible. Soft, safe and comfort able. Write today for our 168-page FREE book on DEAFNESS, giving you full particulars and testimonials. WILSON EAR DRUM 00., Incorporated. 220 Inter-Southern Bldg., Louisville, Ky. Moving Picture Machine Given faek Boy», here is your t: r ~~——H M chance to hnve a NEW Ju. la real movingpicture I'Uiwwi MrajiM machine with film .MRaSZT complete. Simply Hr seHiilioxcafamous WhiteCloverine gr-A. ]Sk/ Salve a««c with Free WeteFpictures, according to ’> M offeHnnreml»mratalog. Be fir'tin ynurtown Tig WHaon CbemlealC*., Dffit. MP 77 Tyrene, Pa. « Walking Doll Free She can walk or run as fast as you can. All you have to do is to push her. Entirely new doll, 1 ft. tall. Be the first girl in your town to have this fine walk ing doll. Sent free, all charges paid, for selling only 8 peks. Novelty Post Cards at 15c. Jones Mfg. Co.. Dept. 16, Attleboro, Mass. FUtnlttSM Genuln4’ Song-o-phone cornet, solid metal, higher polished. Anyone can play it. Given for selling 25 Jewelry Novelties at 10c each. Eagle Watch Co.. Degt. 461. East Boston. Msm. CURED HER FITS Mrs. D. Martin of New York writes thaf her fits were stopped with a medicine sent to her by a Milwaukee resident and sug gests that everyone suffering from fits write R. P. I-epso, 13 Island Ave., Milwau kee, Wis., who will send them a bottle of the'same kind of medicine she used; free. FITS If you have Epilepsy, tits, Falling Sick icss or Convulsions —no matter how bad— write todav for my FREE trial treatment. I'sed successfully 25 years. Give age and explain case. Dr. C. M. Simpgon, 1685 Went 44th St., Cleveland, Ohi*.