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! WHEN MEALS |
j DON’T FIT j
I “Pape’s Diapepsin” is the I
? quickest Indigestion and j
; Stomach Relief I
* t
Are lumps of undigested food caus
ing you pain? Is your stomach acid,
gassy, sour, or have you flatulence,
heartburn? Then take Pape’s Diap
epsin.
Just as soon as you eat a tablet
or two of Pape’s Diapepsin all that
dyspepsia, indigestion and stomach
distress caused by acidity ends.
These pleasant, harmless tablets of
Pape’s Diapepsin never fail to make
sick, upset stomachs feel fine at
once, and they cost very little at
drug stores.— (Advt.)
■'wure Your
Rupture Like
I Cured Mine”
Old Sea Captain Cured His Own
Rupture After Doctors Said
“Operate or Death.”
His Remedy and Book Sent Free
Captain Collings sailed the seas
for many years; then he sustained
a bad double rupture that soon
forced him to not only remain ashore
but kept him bedridden for years. He
tried doctor after doctor and truss
after truss. No results! Finally, he
was assured that he must either
submit to a dangerous and abhorrent
operation or die. He did neither! He
cured himself instead.
S Will
Mi
“Fellow Men and Women, You Don’t
Have To Be Cut Up, and Yon
Don’t Have To Be Tortured
By Trusses.”
Captain Collings made a study of
himself, of his oondition —and at
last he was rewarded by the finding
of the method that so quickly made
him a well, strong vigorous afid hap
py man.
Anyone can use the same method;
it’s simple, easy, safe and inexpen
sive. Every ruptured person in the
world should have the Captain Col
lings book, telling all about how he
cured himself, and how anyone may
follow the same treatment in their
own home without any trouble. The
book and medicine are FREE. They
will be sent prepaid to any rupture
sufferer who will fill out the below
coupon. But send it right away—
now—before you put down this pa
per.
FRLE RUPTURE' BOOK AND
REMEDY COUPON
Cant. W. A. Collings (Inc.)
Box 221E. Watertown, N. Y.
Please send me your FREE
Rupture Remedy and Book with
out any obligation on my part
whatever.
Name
Address
(Advt.)
Gets 28 Eggs A Day
Now, FromJ4 Hens
C. C. White, Well-Known Breeder,
Tells How. Costs Nothing to Try.
“I gave Don Sung to 34 utility Buff
Orpingtons and the egg yield increased
from 7 to 28 a day. Don Sung is a
wonder and I am now giving it to all
®y hens regularly.”—Chas. C. White,
f Mgr-. Cherry Hill Farm,
■IF- U» ITT Flackville, Ind.
fl* Mr. White is the well
known breeder and ex
•» hlbitor. He wrote the
1 f above letter In Decem-
ai ■ y-A ber, after his test had
shown a gain of 21 eggs
a day from 84 hens. We will make you
the same offer we made him. Here it is:
Give your hens Don Sung and watch
results for one month. If you don't find
that it pays for itself and pays you a
good profit besides, simply tell us and
your money will be cheerfully refunded.
Don Sung (Chinese for egg-laying) is
I scientific tonic and conditioner. It is
sasily given in the feed, improves the
hen’s health and makes her stronger and
more active. It tones up the egg-laying
organs, and gets the eggs, no matter
how cold or wet the weather.
You can obtain Don Sung from your
druggist or poultry remedy dealer, or
send $1.04 (includes war tax) for a
package by mail. Burrell-Dugger Co.,
214 Columbia Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.
PonSung
Chinese for Egg* Laying
gggSALt. THESE FREE
Gold plated Laval-
Here and Neckchain,
wffifejgExW pair pier' efess Ear-
bobs, Gold plated
•T’CTy. ■ Extension Bracelet
and 4 Beautiful
gaaafeffi Rings, ALL FREE,
for selling 25 Jew
ejrv jf ove itj es a t jo
eta. each. We also give Watches, Camera*;
etc. Write today. EAGLE WATCH CO..
