Newspaper Page Text
MILLION TROOPS
mobilized FOR
Smaller Kingdoms Prepare to
Unite to Resist the “Broken
Pledges” of Turkey.
VIENNA, Oct. I.—More than 1,000,000
Bo ldieis are on the march today through
•- . Balkans, Russia and Austria in
j i paration for war in which the actual
. inants will bo Bulgaria, Servia,
negro and Greece allied to one
~j, H ainst Turkey on the oher. The
■ ns a ill cost .$10,000,000 even
trf ■ re does not result.
T military movements in southern
I- ;u. nd Poland are in anticipation
o- eventuality involving the great
r . !’ ti' the Austro-Hungarian
. nt ; n governments are converg
ing ■it -i: if troops near the
• pnthcin fr.intifr.- in proximity to the
Balkan border.
Reports received by the continental
governments today from their diplo
e-i tie it in s-oiitativvs in Constantinople
nd in th c cpitols of European Turkey
lenstr'nd 'he situation as critical. An
actual d e le ration of war, however, is
not i-v’ie-tod bi for- the expiration of a
icitnight if it comes at all. AH the
European chancellories are working to
avert an es hostilities.
The Eut'i'pean bourses today refl -cted
the feverishn :-s and tenseness <f the
situation. Securities were heavily de
pressed.
Turkey Massing Army.
With Turkey mrwing !ln army of
sncyivin men in th- vi’ ivot of Adrianople
and in •') garrison centers of other
st-ii’ ~ tie t- rr tories; with Bulgari ',
S': via. Mi r.tenegro and Greet' sum
:ii ning tied" reservists to th" colors.
II- w r •! mo of the Balkans is r. ar-
• r i" "I '..1 eruption than it has been
for cr -is.
T'”' 'i - it io - <>r-< of Europe, in this
nt* ’rational nolice, are
effort to avert an out
s; ■ iities-. In the capitals of
I nis n however, the efforts
n< ' o ic’g met with a receptive
•' pa ihi s from Athens state that
i- -ummoning her war strength
land and .- i. All tile battleships of
1 is Has;, have been summoned
f "in iC' avers."
'ii !' officers of the Greek army
v ' i have been absent on furlough tire
'|-' 1 oiiie King George has been
■■’ ’ ■ !’-o to ai riv e today fr<nn northern
■ ”• ..... « ipre , 1;I s been visiting.
' I ,ng of the countries di
re* * ■ ; iv. ,ii d is ■
’ i’- a"i,ch'll; Bulgaria. 2i'sm>u;
1 'mi’: Servia. 95,000; Monte-
tdditi v . Russia, is concentrating
■ '"icc troems in Poland, while Austria
ving es p. r 300,000 srmv to
'’ints in the south and in
T i '!■" -e-.ln-..
T" ?import Berlin Treaty,
■ ’ . tS rvi-in ministet
'■' ’ ' i ' -•< to ha vo been r--
’* t ’nt’.n )■ le Ir- b*s *. iv
■’ - i "ini' ati'>n to th
- -■. I '■ unt Von Rerch
n f-reiern minister, de
t> ■■ f"reign office is in rc
”f a joint not from the Balkan
declaring thai t’m y are united
tli i i . rt i • a. tide 23
r> - • 'iii . ■ ..ty, gi .. : ’.ing Turkey’s
11 ’ i’c «>f the Balkans. Reforms
■■■m - <i m i Ila t cl„ ;.-e which the
>'• a . rn.n; m i i.uii-ii to vur -
1 ' 1,11 ii'Tie n hl, in a supple
' U".| . I-,eci upon (he sc-
I I!<> ■' Silt »« nf ■ «• ,
situation and t lie pos-
Ih.ii Austria ■. ould be involved
"iit. Ge added that the
aovermii'.'nts were prepared to
■ -ss Turkey entered into a new
agre, nirnt.
o-noff, the Russian foreign min
i l.i'iidon at present. A tele
rom there -aid that he and Sir
' the British foreign min
' I ■’ ■ ’nfe, i nee at noon. This
: ■ i- h’ii d to a possiblt
i protection of English
? s by a Joint Eng
'.ussian war fleet along the
>ral Adriatic sea. Modi.
sea, Black sea
' ' ’ of Marmora.
v ALE DIHING HALL SHORT:
OHE0 H E T 0 COST OF LIVING
ha VEX, It t.vx.. < let. 1. —The
1 7 ' "■ Ht ,i • has affected the
5 .. n ' " l!l - There is a deficit of
■ -‘tti ioutfd u» the increased prices
1 ‘‘ s - 1-Hst year there was a
DASHER STATIONED AT
A CEMETERY ARRESTED
„ 1,1 ’■ ''cf- I.—Thomas Stams, a
" 's arrested, charged with hang
" "■ a cemetery to flirt with girls
' n " l'o came to put flowers on
graves ~f relatives.
