Newspaper Page Text
2
ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
Beware! Unless you see the name
“Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre
scribed by physicians for twenty-one
years and proved safe by millions.
Take Aspirin only as told in the
Bayer package for Colds, Headache,
Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache,
Toothache. Lumbago, and for Pain
nandy tin boxes of twelve Bayer
Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents.
Druggists also sett larger packages.
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester
of Salicylicacid.—(Advt.)
* A Stubborn Cough J
X Loosens Right Up 1
❖ f
tTliis home-made remedy is a won- Y
der for quick results. Easily ’♦*
and cheaply made. *•*
v-*i-*i**i-******'.*****.**.**»-*.********.**.*’i*
Here is a home-made syrup which
millions of people have found to be
the most dependable means of break
ing up stubborn coughs. It is cheap
and simple, but very prompt in ac
tion. Under its healing, soothing in
fluence, chest soreness goes, phlegm
loosens, breathing becomes easier,
tickling in throat stops and you get
a good night's restful sleep. The
usual throat and chest colds are con
quered by it in 24 hours or less.
Nothing Better for bronchitis, hoarse
ness, croup, throat tickle, bronchial
asthma or winter coughs.
To make this splendid cough syrup,
pour 2y 2 ounces of Pinex into a pint
bottle a"hd fill the bottle w-ith plain
granulated sugar syrup and shake
thoroughly. If you prefer use clari
fied molasses, honey, or corn syrup,
instead of syrup. Either way,
you get a full pint—a family supply
—of much better cough syrup than
you could buy ready-made for three
times the money. 'Keeps perfectly
•nd children love its pleasant taste.
Pinex is a special and highly con
centrated compound of genuine Nor
way pine extract, known the world
over for its prompt healing effect
upon the membranes.
To avoid disappointment ask your
druggist for “'2y 2 ounces of Pinex”
with full directions, and don’t accept
anything else. Guaranteed to give
absolute satisfaction or money
promptly refunded. The Pinex Co.,
Ft. Wayne, Ind.
A Strong Witness
Natchez, Miss. —“The best med
icines I have ever used in my home
a are Dr. Pierce’s. We
have used the ‘Gold
en Medical Discov
ery’ as a blood med
icine and as a tonic,
also for deep-seated
coughs and weak
w -3..^. - l un g s > an( l was
' excellent.
'“V-v”* “j always keep Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets in my home
for use when needed. I have given
them to my children since they were
quite small. They can be given with
safety to the smallest child, owing
to their being free from any injurious
drug. They regulate the stomach,
liver and bowels in a mild, but very
effective way. I cannot speak too
highly of Dr. Pierce’s medicines.” —
MRS. J. B. GILBERT, 212 St Cath
rine Street All druggists.
Mrs. C. E. Schwab, 1007 14th St.,
Canton, Ohio, writes: “We use Fo
ley’s Honey and Tar for coughs and
find it one of the best remedies on
the market, especially good for chil
dren’s coughs, as it does not contain
any drug that is harmful.” Serious
sickness often follows lingering
colds. Hard coughing racks a child’s
body and disturbs strength-giving
sleep, and the poisons weaken the
system so that disease cannot be
warded off. Take Foley’s in time.—
(Advt.)
31-Piece Dinner Set Given
HFull size dinner
china, guaranteed
against crazing;
pure white color.
Every piece dec
< rated with
royal blue band
and your initial
stamped in pure
coin gold - just
K— —At cell 40 packets
Garden Seeds at roc, according to offer in catalog. Send
your name The Wilson Seed Co., Dipt. D IMTyrone.Pa.
~MEN AND WOMEN
Turn your spare time into dollars selling
White K. Laundry Tablets that wash
elothes without rubbing. Mrs. Anna Watts,
of Michigan, has sold 8.000 packages. Mrs.
Bose High, of Missouri, 8,700, and hun
dreds of others, men and women, are sell
ing them. Why don’t you? We start you
free. Sell for 15 cents a package. Send
for free sample and agents’ offer. L. A.
Knight Co., 103 Market street, St. Louis,
Missouri.
Thia Cno *
■Vi </.</ /.l has gold finished
■ 7 1 hands and dial. He-
■ ***l value at least
55.00. Given Fi'ea
ior selling only 40
J 9 V -h- •• I Packs Vegetable
Seeds at 10c per
i large pack. Easy
Wi i F-'' I to aelh Everybody
Kd wants seeds. Writ®
>s | for sample lot.