Dept. 476, East Boston, Mass.
“YOUR MEDICINE IS 0. K”
Mrs. Charles Rule, New Diggins,
Wis., writes: “Your medicine is O. K.
I think Foley’s Honey and Tar is the
best for coughs. I think your medi
cine is all you say it is. I know I
would never be without it. You
may use my name.” Foley’s Honey
and Tar acts quickly, checks coughs,
colds and croup, cuts the phlegm,
opens air passages and allays irri
tation. It stops sleep-disturbing
coughing at night. Children like it.
Contains no opiates. Sold every
where. — (Advt.)
1921 Model FZTfiK.W
to introduce our watches. Thin model, beautifully polished
ailveroid case. Men's and women s sue. r itted with high
mde movement, fully tested. Stem set and stem wind.
EVERY WATCH GUARANTEED
sg9s
C.O.D.
Send us your name and address plainly written, at one®.
We'll tend thia beautiful watch by return parcel poat. ray poatmao
only 12.95. Teat this 1921 time keeper in every way. If nj?t satis,
tied return ft. We'll refund your mopey. Send your order TODAY*
Special Offer: Gold filled cbAkuJl eitra. •
Cambridge WutohCo x iua Cambridge Bldg., Chiodga
Watch, Chain and Two Rings
wwxcmw Genuine American
Watch guaranteed by
maker, and all thi<
zf g ' j jewelry civen»nrsrl|.
VA. MR only co packets.
j Garden Seeds it toe
| each Many other pre-
J miums Writetoday •
rm~i The Wilson Seed Co.
Dept.C. Ml'yrone.Pa.
THE ATLANTA TRI-WEEKLY JOURNAL
SMUGGLERS HAVE MANY TRICKS
' ‘ —■
ar iiiiL. .
. w WJSgter
s 'Hn f ■ ‘ f •
£ •'Wimr'' ;
11 ; j ssgj ———
~ ?= 1 I I
o — j l - -
■ -
Uncle Sam’s sleuths who watch
over the customs house in New York
have become experts in ferreting .out
valuable contraband that arrivals in
this country try to slip in without
paying duty for. The accompanying
pictures show some of the tricks ex-
Record Enrollment Likely,
Declare Atlanta Officials
For Cross Roll Call
To make the fourth annual Red
Cross roll call, which starts next
Thursday morning, not only a rec
ord-breaker in the number of mem
bers enrolled, but also a record
breaker for speed in completing the
canvass, is the aim of.Chairman Ju
lian V. Boehm and his colleageus of
the executive committee of the Civi
tan club, which, undertook the work
of the enrollment this year.
“I believe we are going to do
both,” said Chairman Boehm Tues
day. “I believe we are going to
get more members than we have
ever got before, and get them quick
er, thanks to the magnificent sup
port we have received from public
spirited men, women, boys and girls
throughout the city.”
All departments of the drive are
practically in readiness to launch
their work next Thursday morning.
The downtown district will be can
vassed, from office to office and from
store to store, by the downtown di
vision, composed of the livest wire
civic workers in the city, who are
trained in covering the maximum
amount of territory in the minimum
of time, and sweeping things clean
as they go. While the downtown di
vision is working Its territory, the
girls with booths will be on the job
in the lobbies of office buildings,
banks, hotels and other public
places. Persons ’not enrolled in
their offices will be enrolled at the
booths as they pass back and forth.
Then Thursday night will come
the house-to-house canvass, which is
to be the mainstay and backbone of
the entire enrollment. This work
will be done by eleven sets of teams,
one in each city ward. They will
have assigned to them certain spe
cific territory on the city map. Their
job will be to ring the door bell of
WARNING
Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are
not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
21 years, and proved safe by millions.—Say “Bayer”!
SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an “unbroken package” of
genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper direc
tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu
matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American!
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents—Larger packages.