ARMY ORDERS
I'A'GIOX, Oct. 1. —Army or-
O Reed. Sixth cavalry,
"tth civil government. Phil
p oper station.
■ ■ amJs Le J. Parker. Twelfth
■ . duty with civil govern-
, 1-j'ines. to his proper station.
, ."airs r. Leeds, corps of
bx army retiring
n- ■■'''dated for active service
di: a bilit v incident t here-
• "it red.
Attributes Longevity to Corn Juice and Pipe
SHE'S 92 YEARS YOUNG
You who are seeking the secret of
long life, read this.
Mrs. Emily Evins, of 4 Highland ave
nue. is 92 years old today, anti here are
the two important reasons she gives;
She took her drink evety morning
before breakfast until she was 45 years
old.
She has been smoking for 48 years.
Thats why she is celebrating her
birthday instead of b ing laid beside
her ten brothers aad four sisters in the
family butying ground—at least, that’s
the way Mrs. Evins thinks.
Mrs. Evins was sitting on the front
porch conversing with her youngest
living child, Mrs. J. C. Lee, aged 58.
and her oldest daughter, Mrs. E. C. Em
bry, aged 72, when a reporter arrived.
"I'm not feeling so well now.” she
said in answer to a question. “I don't
smoke except in the morning and at
night. Yes. when I go up to go to—to
retire—l generally get out my pipe
and smoke a little while—till about 12
o’clock. I reckon."
Began Smcking 42 Years Ago.
"No, 1 haven't been smoking all my
life —I only began it a few years ago.
How b ng, you say? Why, let me see.
1 guess it s been about 48 years since I
started to smoking, ’cause I lemembet
Maw was 93 when I started to teach
as. how to -moke, and I'd been smok
ing about a yea: th m. It's been a pow
erful comfort to me, too, but I'm sorter
poorly now and 1 can’t do so much.
"Yes ' , I drink whisky. My fa
ther owr ed two stills when I was a gal
Slid :■ ■■ wasn't a day till I was 45th.it
I < t if; ;a my drink before b'»ak
: 'Si. -ilways sent it to me when
" r ■;• S ’Pl.iv had give out, but
• f;, he di".; 1 didn': always have it. I
§*• - v-as about 91 when he died.
Maw was 91 when she went, but Paw
always had lived hard.
"I get sortei bme.'-ome sometimes,
’cause all tl.e friends I had when I was
young .an- yon< There weren't bu'
three families living in all this section
around Atlanta wh n I was a girl. Th
people nowadays ain't like they used to
; be. They're ign'ran' now . and they
won't li tcn to nothing. They ain't ne.i
■so .-mart, ither.
"Ah' the way these w inunenfolks'
idriss! Lund! I can't tell you what I
Ido think about it. Etn'ly, here, ’s
young—let her tell you."
She turned to Em’ly. aged 72, and
with eight gr •■t-prardehi' lren.
Going to Dance a Jig Today.
I “Em’ly. t 1! th.' gentleman what we
[think about the v.ay thes? wimmen|
[elresses." But Mrs. Embry refused, al
most blushing in her confusion.
It is a remarkable family, that of
[ Mrs. Evins. Her grandfather was killed
in the R< volution, and he grandmother
livid to 94. She hers If is 92 today.
Mis. Embry, her oldest living child, is |
72. anti Mrs. Evins has six chiidr.
alive. She has 51 grandchild en. site
doesn't know hov, many great-grand
ch:. i’p;- :mj .'i r.:inib< j r of great-great
gran ' . hi: ': an. Three of her children
lit've gr. at-giandchildren.