W .-..wwl Send no money.
VI I Trust You with
V !iJa? rT I » ecds ®*>«.
I ihosU o I American Seed Co.
*-■ —■ ■ 1 tax 533. UfitASTtft PA.
■ epßsy
FALLING SICKNESS
JEKS7 To ,n 2offer?r » Fi ». Epilepsy, Falling
Sickness or Nervous Troubles will be sent AB
| SOLUTELY FREE a large bottle of W. H. Peeke’s Treat.
| meet. For thirty yezra. thouiands of sufferers hare used W. H.
| Peekr’sTreatmeat with excellent results. Give Ex tress atHP O
I Address, W. H. PEEKE, 9 Cedar Street, N. Y.
Girls! Girts!!
Save Y ©ur Hair
With Cutacura
Scrp and Ointment to clear Dandruff and >t-hing, 25e.
each. Sampler:freoofCAlcurs., Dept.tJ.Malden, M«b.
I this jewelry !■ yocre for Milin* only 0
ssM.n'ho Nova Salve at 2ft cu. Wonder
r catarrh, cute, barn*, etc Order todr.jr.
d ratern 91 W aad aU A FUcea arc yours.
$. SUPFIT COMPARr.BOX 3J« Grsentilla, fa.
. OOIFSITM Genuine. Name on
F*l tC «IM each Tablet. Five
rlMl illlfiA i grains; 200 for
sl,lO Postpaid. Sent anywhere. 400 tablets
$2.00. FREE catalog. Nationally adver
tised.
Merit chemical co.,
Box 558. Memphis, Tenn
«"ctVEH t for > ore WEDDING RING
names of your neighbors and ten cento
' to pay postage®c-
Cera city Supply M QU.IISCY,
NEW YORKER SEES
DEFLATION’S END
BY FIRST OF APRIL
Business will be on a firm, stable
basis by April 1, anti prices that will
bo quoted then will prevail for at
least five years. Dean Josenh French
Johnson, of the New York Universitv
School of Commerce, told members of
the Kiwani* club at their weeklv
luncheon Tuesday at tho Peacock
case. Fean Johnson Interestingly
of prices for the past several years.
Other features of the meeting were
several cornet selections by John A.
Scharf, of Atlanta, who was intro
duced by Forrest Adair as one of the
three leading cornet players in the
United States, and unanimous ap
proval of a movement to obtain the
1923 International Kiwanis conven
tion for Atlanta, which was lavn-hed
by President Walter C. Barnwell.
Dean Johnson, who is in Atlanta
on a visit to Profevsor Watters,
dean of the Tech School of Com
merce, told members that the amount
of actual gold in the United States
controlled the price level on all com
modities.
“When the gold reserve increased,
as it did during 1917-18 and 19. prices
also began to increase, and when the
gold supply started decreasing in
1920, prices did likewise,” he said.
“Liberty bonds, which should be
regarded as debts and liabilities, in
stead of assets, were but another
reason for prices to advance, for
people used them as cash, buying
commodities with them, thereby put
ting more money in circulation than
there was credit and gold to back
it. Then, when the pinnacle of infla
tion seemed reached, the Victory
loan was floated, and the greater
nart of this was subscribed and
bought on credit established by su
perfluous prosperity by the Liberty
bonds, and prices were driven sky
ward.
“In 1920. the gold reserve began
to shrink somewhat, and the prices
on all commodities likewise began to
shrink, and they will continue to do
so until they reach a level commen
surate with the gold reserve supply
in this country. Watch the ebb and
flow of the gold reserve into the
country and you can pretty well tell
what the price levels will be on all
manner of goods.
“I believe that by April 1, the
period of deflation will be at an end,
and from then on, for at least five
years, we will be on a firm, stable
business basis, and business men
throughout the country will know
how to proceed.”
In proposing the movement to have
the 1923 convention of the Interna
tional Kiwanis club in Atlanta, Pres
ident Barnwell pointed out that it
would attract prominent bankers,
manufacturers and business men
from all parts of the world to At
lanta.
It was announced at the meeting
that George Beban, who will be in
Atlanta all next week, appearing at
the Howard theater, would deliver a
short address to the members at
their next meeting.