Aaplrln !■ the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacldeßter of Saficyllcacld
In I • 111 i • 1 j "i
Our large size 10-Karut Gold-filled glasses will enable yon to see far or near, read
the smallest print and thread the finest needle. They will give you years of satisfac
tion, will protect your eyes, and prevent headaches due to eye strain. You can have
these beautiful, durable glasses on trial free.
Send No Money—Just Mail Coupon
We trust you with the glasses. Jus* send your name and address and we send
glasses on FREE TRIAL. Put them on and note how easily you can read, work,
write or sew, either by daylight or lamplight. Sit down now and fill out tlie
•*oupon. Mall it today.
GREAT EASTERN SPECTACLE CO., Dept. B, East Boston, Mass.:
I send coupon for ten days’ FREE TRIAL of your 10-Karat Gold-filled, large size
spectacles with fine leatherette velveteen lined spring back epectacle case. If I keep
the glasses I ani_to pay you $2.85 only, plug 15 -ts. War Tax, for these glasses that
sell as high as $“. If not. I will-return them without paying a single cent. Be sure
to answer the following questions without fail:
How old are you? Have you used glasses? How long?
Name
i ostoffice
Rnr’il Route Box No State
Oo £. , .. s £ en ' l tmseooA mone.v for nbnrtd. Inmpy beds Hu» beds of Genuine New
■■acwxx xx. Feathers and Kelpie Tested Featherproof Viek.ng. Shlppeu direc'fXp" iR
v ♦ (Positively only feather factory in country selling direct Beware of
\ iA ta Vi rs * lil E*’' B t ßav J? gß guaranteed Any offer delivered C.O.D. Noth*
Ing Dnwn-Not One Penny. Satisfaction guaranteed or you don’t pay
XV P° quibbling Get your copy of o U r book today Why pay hi«h prices nr
uJ'eL t r i or ~cker* beds? Sleep on sanitary healthful, odorless, new HTH ftl (58 CTO
F? C S^. b, il:.r y S^ l t?n O frOD ' Ur ‘ tr W
irity Bedding Factories Dept. 319, Nashville, renn.^**l3 z
posed by the inspectors. The man
with his back turned, at the upper
left, is wearing a secret belt. At
the upper right, an .agent is shown
nabbing a casket of jewels that had
been hidden behind a stateroom desk.
every home in their territory and
enroll every family 100 per cent in
the Red Cross, giving receipts and
Red Cross membership badges as
they go. They will start at 6:30
o’clock and finish not later than 8
o'clock, and during those hours the
people are requested to stay at home
to receive them when they call.
In the suburos and rural districts
of the county, the canvass will be
made on a similar plan. Each county
store in Fulton county will be an en
rollment center for the Red Cross,
with the merchant acting as chair
man for that community center. The
Fulton county police will maintain
communications between general
headquarters in the Chamber of Com
merce building and every precinct
and suburb in the county. James L.
Logan as general chairman for su
burbs and precincts has put together
a most complete and efficient or
ganization. His suburban chairmen
are as follows:
Hapeville, J. M. Daniel; Chatta
hoochee. H. W. Salmon; Riverside, J.
B. Summerlin; Bolton, Virlyn B.
Moore: Rock Springs, Mrs. R. L.
Hope; Buckhead, J. P. Davenport and
Lee A. Davis; Ben Hill, Dr. Roy W.
McGee; College Park, Mrs. R. C. Ad
erholt, president of the College Park
Woman’s club, who has enlisted
every member of the club as a worker
in the drive.
Jack Johnson Matched
For a Turkey Day Bout
LEAVENWORTH, Kan.. Nov. 9
Jack Johnson, who is serving one
year in prison here for violation of
the Mann act, was matched today for
a Turkey day bout of six rounds in
the federal prison. “Topeka Jack”
Johnson will be his opponent.