M s. Evins w..- a Colli r. there being
EDITOR IS APPOINTED ;
STATE SANITARIUAI
TRUSTEE, VICE HEARD
I
l-libioi il. i,. Rainey, of The Dawson |
i.'w.vs. las bt en appointed a trustee of I
j i. <■ state sanitarium, to succeed Senator- |
[elect .1. i’. Heald, re-igned because of the I
i di:-nial oica i ion his prospective member- I
•i.ip in the legislature would impost'.
Mr. Ramey is one of the best known ;
men in smith Georgia, and the governor
. ; s being congratulated generally because |
of liis selection to membership on the |
> ani'u! i.n.i board, which is, in many re- j
spvcts, the most important of all state ,
boards of trustees.
The governor also announced the ap
pointment of \V. S. \\ < st. of Valdosta;
H. It. Tift, of Tifton. and J. H. Merrill.
| of Alouiuie, to be trustees of the South
! Georgia Agricultural, Industrial and Nor-
I mal college.
i BROAD STREET. IM ROME.
SCON TO BE WHITE WAY
iluJiE, GA., Oct 1. —Rome is to have
ia White Way. F. r a while, though, it
i looked like the project would not ma
| terialize. Woikmen started today on
I th< big lighting scheme, which will
I make Broad street a myriad of lights
i for five or six blocks. The committee
j in charge had trouble getting three or
I four big property owners agree to the j
project, and rather than delay the
scheme any longer the committee de- >
cided to assume the responsibility and .
pioceed with the work. i
JUDGE MADDOX FINES SIX
ABSENT JURORS S4O EACH
i
ROME, GA.. Oct. 1. —Judge Maddox
has no patience with the juror who, i
duly summoned, will not appear when 1
| his name is called in court. He showed
hist disgust for the absent juror when
he fined six of them S4O each. t
When court convened and it was dis
covered that six jurors were absent, the
judge promptly notified the clerk to
collect S4O each from them. The fined
jurors showed up in a hurry, but they
j had to pay the fines just the same.
SEIZE AND FORCE GIRL
1
TO SWALLOW POISON ;
; STEUBENVILLE, OHIO, Oct. I.—Miss i
i Lettie Ward, fifteen years old. who lives <
‘ at the home of Samuel Farmer, of Wheel
| ing Junction. W. Va., was seized by un- I
I identified men near her home today and
i held while poison was administered. She ,
is expected to die. <
Farmer recently had received anony- I
mous letters threatening his life if he did I
not leave the county. No reason for the 1
attack has been disclosed.
DYING, INSTINCTIVELY
HANDS WIFE HIS WAGES
NEW YORK. Oct. I.—Charles Mar
shall. dying after an 11,000-volt electri
cal shock, Instinctively handed his wife
the paj envelope he had just ree< ived.
as she bent over him.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1. 1912.
ten brothers and five sisters in the
family. Her last brother. Judge John
Collier, died several years ago at the
age of 91, leaving behind him a fortune
of more than $1,000,000. She is the sole
survivor of the fifteen, most of whom
lived to a ripe old age.
Today, she says, she is going to
dance a jig, perhaps, just to show that
she is not yet tiled of living.
—
*. Wti
J/ sSFIk 1
r Jr at
1 wHv * ■
a, WdW;
* UMEwIWMWfe: ■ ImwW®
1 \ ' j® 1
\ \ I 1
j • a SiBMiF:. • i i a
FWW I f '' '
I r 11? iliwL
Jw ‘"HP
’ ""x
i xx \ .'JJ \
‘jQjy <\ ■ i
■ X '*
X >?> '..... . \ >/
hi * 1.
AZ*M-h‘
Tlio squad from Company E. Seventeenth infantry, that won
the wall sealing contest at Fort McPherson, establishing what is
said to be an army record. These eight men ■went over a ten
foot wall in 22 2-5 seconds.
WINS GIRL’S HEART
IN TEN DAYS; WEDS
HER ON STREET CAR
"A street, car is much more interest
ing than a jokey old depot,” argued the
Rev. F. J. Dodd, of Eairburn, and heed,
ing his argument, Miss Delia Cochran,
aged nineteen, of Eairburn, consented
to marry Charles R. Taylor, of Union
City, while standing in the aisle of a
Eairburn trolley car.
It took Taylor ten days to get Miss
Cochran's consent after he met her, but
when he had obtained It his friend, the
minister, got the license and did all the
rest.
Their honeymoon lasted to College
Park, ten miles away, wher they
stopped to tell their friends about their
marriage.