452 Arrersts Made
For Liquor Violations
During December
Atlanta police arrested 452 men
and women for alleged contempt of
the “dry” laws during the month
of December, and Recorder George
Johnson bound over 9,3G1 defendants
to higher courts on similar charges
during the year 1920, according to
reports made by the city authorities
to Major J. A. Fort, federal prohibi
tion director.
In a communication to federal,
state, county and city officers of
Georgia, mailed Wednesday by Ma
jor Fort, he declared that conditions
are rapidly becoming more favor
able for prohibition enforcement,
and expressed the opinion that the
year 1921 will see a marked improve
ment throughout the country.
Major Fort’s letter follows:
“To Sheriffs, Chiefs of Police and County
Policemen: With the beginning of the new
year conditions seem more favorable for he
enforcement of the prohibition laws.
"A number of new men have assumed
their duties as officials with a full knowl
edge of conditions as they exist in their
counties, and what steps it will be neces
sary to lake to improve these conditions.
’’Nineteen and twenty was a political
year, a year of high prices and a time of
reaction, following the war. All of this
made the enforcement of the prohibition
laws more difficult.
“As many pressing issues of last year
have been settled, the newspapers will turn
to other matters for their news, and it may
reasonably be expected that a great deal
of publicity will be given to the enforce
ment of the prohibition laws, '..here bad
conditions are brought to the public notice,
improvement should follow now as it has in
the past.
“These letters and reports are for the pur
pose of establishing cordial relations be
tween state and federal officials, of keep
ing sucn informed of the activities of ti e
other in an effort to co-ordinate and supple
ment—not to supplant—the duly consti
tuted state, county and municipal officials.
“You are cordially invited to visit or com
municate with this office at any time.
“Yours very truly,
“JAMES A. FORT,
“Federal Prohibition Director.”
Cashier Missing,
Bank Is Closed
SHILOH, Ga., Jan. 13.—The Bank
of Shiloh was forced to turn its af
fairs over to the state bank exam
iner today on account of an alleged
shortage approximating SIO,OOO dol
lars. The cashier, Milton A. Camp,
is charged with the alleged shortage
and efforts are being made to locate
him.
“They Work while you Sleep”
Do you feel at “sixes and sevens”
today? You are bilious, constipated!
You feel headachy, full of cold, un
strung. Your meals don’t fit —breath
lis bad. skin sallow. Take Casearets
tonight for your liver and bowels
and wake up clear, rosy and cheer
ful. No griping—no inconvenience.
Children love Casearets too. 10, 25,
50 cents.—(Advt.)
Lungs Weak?
Generous Offer to Tuberculosis Suf
ferers of Trial of SANOSIN SAJO
LEUM Embracing Europe’s Remark
able Expectorant, SAHOSIN.
Noted medical scientists—Doctors Da
nelius, Sommerfield, Wolff, Noel, Gauthier,
Essers —declare SANOSIN most valuable
treatment for Pulmonary ailments. Felix
Wolff, Court Pliysicain, Director of the San
itarium for Consumptives in Reiboldsgrun,
Germany, highly recommends it. SANOSIN
has been officially recommended to the Ber
lin Medical Association. Dr. C. W. A. Es
sers, Amsterdam, Holland, declares it a
“Moral obligation to make SANOSIN known
to the whole human race.” American suf
ferers, rich oriSpoor, can use this remark
able home treatment that lias met with such
success in Europe. SANOSIN SANOLEUM
is designed to produce calm, restful sleep
without Morphinin or similar deadening
drugs, and to bring almost immediate relief
from coughing, blood spitting and night
sweats. SANOSIN SAN OLEUM is an inex
pensive home treatment of genuine merit
and is proving a blessing to all suffering
from Tuberculosis, Bronchitis, Asthma, Ca
tarrhs, Whooping Cough, etc. Send for
FREE BOOKLET (with testimonials) ex
plaining this treatment and how a trial can
be made in your own homo at our risk. Ad
dress SANO3IN-SANOLEUM, 222 N. Wa
bash Ave., Chicago, 111., Dept. 409.
SHOW THIS TO SOME UNFORTUNATE.
THE ATLANTA TIM-WEEKLY JOURNAL.