Below to the left are shown an ordi
nary heel and an ordinary lemon,
except that both are hollow for the
purpose of hiding opium. To the
right appear a set of bogus pulley
blocks crammed with morphine.
Ragtime Shbe Shines
OMAHA, Neb. —Now comes the
jazz-bo bootblack and the syncopat
ed shoe shine. With a swish and a
bang and a slam—the supple-armed
devotee of the great god Shine,
whanges the ol’ polishing cloth on
A. ,•
the leather top and straightway raps
out the lilting overture to a popular
tune. From then until he tugs the
cuff of your trousers in token he is
done, the air shakes with the rattle
and bang and sway of the jazz-bo
melody. It’s all the rage here now.
You climb to your perch in the shoe
shine parlor and name your favorite
piece. While he shines, the boot
black makes the cloth snap in the
rhythm of the tune you choose. First
class hops here now have a varied
repertoire. They’ll plav anything
from “Down in Dixie.” to “Dardanel
la,” though the favorite seems to
be ‘‘Tell it With Tips,” which is
something like the "Black ’Em Up
Blues,” only more like “The Polish
ing Rag.”
Wife AaSks Officer
To Watch Street Cars
For Conductor Husband
The confusion and craning of necks
which occurred at Marietta and For
syth streets Tuesday morning, has
]an interesting, if somewhat hazy
explanation.
A crowd gathered around a weep
ing young woman, who sought
refuge under the sheltering wing of
i the traffic officer standing under the
semaphore in the middle of the
street. She sobbed out her story,
, and when it had all been told, her
I tears gave out, and she became an
gry.
“I want you to find my husband,"
she told the policeman. “He's a
street car conductor, and will come
by here on a street car in a few min
utes.” She gave him a description
of the husband, and then told the
story—one of the eternal triangle.
“I have been married to about
three weeks, and this morningg I
was riding on his car, when a wom
an came in and said she was his
wife. He didn’t deny it, either. And
now it seems I’m married to a man
who has two wives, and all I want
is to get hold of him.”
Further information gleaned from
the young woman was to the effect
that the husband left his first wife
in a south Georgia town, came to
- Atlanta and met the second woman
i and married hre, and that now the
j first wife has appeared on the scene,
i The bewildered traffic policeman
I told wife No. 2 that he would be on
; the lookout for the offending hus
, band.
Atlantians Are Warned
Os Confidence Agents
Police officials issued a warning
Tuesday to all Atlantians, particu
larly business men and financiers, to
beware of a clever gang of confidence
men and women who are now be
lieved to be in Atlanta, and who are
according to the officers likely to
perpetrate • a “wire-tapping” or other
confidence game any day.
Approximately seven men and
women are in the party, they said.
All of them, the officers said, patron
ize the best hotels and are flashily
dressed. They are said to be on the
way to Florida to operate among
the tourists during the winter. As
far as the police and government
agents have been ahle to ascertain,
the gang has not yet attempted to
victimize anyone in Atlanta to date.
Their actions are being losely watch
ed, it is said.
Another Big Cut
In Engine Prices
I will you an up-to-date
WITTE Kerosene Engine, battery ig
nition or Bosch Magneto, on prac
tically your own terms—Cash or
Payments. I guarantee longer, ship
quicker, save you sls to S2OO. It is
easy to earn the cost of a WITTE
in a few weeks, or a saw-rig outfit
clear in 30 days. Before you select
any kind of an engine for any work,
get my latest catalog and quick-ac
tion price list on engines, 2 to 30
H.-P., FREE, by Return Mail.—Ed.
H. Witte. Pres. Write nearest ad
dress. WITTE ENGINE WORKS,
2651 Oakland Ave., Kansas City, Mo.,
or 2G51 Empire Bldg., Pittsburg, Pa,
(Advt.)
Six Concealed Saws
Fail to Saw to Freedom
HOUSTON, Tex. —After he had
boasted that he walked through the
i walls of “the last jail like a cracker
box,” Virgil Carson, twenty-three
i set to work with his trusty saw on
i the bars here. They nabbed him
bout morning. He was half through.
iThe cops had overlooked oqly a half
j dozen saws in his belt.
