Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 07, 1913, Image 7

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REPUBLICANS HELD TO HEARST’S 5T7NDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA., STNDAY, RFPTFTMTVFTR 7, ISIS. * I , Georgia Senator Declares the Doleful Speeches of His G. O. P. Colleagues Are Without Foundation—Sees a Reign of Plenty Throughout Nation. 7 A Twice Married, He Asks Two Divorces California Pair Had Two Ceremonlea Performed and Now Seek a Double Divorce. WASHINGTON. Sept. 6—Senator know just what decreases of price; 111 t hft SpTlJI.t P t O_ Will Kn n ^ a ^» — - .. . . I 1 i ; t \ If Vv Hoke Smith spoke in the Senate to day in answer to the charge by the Republicans that the Wilson tariff bill >f twenrty years ago contributed to the panic of 1893. Senator Smith showed that the panic of that year was due to several causes, one of which was the unset tled conditions growing out of the Baring failure. The high tariff law of that time had prevented imports, thus reducing the receipts of the Government, while excessive appro priations exhausted the Treasury re sources. At the same time the silver purchase law had resulted in the ex portation of great quantities of gold and the plates had already been pre pared for an Issue of Government bonds when Mr. Cleveland was inau gurated on March 4, 1893. The worst of the panic of that year was over by September, and the Wil son tariff bill was not passed until the latter part of 1894. Senator Smith said: “Many times during this debate Senators upon the Republican side of the Chamber have made the claim that the passage of this tariff bill will probably bring the country to financial distress. They have appealed to the history of tariff legislation to sustain the claim. They have sought to show that the reduction of tariff taxes will flood this country with for eign products, and they have cited the panic during the last administra- . tion of President Cleveland to sup port their suggestions of hard times as the result of tariff reduction. References Are Inaccurate. “As this bill Is to pass substantially in its present shape, it is well for the public to understand that the histor ical references made by Senators on the Republican side are inaccurate, and their fears utterly without foun dation. “Before dealing with the panic from which this country suffered dur ing the last administration of Presi dent Cleveland, let me call attention to the fact that the tariff legislation of 1846 can justly be compared to the present bill. The reduction of the tariff taxes in 1846 was followed by unprecedented prosperity. So that we have a record of substantial tariff re duction accompanied with improve ment and progress upon all lines of activities. “One of the severest panics from w'hich this country ever suffered was in 1873. At that time we had a high protective tariff with no suggestion of its reduction, so that we have had a severe panic under a protective tar iff. In all the woeful speeches made during this debate especial stress has been placed upon the panic during the last administration of President Cleveland, and with general terms, but without logic or reason, the ef fort has been made to connect the tariff legislation passed during his ad ministration with the panic and to charge tariff tax reduction as the cause of the panic. Panic Preceded Cleveland. “Mr. Cleveland was inaugurated the second time on March 4, 1893. The panic was already in progress before his inauguration and before his elec tion. The extreme period of the panic was during the year 1893, and the Wilson bill reducing tariff taxes was not passed until during the last half of the year 1894. No great in crease of importation followed the tariff reductions of 1894. Our tariff Importations were less In 1895 than they were in 1893. and less in 1896 than they were in 1892. The total Im portations for those four years were as follows: 1893 1895 1892 1896 .$844,454,000 . 731,162,000 . 813,601,000 . 759.694,000 f * . ' V < “The panic of 1893, which began as I have already stated, prior to that time took place under a high pro tective tariff. If it is urged that in 1893 it was known that the Democrats contemplated reducing the tariff, and that this brought on the panic, we may well reply that a majority of the Senate was oppo.'ied in 1893 to tariff legislation In full compliance with Democratic principles, and this fact was generally known. “To*day. a majority of both Houses of Congress are known to be thor oughly in accord with the Democratic principle of tariff reduction. They are on the point of passing legislation, yet the business record of our coun try for the past twelve months has been one of prosperity and progress. “Our imports for the past fiscal year amounted In value to $1,803,622,- 000, and