LIEUTENANT WALTER HINTON, NAVAL BALLOONIST, who engaged in a fist fight with
Lieutenant Stephen A. Farrell, one of his companions, soon after they reached civilization, following
days of suffering and privation together in the snow wastes and wilderness of northern Canada. Lieu
tenant Lewis P. Kloor, the third member of the paty, joined Lieutenant Farrell in his resentment of
alleged reflections cast upon the two by Lieutenant Hinton in a letter to Mrs. Hinton. The snow
scene represents the type of country the lost balloonists were forced to land in, four days’ walk in
deep snow to the nearest trading station and several weeks’ travel back to civilization—Photos
from Central News Photo Service.
t - -
i ’ TWf ’■
'J * «
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Ha Ip: -
'
LEYGUES CABINET
RESIGNS AFTER
ADVERSE VOTE
PARIS. Jan. 13. —The cabinet of
Premier Leygues suffered a defeAt
in the chamber of deputies Wednes
day.
The cabinet resigned after its de
feat.
The action had been expected since
Leygues’ policies have been consid
ered as affronting England and un
settling internal affairs.
The premier was chosen for the
place by President Millerand at the
beginning of his term. Millerand
openly stated that he desired to be
president in fact and desired a pre
mier who could be directed.
A successor was expected to be
chosen immediately in view of the
fact that the allied premiers are to
meet next Monday to discuss a num
ber of matters affecting them all.
German indemnity, disarmament and
the Near East are among the ques
tions to come up.
Leygues’ overthrow, it was be
lieved, will make more authoritative
the coming conference, if President
Millerand appoints a strong premier
such as M. Viviani, or Briand, or ex-
President Poincare..
If Viviani or Briand should be ap
pointed, it is believed the French
policy will be more complaisant to
ward the allies than it has in re
cent months. If Poincare should be
selected the French reactionaries
would be intrenched. Poincare is
Millerand’s law partner and has been
working for thep remiershlp ever
since he retired from the presiden
cy.
The vote was unexpectedly large.
Leygues had acquired much sympa
thy even among radicals by his as
sertion that the country would be
playing into Germany’s hands if her
future course were to be announced
before the premiers’ conference.
Wife of Weiner Vender
Declines to Smile as
Business Drawing Card
Many form of advertising and
schemes to attract customers are
employed by merchants with good re
sults, but the plan of J. J. Maloof
did not materialize when he failed
to get his wife’s consent to pose as
a drawing card for wiener lovers.
Maloof, according to his eighteen
year-old wife, decided to open a
wiener stand on Decatur street, and
in order to draw customers to his
place of business he requested his
wife to wait on trade and smile at
the prospective buyers. The plan
did not appeal to the girl and she ob
jected. When he insisted, she says,
she left him and sought other em
ployment where smiles were not in
cluded as a part of her duties.
Thursday morning the young woman
appealed to the court to restrain
her husband from interfering with
her, claiming that he had caused her
to lose several positions by hound
ing her. She was directed to an at
torney.
Mrs. Mabel Maloof, the girl wife,
said she was induced to wed J. J.
Maloof at Trinidad, Colorado, by her
relatives, though she said she did
not desire to marry a man she did
not like. The wedding took place
in June of last year and shortly aft
er, she said, her husband brought
her to Atlanta where his plan to
start into the wiener business was
formulated. The couple lived to
gether one month before the separa
tion came about. Mrs. Maloof
claimed.
Seven Big Stills Are
Raided Near Columbus
COLUMBUS. Ga.. Jan. 13.—The de
struction of seven illicit stills, four
of extraordinary capacity, and the
confiscation of 8,000 gallons of beer
mash, resulted from raids made by
county officers and deputy sheriffs of
Muscogee county Tuesday afternoon
and Wednesday morning.
Five of these outfits were located
less than a mile apart, a short dis
tance from the Harris county line.
No arrests were made.
HAMBONE’S MEDITATIONS
EF DtY DON’ STOP TALKIN’
BOUT PE HoL'-UP MEN
GITTIN' SO MUCH MONEY
OFFEN FOLKS, FUS' THING
DEY KNOWS DESE HEAH
COLLEcruKS GWINE GIT
N\AD /
1— J
1111 l I
WOPtj I
I I'll
•sillw
Copyright, 192] py McClure Newsp«pe/ Syndicate
MZ
Any Tri-Weekly Journal reader
can get the answer to any ques
tion puzzling him by writing to
The Atlanta Journal Information
Bureau, Frederick J. Haskin, di
rector, Washington, D. C., and in
closing a two-cent stamp for re
turn postage.