“Hunger Striker”
Is Heavy Eater
NEW YORK.—Alexander Coler
up, a 16-year-old deaf and dumb
boy, of Portland, Me., who is be
ing held by the police of Orange,
N J., threatened to go on a hun
ger, strike unless immediately re
leased.
He was turned over to the po
lice by the Associated Charities
to whom he applied for assistant,
and is being held while an effort
is made to reach his relatives.
He wrote a note to the police as
fellows:
‘‘You promised me that you
would let me go. I asked you
again this morning and you said
you would not let me go yet. Un
less you release me I will kill my
self and I will not eat anything.”
The police describe him as the
“heaviest eating hunger striker”
they ever saw. For dinner, they
said, he ate three sandwiches
and drank a quart of coffee, and
for supper two fried eggs, a
quantity of bread and a quart of
coffee.
MOVING DAY FOR
LIQUOR EXPECTED
AFTER DECISION
WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—Thdu
sads of applications for permits to
move liquor from homes to storage
places are expected as a result of
the supreme court decision that li
quor for personal use stored outside
the home is immune from seizure,
according to officials today.
Officials emphasized, however, that
the decision will not make it possi
ble to obtain liquor lawfully,
“But thousands of persons in or
dinary financial circumstances
bought liquor in SIOO lots before
January 16, 1919,” said Dr. A. .B
Adams, of the prohibition enforce
ment division. “These people have
been worried continually. Some have
feared to leave their homes at night
lest burglars steal their liquor. Un
der the supreme court decision as re
ported, these litiuor owners probably
will be able to get permits to trans
port their liquor.”
Until the mandate of the court is
issued, internal revenue officials will
have no official notice of the deci
sion and probably will refuse for
the present to issue permits to move
liquor.
Wayne B. Wheeler, general coun
sel of the Anti-Saloon League, said
the decision will make prohibition
enforcement more difficult and de
clared it constituted another good
argument for the government tak
ing over all liquor and storing it in
warehouses concentrated at a few
central points. Wheeler further ad
vocated that the liquor be then dis
posed of in a legal manner and that
the proceeds go to the owners.
Wheeler also declared the decision
offered little hope to the thirsty.
“As I understand the decision it
applies only to liquors which were
lawfully possessed for the owner’s
personal use before the law went
into effect. There will not be a large
number who can lawfully take ad
vantage of the decision.”
Official “Step-Mother”
Os 10,000 Kiddies
Wants Larger Family
SACRAMENTO. Cal.—“ Stepmot
her” to 10,000 kiddies and anxious
to increase her “family.”
She is Miss Amy Steinhart, chief
as the children’s department of the
state board of control, and admin
istrator of (over $2,000,000 every
two years in widows’ pensions.
Miss Steinhart heads a corps of
young women whose duty it is to
see that the children of some 10,000
widows in California do not suffer
want.
The law now excludes hundreds
of children whose fathers are in
capacitated through disease. Stirred
by this manifest injustice, Miss
Steinhart, without consulting a legal
firm, penned an amendment to the
state constitution, which is being
submitted this November to the
voters of the state, and which is
declared to be a faultless as well
as a big piece of humanitarian leg
islation.
Now Miss Steinhart Is telling the
voters why they should pass the
amendment to relieve this class of
suffering children.
Holland Attempting
To Keep BolsheviL
Agents From Country
ROTTERDAM, Nov' 9. —Holland
has established a great cordon along
the German frontier to prevent the
influx of large numbers of Russian
bolshevik agents from Germany.
Heavy guards are maintained so that
persons wishing to cross the bound
ary in either direction must pass
through frontier posts and over
recognized highways. Those who
attempt to sneak across run the
risk of being shot.