our exports to $2,477,514,000. “It Is true that Just at this time business halts. Merchants are wait ing for the passage of this bill to will be made on account of relief from tariff taxes. Barring this, the coun try is prosperous. By the first of September, 1893, the severest part of the panic of that period was pac ing. It is easy to find causes for tha panic of 1893. Those causes and the conditions of 1893 should be presented doubt, due to protestations °l u r 0,1 the other slde of this chamber, may be removed from the public mind, and evil consequences which might otherwise be caused from the doleful speeches we have heard be prevented. “The panic of 1893 was due to a number of causes. The large failure of Baring Brothers took place on November 20, 1890, and was followed with world-wid© financial disturb ances. The disturbance wag so great In New York City that the banks were forced to issue fifteen millions in Clearing House loan certificates, and loan rates rose in New York city at times to over 100 per cent, accom panied by numerous banking failures. 1 his in itself affected conditions tnroug’hout the United States. "There were, however, other agen cies at work here that necessitated serious trouble. Air. Cleveland closed his first term as President on March 4. 1889. Dur- lng the first four years of his service the country enjoyed unprecedented prosperity. The Government, finan- cially. was strong. The revenues largely exceeded tne appropriations. 1 he surplus in the Treasury was so great that not only were those Gov ernment bonds retired which the law- required, but Government bonds were brought upon the market, reducing the national debt, to prevent an ex cessive accumulation of money in the national treasury. “At the close of the administration of Mr. Cleveland on March 4. 1889. all liabilities had been paid and there was in the treasury a surplus of $180,009,000 and the golu reserve was ample. No Secretary of the Treasury ever turned over to his successor a treasury more fully supplied or a national credit more absolutely es tablished. Harrison Wiped Out Surplus. “Under President Harrison, who followed President Cleveland, Mr. Windom became Secretary of the Treasury, and the measures whlcn were then adopted wiped out the surplus in the Treasury and seriously affected the credit of the Government. In 1890-91 the tariff was revised up ward. It was increased 10 per cent, not for the purposes of raising rev enue. but for the purpose of exclud ing importations of foreign goods. Ap propriations were also largely In creased. The revenue was decreased over fifty million dollars annually, while the appropriations were in creased over a hundred million dol lars annually. These two pieces of legislation changed the net balance In the Treasury annually over one hundred and fifty millions of dollars. The surplus from Mr. Cleveland’s administration was rapidly wiped out, and by the 4th of March, 1893, the Treasury was reduced to the lowest state that it had been in for many years. “But the attack upon the national credit was not limited to emptying t'he Treasury. Secretary Windom recommended that all silver bullion offered to the Treasury should be bought and Treasury notes issued in payment. The House of Represen tatives did not accept his view, but it did pass a bill providing for the is suance of $4,500,000 Treasury notes each month with which to purchase silver bullion. “When this bill reached the Senate, that body promptly substituted for it a bill providing for the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1. This was done without regard to the fact that President Harrison had declared that a ‘free coinage bill would be discreditable to our financial man agement and disastrous to all busi ness interests.’ As a compromise, a bill wqs passed providing for the pur chase monthly of 4,500,000 ounces of silver bullion and the payment there for with Treasury notes. “In the midst of a world-wide financial distrust the United States began issuing over fifty millions an nually of Treasury notes, with noth ing back of them but silver, and that, too, under a statute which re quired this continued increase of pa per money with no provision for its absorption. “To quote from a subsequent re port of a Republican Treasurer, *Th*3 people who had demanded this hun dred million of ready cash made their use of it and were willing to part with it, but the Treasury, which SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. Do a ntan and a woman, twice married to make a marriage doubly aure, also have to secure two divorces? This Is an odd point that arose In the Superior Court here through the filing of a divorce complaint by James J. Hafflnger against Lily Banchlero Hafflnger. The couple were married at Clay ton, Cal., in 1911, and three days later