New Questions
1 — Was a dinner served recently In
New York for charity at which SI,OOO
a plate was charged for 22-cent
meals?
2 Does Warren G. Harding have
the right to be A senator and an
elected president at the same time?
3 -I saw in a guidebook to Niagara
Falls the statement that in the year
1848 the falls ran dry. Please give
me the reason for this.
4 When was kerosene first used in
lamps?
5 Would a notch cut in a tree four
feet from the ground be higher up in
later years as the tree grows?
6 Has any woman ever motored
alone across the continent?
7 When will the new Pilgrim An
niversary stamps be on sale and
where?
8— What were the casualties of the
A. E. F. in Siberia, killed, wounded
and death from disease?
9 I heard that duck hunting in
Florida has been carried to the point
where huntsmen built a floating
island on which they went in search
of game?
10 — Are there tree-dwellers in the
Philippines?
Questions Answered
1— q. Which race leads in numbers,
the white or yellow?
A. So far as statistics of the pop
ulation of the world are available it
seems that the Mongolian race is
more numerous than the Caucasian
race. The Mongolian numbers about
655,000,000, and the Caucasian or
White race, 645,000,000.
2 -Q. What kind of a government
has Iceland?
A. Iceland is a crown colony of
Denmark. The Danish king is king
of Iceland, although the government
has recognized the island as a sov
ereign state. Its foreign affairs are
under the control of Denmark.
3 Q. Is the expression “a certain
party” correct when it is applied to
an Individual?
A. The expression “a certain party
as applied to an Individual is not
sanctioried by good English. The use
of the word “party" in referring to
an individual is restricted to legal
terminology.
4 Q What is the meaning of the
term “trade acceptance?”
A. A trade acceptance is an act by
which one agrees to be bound by the
terms of a bill of exchange—to ren
der a bill of exchange valid so that
if the drawee fails to liquidate it, the
drawer may be charg’ed with the
costs. The promise of the drawer
should be in writing under or upon
the back of the bill. The proper form
is to write the word "accepted across
the bill and sign the acceptor s
name
sq. What is meant by the term
“snow” as used in theatrical circles?
A. In this connection ‘ snow is
a slahc’ term for those admitted to a
theater on passes. Another common
use for the word is as a slang name
for cocaine.
60. Is the use of the word
“chicken” to mean a young girl, mod
ern, and is it really slang?
A. We think bf this use of the
word as modern slang, but diction
aries give it as meaning “a young
or youthful or inexperienced person,
n child: also a timid person. I roof
that it isn’t by any means modern is
furnished by 'the fact that Jonathan
Swift used it years ago.
7 q. Do they have anti-strike
1£l A? The Conciliation
and Arbitration Act of Australia rec
ognizes the right of workers to
but limits the zeroise of the n-ffit
and provides penalties for Illega
st g l b. f Q. How was the length of a
mile determined? _ „
A The mile is derived from the
Roman millaire, which contained a
thousand paces. A pace was 5 Roman
feet, this being the length of the
double step made by
the time it was taken off the ground
until it was put down again.
9—Q. What is meant in a war risk
policy where it states th ’\ t p^ h t e
is good for five years after the war
war risk insurance act pro
vides that term insurance should be
everted into one of the Tranent
forms any time wnthm five years
after the signing of the 1 163 ';® . tr “S
it does not refer to the signing of
the armistice. . r> n st-
10 Q. Where is the finest post
office in the world?
A The new city postoffice I
Washington, D. C., which
Union station, cost $3,000,000, ana t
is considered the most modern post
office in the world.
‘ Franklin Day” Will
Be Observed Over
Country January 17
x’TTvxr vgrK Tan 12.—”"'The versa."
tile aYcom?lishments of Benjamin
Franklin Will be retold throughout
the country by various organizations
on January 1?" the 215th anniversary
of his birth. In a number of cele
brations tributes will be paid to
him as a statesman, diplomat, Phil
osopher. scientist, Jo ur ™ lls *l al . ecO h°2
mist, salesman, philanthropist, hu
morist, printer and pubbsher.
As an advocate of spending less
than one makes. Franklin is to be
honored on his birthday by the Na
tional thrift week committee, which
is encouraging other celebration of
his work. University of Pennsyl
vania alumni here plan to hail him
as the founder of their alma mater.