These precautions have failed,
however, to check the movement of
soviet agents. Men whom the po
lice would like to interview have
been seen in this city and Amster
dam, but when police set their drag
net for their quarry, the men want
ed have utterly vanished. Later,
there usually comes information
that the suspects have been found
in Germany and are on their way
to the Russian frontier. The sys
tem followed resembles the "under
ground railroad” by which fugitive
slaves moved through northern
states to Canada in the days before
the American civil war.
Two Chattanoogans
Held in Savannah
As Murder Suspects
SAVANNAH, Ga., Nov. 9.—Dick
Turner and A. Hamburg, both of
Crattancoga, Tenn., according to in
formation furnished the police, and
J. A. Abramson, of Savannah, are
being held by the county police for
investigation, according to the dock
et. They are supposed to have killed
Cnares Bowman, a colored chauffeur,
<>n_ the White Bluff road about ten
nines from Savannah, late Monday
night. Eowman was found dead in
rds automobile by Rufus L. Rushing,
who took his rifle and apprehended
the three men named as they were
walking to the city. It is alleged
they and three women, for whom the
police -are looking. went to White
Bluff in the automobile driven by
Bowman.
The Chattanooga men were found
to be well supplied with money. One
of them possessed a Chattanooga po
lice badge, No. 36. They are being
held while the police investigate the
case further.
Coat Hanger Used as
Weapon to Advantage
SEATTLE.—They had to take
three stitches in Samuel King’s scalp.
Sam is a clothing merchant. He
says his employe, Miss Lavina Schaf
fer hit him with a coat hanger. She’s
free on SSO bail.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
nUse for over 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1920.
The Tri-Weekly Journal’s
HONOR COLUMN
A Department for
People Who DO Things
, v < t
EXSA
ml. -
C M_
Women keep
demo nstrating
right along that
i they are qualified
' to fill all sorts of
jobs that men used
to think were mo
nopolized by the
male sex. Yet you'd
hardly look for
woman in the
strenuous capacity
of a chief of po
lice. There’s one in
the United States,
however. Her name is Elsa McGinn
and her picture appears in The Tri-
Weekly Journal’s Honor Column to
day. Take a glance at Miss McG!*»n.
She seems good-humored enough, but
her appearance bears out reports that
the huskiest and most unruly of law
breakers get the surprise of their
lives when they dare to challenge
her ability to hold down her job.
Miss McGinn is at the head of the
police force at Burlingame, Cal. She
makes a fine officer, in the opinion
of her bluecoats and the public.
FIJI ISLANDERS
ARE PROSPEROUS,
THRIFTY PEOPLE
SUVA, Fiji Islands.—A telephone
in every white man’s home on Fiji!
That is the goal of Superintend
ent of Telegraphs and Telephones C.
F. Monckton, here. He is enlarging
the system here to provide for 1,200
subscribers instead 'of 400, and soon
this outpost of civilization will
boast of a modern telephone sys
tem.
The new system will do away with
the old “twist the handle” to call
the operator type of phone In use
heretofore, and three operators will
be required to handle the entire tel
ephone business of Fiji, against one
operator in the past.
FIETS ABOUT TANLAG
ARE GWEN TO PUBLIC
Special Representative Tells
Why It Has Become Most
Talked of Medicine in
the World Today.
NO GREAT MYSTERY
ABOUT IT, HE SAYS
Merit Alone Has Confirm
ed It in the Minds of the
People All Over the
American Continent.
W. B. Logan, special representa
tive in the State of Georgia for Tan
lac, the medicine that has created
such a sensation all over the United
States and Canada, gives some high
ly interesting facts about Tanlac and
the remarkable results achieved by it.