ATLANTAN IS SLATED FOR
HIGH OFFICE IN JOVIANS
M. O. Jackson, assistant general
manager of the Southern Bell Tele
phone Company, has been nominated
by the local chapter of Jovians for
statesman for Georgia. The national
convention of the Jovians. at which the
various officers will be elected, will be
held in Pittsburg in October.
Mr. Jackson was nominated for the
office at a smoker given to the local
chapter in the Transportation club Sat
urday night by Statesman D S Mont
gomery, Southern agent of the Na
tional Metal Moulding Company.
DOCTORS TO MEET AT WAYCROSS.
WAYCROSS, GA., Oct. I.—Doctors
of the Eleventh district will hold their
final convention of 1912 at Waycross
November 19. The meeting promises
to he a busy one. The entertainment
feature will be looked after by Way
cross anil the visit of the physicians
made an enlovable one.
MAN SUES RICH WOMAN
FOR BREACH OF PROMISE
SEDALIA, MO., Oct. 1. —Alleging she
broke her promise to marry him. Louallen
R. Holt, a wealthy merchant of Mary
ville. today filed suit against Mrs. Eliz
abeth Casto, for $25,000. Mrs. Casto, who
was the widow of .1. M. Planck, wealthy
Sedalia merchant, was married in Jan
uary to Dr. Jabez C. Casto, a Sedalia
specialist.
Holt says in his petition that he show
ered Mrs. Casto with expensive gifts when
she promised to become his wife. This
promise, the suit says, was made a few
months after the death of her husband.
“I’M NO MORE CRAZY
THAN YOU ARE,” GIRL
TELLS SANITY JURY
MACON, GA., Oct. I.—Nora E. Full
er, the pretty six teen-year-old girl who
recently tried to commit suicide by
drinking carbolic acid when her mother
frustrated'her plan of elopement w ith
a traveling man, has been dechired in
sane by a jury in the ordinary’s court
and must go to the state asylum.
“I'm no more crazy than you are.”
Miss Fuller told the jurymen who de
clared her insane.
The girl's brother testified in her fa
vor, but her mother declared that she
had always been weak-minded. What
probably influenced the jury in its ver.
diet was Miss Fuller’s statement to
them that her mother was an im
postor.
CANDIDATES ENTERING
FOR FORSYTH PRIMARY
FORSYTH, GA., Oct. I.—Municipal
politics are beginning to warm up. The
date for the primary has not yet been
set, but it has been generally held
about November 1. However, two can
didates for council are already in the
field. They are T. E. Fletcher, for
merly ordinary of Monroe county and
cashier of the Bank of Forsyth, and E.
N. Wilder, a prominent young business
man. now serving his second term in
the city council and acting as mayor
pro tern. Mr. Fletcher, while not now
a member of council, has served sev
eral terms.
AUTO PLUNGES IN CANAL.
WAYCROSS. GA.. Oct. I.—Although
he was badly hurt Internally when his
auto fell on him as it plunged Into the
city canal, W. L. t'lubb is holding lil
own and has good chances of recovery.
He is at a l.ocal hospital
- ■!■ - IP— I M| . - ' ,i- , , ~„ „ - - 'l* . I. I ■■
Soldiers Find Scaling 10-Foot Wall ‘Some Job’
17TH BOYS SET RECORD
Stunt Is More Than Mere Mili
tary Tactic—lt’s a Real
Athletic Feat.
When the army of the allied powers
battered its way from Tien Tsin during
the Boxer rebellion just in time to re
lieve the beleaguered legations in Pe
kin it was the of the enemy and
not their bullets that proved most trou
blesome.
And the careful training of the troops
of the American contingent on this lit
tle art of warfare known as “wall seal
ing" gave the American soldiers the
first call.
As they will tell you at Fort Mc-
Pherson. where a squad of eight men
from Company E recently lowered what
is claimed to be the army record for
scaling, this job of eight men getting
over a ten or twelve-foot wall in about
the same time that it takes one man to
run 220 yards is more than a mere
military tactic. It is an athletic feat,
timed and oiled to go like clockwork.