Libraries in many cities will call
attention to Franklin as the founder
of the first public library in the
colonies.
TO ASK TARIFF
TO STOP FLOW OF
CANADIAN WHEAT
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—T0 stop
“enormous importations of Canadian
wheat,” Senator McCumber, Republic
an, North Dakota, announced today
that he would ask for a tariff of
probably 50 cents a bushel on wheat
to be included in the Fordney emer
gency tariff bill, instead of the duty
of 30 cents carried by the measure
as It passed the house.
The senator’s announcement was
made at hea-ings on the Fordney
measure before the senate finance
committee. He charged that Ameri
can markets had been glutted by the
Canadian wheat and said that as
there remained more than 150,000,-
000 bushels of Canadian wheat for
export he feared ruin of the Ameri
can wheat farmer considering the
difference in the exchange rates be
tween the two countries.
Senator McCumber said he did not
believe “an import duty of fifty cents
a bushel would increase the costs of
a loaf of bread one iota.”
Alleged Con Men
Held in Default
Os $25,000 Bond
Bonds of $25,000 each have been
fixed by Solicitor General John A.
Boykin for J. W. Mooney, R. J. “Red”
Wilson and John A. Alexander, al
leged con men, who were brought to
this city Wednesday afternoon from
Memphis, Tenn., by County Police
men Marvin Baker and Deputy Sher
iff James E. White. The three men
were taken to the Tower immediately
upon their arrival and are being held
in default of bail.
Quick action was necessary in or
der to get the three men to Atlan
ta, according to the officers, as
friends of the trio were said to be
working to prevent them being
brought here.
The three men were arrested, to
gether with William Fletcher, Wal
ter Chambers and George W. Wil
liams, by the Memphis police sev
eral days ago. All six men are said
to have been indicted by the grand
jury here during its investigation of
gambling, horse racing, wire tapping
and swindling, and as soon as their
arrest was heard of by Solicitor Boy
kin steps were made to have them
brought to this city. Officers Baker
and White, together with Special In
vestigator Plennie Minor, of the so
licitor general’s department, went to
Memphis armed with extradition pa
pers, to bring the sextet here, but
on arrival there they were blocked
by habeas corpus proceedings taken
out for Fletcher, Chambers and Wil
liams.
The governor of Tennessee having
honored the extradition papers, Offi
cers Baker and White took the other
three men and made a hurried trip
to Atlanta before writs of habeas
corpus could be secured for the pris
oners by their friends. Officer Mi
ner remained in Memphis and will
make special efforts to get the other
three men.
The grand jury met Wednesday aft
ernoon, but only routine business was
transacted. It is probable that the
gambling and swindling investigation
will not be resumed before the first
of next week. In the meantime So
licitor General Boykin is preparing
further evidence to be presented to
the investigating body.-
One-Stop Air Flight
From California to
Florida Is Planned
SAN DIEGO, Cal.. Jan. 12. —An at
tempt to establish a new continental
airplane speed record from San
Diego to Jacksonville, Fla., will be
made February 21 by Lieutenant W.
B. Coney, of the Ninety-first aero
squadron stationed at Rockwell field,
he announced today. He plans to
make only one stop, at Fort W orth,
Texas, in his 2,J00 mile dash.
Lieutenant Coney said he plans to
leave Rockwell field at sundown
February 21 and fly all night, land
ing at Fort Worth in 11 1-2 hours.
He expects to be able to make the
second “hop” in nine and a half
hours.
Z /|\ X /nir z nn x
“Pape’s Cold Compound”
Breaks any Cold
in Few Hours
Instant Relief! Don’t stay stuffed
up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A
dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound”
taken every two hours until three
doses are taken usually breaks up
any cold.
The very first dose opens clogged
nostrils and the air passages of the
head; stops nose running, relieves
the headache, dullness, feverishness
“Pape’s Cold Compound” acts
quick, sure, and costs only a few
cents at drug stores. It acts with
out assistancaMMMß nice, contains
no quinine—Pape's!
Stefansson, Famous
Explorer oj the Artic,
In City for Short l isit
In a ten-minute interview at the
Piedmont hotel Wednesday afternoon,
V. Stefansson, famous Arctic ex
plorer, turned topsy-turvy some of
the cherished beliefs the layman
holds on life in the far north.