“Contrary to popular opinion,” he
stated, “there is no great mystery
about Tanlac, except in so far as the
chemistry of the human body itself
and what it does with substances ta
ken into it, is a mystery. Some of
the ingredients of Tanlac have been
known and used as medicines for
centuries. Others at’e of more recent
discovery, but every one of them is
of recognized therapeutic value and
used by the medical profession ev
erywhere. Tanlac is simply a com
mingling of these medicinal elements
in away hitherto uwknown and which
brings out their curative and recon
structive powers to a most remark
able degree. Briefly, it allays irrita
tion of the stomach, strengthens the
digestive and assimilative organs,
builds up and revitalizes the whole
system, and gives the body new pow-
Kill That .Cold With
CASCARA D QUININE
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 does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic
Laxative—No Opiate in Kill’s.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT
Find Costly Radium
After Long Search
UTICA, N. Y.—The $13,000
worth of radium belonging to a
Utica physician which was lost in
a hospital sewer, has been found
in the sewer pipe not far from
the hospital. The radium was
thrown into a toilet bowl by a
patient who was annoyed by its
heat. Twenty men have been
uprooting and examining the
sewer since its loss was discov
ered.
The radium itself was in a vial
especially made for it and it is
in three particles, each about the
size of a small birdshot.
DECEMBER IS
DESIGNATED AS
PEANUT MONTH
Representatives of the Georgia
Virginia, North Carolina and Ala
bama Peanut Growers’ associations,
meeting Monday at the Hotel Ansley,
formulated plans for a campaign of
publicity for the greater consump
tion of peanuts and peanut products.
It was decided to designate Decem
ber as “Peanut month.” during
which an active campaign of pub
licity is to be pushed.
"If results are obtained in like
measure to the co-operation between
associations which we are expect
ing,” declared J. Frank Fooshe, sec
retary-manager of the Virginia-
North Carolina Peanut Growers’ ex
change, “there is no doubt that the
campaign we plan will be of far
reaching importance and benefit to
peanut growers and to the south."
Mr. Fooshe pointed out that the
peanut market has toned up consid
erably during the past week, the
average gain during that period be
ing about a cent per pound.
"This gain of one week alone
means exactly $10,000,000 to the pea
nut belt,” he stated, “and from this
one example a forceful idea of just
how important to the south the pea
nut Industry is can be gained. The
present crop of the entire belt, it is
now being realized, is shorter than
was for a time thought, even being
below government estimates issued.
During the past month there has
been a heavy deterioration. Farm
ers are much encouraged over the
improvement of the market and ar
realizing the possibility for • better
prices.
“The peanut crop is estimated for
this season as approximately a bil
lion pounds, which, in round figures,
will mean $50,000,000.”
Alabama ranks first as a peanut
producing state; Georgia second,
Virginia third, North Carolina
fourth and Texas fifth.
Attending the session here were
W. W. Webb, of Hahira, the presi
dent of the Georgia Peanut Grow
ers’ association, who acted as chair
man; F. O. Hooten, of Montgomery,
secretary of the Alabama associa
tion; W. J. Lyon, secretary of the
Georgia association; Secretary-Man
ager Fooshe, of the Virginia-Nortn
Carolina exchange, and several prom
inent Georgia peanut growers.
Sidewalk Shimmy
Barred by Police
“You cannot shake your shimmy
, h , e . r ®’”. Police Captain Chandler
blithely sang to a picture replica of
Viola Dana which was shivering re
alistically in front of the Alamo No.
2 theater Monday inviting shopper*
to see “The Chorus Girl’s Romance"
inside.
Chief Beavers nodded his assent
and allowed that he didn’t consider
the shimmy a very appropriate thing
for sidewalk display.
George Schmidt, manager of the
Alamo No. 2, didn’t dispute the view
of Chief Beavers and Captain Chand
ler. He promptly cut off the electric
current that made the image of Miss
Dana shiver. Across her shoulders
he hung a sign bearing the word.
Censored.’ In the meantime “The
Chorus Girl’s Romance” goes on un
interrupted and .will be shown again
on Wednesday, Mr. Schmidt an
nounces.
ers of resistance and strength. Grat
ifying gains in weight are not un
common, especially where a person
has suffered from under-nourishment
brought on by dyspepsia, indigestion,
illness, operation or other causes.