At the quarterly field meet of the
Sevententh Infantry at Fort McPht r
son last Friday, thirteen teams, one
from each company and one from the
regimental detachment, competed in a
wall-scaling contest. Company E was
returned a victor in the remarkably
fast time of 22 2-5 seconds. This, it is
claimed, is throe-fifths of a second
faster than the best time herteofore
made by an army team. According to |
the dope, the former record was held
by a team from the Eleventh cavalry,
Fort Oglethorpe. Dodge, Ga.
For eight grown men, fully equipped,
to go over a ten-fool wall in little more
than 22 seconds is no child's play. It
takes team work as well as speed. From
the standpoint of an eyewitness, it is
spectacular. From the standpoint of
the men, it is seven kinds of work.
Here is the way it is done, according
to the descriptions furnished by an ex
pert. The squad of eight is divided
in two ranks, front and rear. The
ranks are numbered from the right
facing the wall—that is, one, two, three
and four front and rear rank. The four
In the rear rank go over the v. all first,
boosted by the four of the front rank.!
Then soldiers numbered three and four
of the front rank push one and two of
the same rank over. Then four lifts
number three up ami left alone on the
ground before the wall four of the front
rank takes a running Jump, catching a
rifle swung between two and three of
the same rank, and is pulled over.
Up and Down
Peachtree
He Had Experience
Blowing His Own Horn.
It happened at a Sunday afternoon
barbecue given to a bunch of friends
by an Atlantan who has had his share
of publicity and a little bit more in
the past few years. There was plenty
of barbecue and all the liquids which
go with it. And there was a hunting
horn fashioned from the frontal orna
ment of a steer which all the guests
tried to blow after dinner.
Now! coaxing a tallyho from a steer’s
horn isn't a gift possessed by every
city man and none of the would-be
musicians brought forth anything more
than a grunt. Then the host spoke up;
spake he:
Give me that horn. I'll show’ you.”
He blew, lustily, and there floated
over the hills and dales the sweet,
melancholy note which set all the
hounds within a mile to baying.
“There now," said the host. “How’s
that?"
“Good," chorused the guests. “But we
knew it. There's no man in Atlanta
who's had more experience in blowing
his own horn.”
And then they filled ’em up again.
Still Those Who Think
City Hall Is Postoftice.
A man walked into the office of Wai.
ter Taylor, city clerk, shoved two pen
nies through the ticket window and
spoke impatiently.
"Gimme a two-cent stamp," he de
ni,i tided.
"Uertainly," quoth Walter, and he
dug into his desk, shoved over a stamp
and passed the pennies back.
"No charge." he remarked sweetly,
•i >v s that ' r< turned the customer
Ain't this the postoftice?”
Then Mr. Taylor explained, as he
has done oft before, that Uncle Sain
moved out more than a year ago nmi
the city of Atlanta moved in; that the
former postoffice is now city hall, and
the i-al postoffice is a block up the
street in a large marble building.
■ » Taverage about three a day,”
. said Mt . Taylor afterward. "They come
in looking for Judge Newman, wanting
to se> the postmaster, anxious to pur
chase iimney orders. A foreigner with
diamonds all over him blew in a day or
two ago and wanted to to be natural
ized 1 told him we could vaccinate him
' or give him a dog license, but neither
these ecmed to suit and he went
away peeved,"
CHINESE TROOPS'
UNIFORM 0. S.
UNOEomn
Atlantan, Just Returned From
the Orient, Tells Interesting
Story of New Republic.
Two regiments of Chinese soldiers,
garbed in uniforms composed entirely of
American-made suits of underwear, were
among the strange sights seen recently
by D. H. Kirkland, of the J. K. Orr Shoe
Company, who has returned to Atlanta
from a visit to the Orient. The soldiers
were patrolling the streets of old Canton
to preserve order, and while their uni
form may have been humorous to Ameri
can eyes there wasn't anything funny
about the methods of the soldiery.
Mr. Kirkland, the first Atlantan to re
turn from China since the fall of the
Manchu dynasty and the establishment
of the republic, tells an interesting story
of affairs there.
"When we arrived at Hong Kong," said
Mr. Kirkland, "we were advised by both
the American and British consuls there
not to attempt to go into the interior of
China, or even to Canton, which is about
150 miles up the Pearl river from that
port, and a night's ride by boat. We
were assured, however, by the friendly
attitude of the Chinese and made the trip.
Much to our surprise, everywhere we
were treated with the greatest considera
tion, and even the provisional governor
of Canton dined with us and afterward
made a talk of welcome, paying a fine
tribute to the United States, which he
termed ‘China's friend.'