For instance—the belief that man
cannot live on meat alone; the be
lief that one must carry carloads
of food on a dash for the pole, and
the belief that there is nothing but
hardship above the Artic circle.
Mr. Stefansson spent eleven years
above the Arctic circle. He is forty
one years old, looks not more than
thirty and talks with the enthusiasm
of twenty-one.
He is in Atlanta for a short visit
to Russell Bridges, of the Alkahest
Lyceum Bureau, and probably will
address the Agoga class at the Bap
tist Tabernacle while here. Accom
panying him is E. L. Knight, a ro
bust youth who spent four years
with him in the far north.
Mr. Stefansson is a former news
paper man, once a reporter for the
Boston Transcript, in which capaci
ty he whetted his natural thirst for
adventure which has resulted in his
spending eleven years in the far
north and covering a greater terri
tory above the Arctic circle than
any other man.
“It’s a great life,” said Mr. Stef
ansson. "If you’ve ever been to Eu
rope you remember the thrill you
got when you stood on the deck on a
great liner with the knowledge that
soon you would see the coast of Ire
land. Imagine how much greater is
the thrill of seeing a new land loom
up before you, a land that fiiak
ers didn’t know existed.”
Stefansson was the man who up
set all the old traditions about polar
exploration. It was he who ventured
into the far north, while other ex
plorers predicted his early death
through starvation, with barely
enough food to carry him beyond the
outposts of civilization.
"And our method proved worth
while,” he said Wednesday. "We
found food abundant in quality and
quantity. We never missed a meal
or lost a dog through hunger, and we
always lived In comparative com
fort.
“It’s just a matter of adapting
yourself to the country, of eating
the food of the country. Imagine an
Eskimo going to South Africa with
the belief that he would have to take
along barrels of fish and use animal
oil for his fuel.
“We ate the food of the country.
We demonstrated the fact that man
can live for years on meat alone, no
salt, no sugar, no flour. We made
the longest journeys that have ever
been made into unexplored territory
and we always fared well by simply
adapting ourselves to the country.
Mr. Stefansson’s spectacular
dashes for the north pole are well
known. During his lecture tour he
will tell of his experiences during his
eleven years in the far north. He
will be in Atlanta until Thursday.
Efforts are being made to get him to
return next week to address the
Agoga class at the Tabernacle.
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 of the Gall Bladder and Bile
Ducts associated with Gallstones from which
remarkable results are reported. Write for
booklet and free trial plan.—(Advt.)
Harding Considers
Sales Tax as One
Feature of Revenue
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13. That
President-elect Harding is giving se
rious thought to the sales tax as
one of the most important features
of revenue law revision was revealed
today when Representative Isaac
Bacharach, New Jersey, Republican
member of the house ways and means
committee, was called to Marion for
a conference.
SendNoMoney
\pectades-Gase
©wo j-Ljl
Send Me The Coupon Below
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THIS is a straight-from-the-shoulder proposition that every man
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With these large size “Perfect Vision” spectacles of mine, you will be
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I want you to try out these Spectacles for reading and sewing, or for
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I Will Send Them To You Free.
You may think lam bluffing. Perhaps I haven’t convinced you
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iSit down Tight now —this very minute —and fill out the below cou
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RACLE HOUSE, Room 1 6T. LOUIS,
this coupon, which entitles me, by return
r 10-Karat Gold-Filled Perfect-Vision Spec
a fine leatherette, velteen-lined, pocketbook
t cost to me, so I can try them out, under
ull ten days’ actual test. This free trial is
my, and if I like the glasses and keep them,
only—no more and no less. But if, for any
lon’t wish to keep them (and I, myself, am
! will return them to you without paying you
, as you agreed in the above advertisement
lays’ absolute free trial. With thia under
is certificate, and it is agreed that you will
1 I will stick to mine.
o answer the following questions:
...How many years have you used glasses i
Box No State
SATURDAY, JANUARY 15, 1021.
V. STEFANSSON, famous
polar explorer, who is in At
lanta on a short visit.
IBkI '
“Dumb” Man Forgets
And Talks; Recorder
Loses Compassion
Fred Miller, address unknown,
Wednesday morning proved that
words are not only frequently use
less, but that they oft times pro
duce dire trouble.
Miller was arrested Tuesday after
noon on Currier street, for solicit
ing alms without a license. He made
signs to the arresting officer that he
was deaf and dumb, and was unable
to secure work.