“It is a demonstrated fact in medi
cal science that the stomach is the
starting point of most of the ills that
afflict the human body, and many of
the so-called diseases are not diseases
at all, but reflect symptoms of the
stomach derangements of the weak
ened condition of the body that nat
urally follows. Some kinds of rheu
matism, gastritis, palpitation, nerv
ousness, kidney disorders and liver
complaints are among the mefre com
mon troubles developed through the
stomach. Scores of other diseases
have been traced to the same source.
“Tanlac was made especially to
overcome these stomach complaints
and are the various so-called diseases
and symptoms that follow them, but
the astonishing reconstructive pow
ers reVealeff by it have not only as
tonished the general public, but have
somewhat surprised even the origi
nators of the medicine themselves.
Thousands of letters reach the Tan
lac offices from all parts of North
America telling of remarkable re
sults derived by people who have
suffered for years without being able
heretofore to find relief.
“Naturally, these remarkable
achievements have spread the fame
of Tanlac to all quarters of the con
tinent, and the demand for it has
necessitated working the laboratories
night and day.
“The tremendous popularity of
Tanlac grows steadily instead of
diminishing and can be explained in
only one way—merit. Its remarkable
restorative effect seems to be more
permanent than hitherto believed pos
sible. Thousands of persons wno
took it when it was first intrdduced
five years ago report that they are
still enjoying excellent health, and
millions of American homes are now
using Tanlac as the family medicine
after having first .tried It out thoor
oughly.”
Tanlac is sold by all leading drug
gists.— (Advt.)
CALOMEL LOW
CM SOUTH
Mr. Dodson, the “Liver
Tone” Man, Responsible
for Change for the '
Better
Every druggist in town has no
ticed a great falling off in the sale
of Calomel. They all give the same
reason. Dodson’s Liver Tone is tak
ing its place.
“Calomel is dangerous and people
know it.” Dodsor.'s Liver Tone is
personally guaranteed by every
drwg-gist who sells it. A large bot
tle doesn’t cost very much but if
it fails to give easy relief in every
case of liver sluggishness and con
stipation, just ask for your money
back.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is a pleas
ant-tasting, jjurely vegetable rem
edy, harmless to .both children and
adults. Take -a spoonful at night
and wake up feeling fine; no bili
ousness, sick headache, acid stomach-x
or constipated bowels. It doesn’t
gripe or cause inconvenience all the
next day like violent calomel. Take
a dose of calomel today and to
morrow you will feel weak, sick and
nauseated. Don’t lose a day.—(Advt.)
rim
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| NAME|
| ADDRESS. |
Ml
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Sl<raitos
Linimenifep
is always ready id
ease rheumatism
A T the very first twinge, down
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then quick relief, without rubbing,
for it’s stimulating and scatters
congestion. The boys use it for
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backaches, too.” 35c, 70c, $1.40.
cm for M*linsr onlr •
r« at 2ft eta Wonder.
>«. ate Ord*r today.
41 ft nacoa are yours.
• 6riunll',rt
CATARRH
TREATED FREE
’-0 days to prove thia treat
inent gives relief to catarrh
a of nose, head and air pas
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X-7 Davenport, lowa,
MOUDS FH»
For Expectant Mothers
osso By Three Gekeratiohs
WRITI FOR BOOKLET OH MOTHERHOOD AMO BABY.FRIt!
Bradfield Regulator Co. dept. s-d. Atlanta, ga
H B^EP^EPSY
SICKNESS
MM To aft saEe-ers from Fits, Epilcpay, Falling
Sickness or Nervout Troubles will be aent AB
SOLUTELY FREE a largo bottle of W. H. Poeko’a Traot.
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Military finish a
rifle. Sell S boxes Men- j,
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Box 84, Greenville, Pa. .
3