Wild With Enthusiasm.
“There was plenty of evidence of war,
and the governor gave us a detachment of
soldiers to show us about the city. The
city was wild with enthusiasm for the
new republic, Canton having been one of
the first cities to surrender to the revo
lutionaries. The real fighting while we
were there was in the north, where the
soldiers were pushing their way toward
Peking.
"There were two regiments of Chinese
at Canton, dressed exclusively in Ameri
can suits of underwear. The climate,
however, is warm, and they don't suf
fer. These regiments are bomb regiments,
using only explosive bombs In their fight
ing. They were armed with sticks in pa
trolling the city to keep order.
"There tvere no queues in evidence, for
all had been shorn by the natives as an
evidence of their loyalty to the revolution;
in fact, the appearance of a Chinaman
with a queue was sufficient invitation for
his murder without scruple.
“We also were advised before leaving
Hong Kong that pirates infest the river,
and that execution of pirates is almost
a daily occurrence. In fact, it was hinted
that by judicious 'seeing' of certain of
ficials, an execution of one of the poor
wretches awaiting death in jail, might be
arranged for the pleasure of our party.
It so happened, however, that there were
no pirates in jail when we arrived, due. no
doubt, to the war troubles of the country.
China Friendly to U. S.
"China Is a great nation, and with her
friendly feeling for this country, should
eventually prove a mignificent market for
our merchandise.
"You don’t need to worry about Japan
going to war with us. The country is
miserably poor, because of the burden of
taxation. The income tax over there
ranges from 15% on SSO to 25% on $12,000
and upward on incomes. It is true that
the Japs, who get very low wages in their
native country, look with envious eyes
upon the wages of $2 to $2.50 a day for
common labor on the Pacific coast, and
they are anxious to come over here and
earn some of it. This, of course, makes a
lot of bad feeling against us for our ex
clusion laws, but it is not going to run
into a war.
"While in Yokohama I met M. W. Mc-
Ivor, who was the Chinese protectorate
during the Chino-Japanese war.
"He has a very prosperous law practice
there and is also engaged in other lines of
business. He says that Japan offers big
opportunities for American trade.”
Mr. Kirkland ate his Thanksgiving din
ner on a steamer on the Ganges river in
India, where he visited the holy city of
Benares, saw the Taj Mahal at Agra,
India, and attended the Durbar at Delhi,
India.
Durbar Wonderful Spectacle.
It was in early December Mr. Kirkland
reached India, of which he says:
"I visited Delhi, which was then tha
city of tents and known officially as tha
coronation Durbar camp, with its beauti
ful boulevards and its architectural won
ders. Only a few months previous this
ephemeral town, then occupied by- the
camps, was cultivated agricultural land,
converted into miles and miles of well
bordered roads with picturesque groups of
pavilions and tents, neatly laid out parks,
magnificent triumphal arches and carved
gateways. Nothing like it ever could have
existed anywhere in the world. The Cur
zon Durbar, I have been told, was merely
a sort of dress rehearsal for it. The in
ternal organization governing the life of
the community inhabiting that wonderful
city of a few weeks was perfect, so ad
mirably designed and carried out. The
postal service was as complete and rapid
as one could wish in any modern, civil
ized city. There were postoffices, tele
graph offices and telephones in every
quarter Each camp had its own inquiry
office and bureau of information and rail
ways. The guests in the official camps
were all provided with motor /‘ars.
"On the way through the/.ava seas a
Mrs. Hull, of Grand Rapids, Jaich., a pas
senger on my steamer, committed suicide
by leaping overboard. A young man. Mar
cus Jordan, of Washington, D. C., leaped
overboard after her, but the woi»an
drowned before she was rescued. The
passengers presented Jordan with a gold
watch for his heroism."
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, ns they can not
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There Is only one way to cure deafness, ami
that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness
Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube.
When this tube is Inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or imperfect bearing, and
when it is entirely closed deafness is the
result, mid unless the Inflammation cau be
taken out mid this tube restored to Its nor
mal condition hearing will be destroyed for
ever: nine cases out of ten are caused by
Catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed
condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give Ou’e Hundred Dollars for
■ any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send fur circulars, free.
F. J. CHUNKY & CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists. ioe.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
(AdvL)
-6
3