In the police court. Recorder John
son, addressing the prisoner and the
surrounding officers, declared that
he did not like to fine a deaf and
dumb man. "It’s a sad case,” said
the judge, “I don’t want to fine him.”
Miller’s tongue slipped: "Have
mercy, Judge,” he murmured.
Judge Johnson looked Indignant.
‘‘Thirty days,” he said.
Congress Defeats
Appropriation for
“Prohi” Enforcement
WASHINGTON, Jan. 13.—8 v a
vote of 115 to 12, the house today de
feated a proposal by Representative
Gallivan, Democrat, Massachusetts,
that $100,000,000 be appropriated for
enforcement of prohibition.
The vote was taken during consid
eration of the legislative, executive
and judicial appropriation bill, in
which the sum of $6,500,000 had been
set aside for the bureau of internal
revenue for the law’s enforcement.
Chairman Volstead, of the judiciary
committee, father of the prohibition
act, offered an amendment providing
for an increase to $7,100,000, which
was adopted, 86 to 48.
LEOPARD MOT
■GE SPOTS
Mr. Dodson, the “Liver
Tone” Man, Tells the
Treachery of Calomel
Calomel loses you a day! You
know what calomel is. It’s mercury;
quick-silver. Calomel is dangerous.
It crashes into sour bile like dyna
mite, cramping and sickening you.
Calomel attacks the bones and should
never be put into your system.
When you feel bilious, sluggish,
constipated and all knocked out anc
believe you need a dose of danger
ous calomel, just remember that
druggist sells for a few cents a
large bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone,
which is entirely vegetable and pleas
ant to take and is a perfect substi
tute for calomel. It is guaranteed
to start your liver without stirring
you up inside, and can not salivate.
Don’t take calomel! It cannot be
trusted any more than a leopard or a
wild-cat. Take Dodson’s Liver Tone
which straightens you right up and
makes you feel fine. Give it to the
children because it is perfectly harm
less and doesn’t gripe.— (Advt.)
k No Fire—No Walting.
- > Save time, meat and money by
f smoking meat the modern way.
Instead of fussing with a smoke-
J house, finish the job quickly with
rCC.Liquid
Meat
Actual condensed smoke > vapor
from hickory wood. Contains ovary thing jg.
found in wood smoke*
Prevents Skippers and Shrlnksqe. J
You lose 10 to 20 per cent of ycnir most iflS
when you smoke it over a fire. No losa
with K. C. Liquid Meat Smoke. Simply
applied with brush or cloth. Keeps aU
insects away—gives delicious flavor. W
A 75c bottle smokes 200 pounds; $L2#
bottle smokes 400 pounds. -
Guaranteed K. C. Liquid Meat
Smoke is guaranteed to be entirely satis
factory or money refunded. Be sore to
get the genuine. If your dealer can teup
ply you. write ns, giving his name and- f (ZJjWfc
aend you a f-eo book on caring moat.
K.C.Liquid M.at Smoke Co.
Dept. 5, Kansas City, Mo,
SQUEEZED
TO DEATH
When the body begins to stiffen
and movement becomes painful
it is usually an indication that the
kidneys are out of order. Keep
these organs healthy by takir,
COLDME3AL
aiiMWfla
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-ook for the name Gold Medal on ever.
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i rfi 11 f ji ) ftswTi wrnn si
a REAL MA- \ TF'J*••
chime which f&I&SSC*. A oldnliabb
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talking, SINQ. Isn -wo treat
dance youngm.
music PER. . "“5
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dze or make diac everything,
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Lancaster County Seed Co.. St#. 13, PARADISE, PA.
fSEND NO MONST
SMASHING SHOE OFFER
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Dept. C-301 SOO W. Van Buren, CHICACO
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"Let those that don’t believe write me,” saya
G. A. Duckworth, Norwood, Ga., telling what Dr.
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similar letters from all partsof the country.
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\1 if HUNT’S Salve fails in the
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v v -Wf«
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ft RFAL CAMERA free
l^e E-- tman Kodak
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iz U it? exposurcs2 la x 3 on real film
wo! M Given lor selling only aopack
.' l ets Garden Seeds at 10c each.
■« Wcite quick. /
.kSz WtISON SEED COMPANY'
Dept. MJUL .. Tyrsae, Pa. ' x