In San Francisco remarried by a jus tice of the peace. Hafflnger sued his wife for divorce last January and was granted a decree. In the proceed ings the Clayton marriage only was mentioned. Mrs. Hafflnger did not contest the suit. The fear now that he Is not really divorced prompted Hafflnger to file a second suit. Miss Eleanor Wilson in Bird Play § +•+ +•+ +•+ ■:••+ +•+ +•+ Cornish Fashionables in Cast +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +•+ +#+ inn i n niurr ‘Feather’ Tariff Proviso Added flb b.fl.H.uHlLF Miss Eleanor Wilson, daughter of the President, who will take the principal role in “Sanctuary,” a play by Percy Mac- kaye, which is a protest against the slaughter of birds. iTf neeirisb feverish tongue 1 UP, constipated waste, sour bile and 11 peemsn, ievenau, w undlgest( , d food will gently move out of the bowels and you have a well, playful child again coated, give “fruit laxative’ at once. MOTHER! GIVE CRASS, SICK CHILD ONLY "CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS" 'No matter what ails your child, a laxative should be the first treat ment given. Look at the tongue, mother! If coated, It is a sure sign your “lit tle one'.*" stomach, liver and bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When cross, peevish, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, eat or act nat urally; if breath is bad, stomach sour, system full of cold, throat sore, or if feverish, give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs," and in Just a few hours all the clogged - Sick children needn’t be coaxed to take this harmless fruit laxative. Millions of mothers keep it handy because they know its action on the stomach, liver and bowels Is prompt and sure. They also know a little given to-day saves a sick child to morrow. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which contains directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. Get the . genuine, made by “California Fig Syrup Company.’' Refuse any other kind with contempt. had found a means of paving It out, could not call It back.’ Foreign ex change began to rise and gold bars began to be taken from the Treasury for shipment abroad. By the end of June. 1891, the exports of gold had reached ‘the unexampled figure of seventy millions of dollars for the six months. Continued Gold Shipments. “The big wheat crop of 1891, with the short crop abroad, checked the trouble, only to begin again In the early part of 1892. In the first six months of 1892 $41,500,000 In gold was shipped abroad. In July and Au gust gold was going out at the rate of two to seven millions weekly. Gold began to be so short that It ceased to enter Into commerce, and the fear of a depreciated currency caused gold to be hoarded. "By the middle of July, 1892, both the Treasury and the banks ceased to pay gold through the clearing house. Up to this time the demand for gold for exportation had been obtained through the clearing house. During the latter part of the month of July. 1892, Government legal tenders were again carried to uie Treasury and redemption In gold was demanded. This was the first demand for re demptions of Government legal ten ders in gold or any large quantities since 1879. “Appropriations were still exceed ing revenue, the gold reserve In the Treasury was depleted, and the Sec retary of the Treasury, Mr. Foster* stated In December, 1892, that a heavy deficit in revenue was impend ing. and that the whole machinery of the Government was Imperiled. “Tn December, 1892, and January, 1893, upward of twenty-five millions of gold was withdrawn from the Treasury for export. The gold re serve had fallen to only a few mil lions more than the legal minimum, and in February. 1893, before the in auguration of Mr. Cleveland, Secre tary Foster gave orders to prepare the engraving plates for a bond is sue under the Republican act to pro vide gold to meet legal tender notes presented at the Treasury. He avoided the actual issue of these bonds in February by appealing to the New York banks to furnish him gold to prevent a panic. To his suc cessors in the Treasury on March 4 1893, Mr. Foster left less than a mil lion dollars in excess of the required gold reserve of one hundred million, and only twenty-five millions of available cash. Public Confidence Shaken. “Referring to the situation on March 4, 1893, Noyes, in his ‘Thirty Years of American Finance,’ de clares: ‘Probably no financial admin istratlon in our history has entered office under such disturbing condl tions. The Treasury was empty and public credit shaken.’ The same au thor states, speaking of this period In March and April, 1893, ‘The very sight of this desperate struggle go ing on to maintain the public credit was Sufficient to alarm both home and foreign interests, and this alarm was now reflected everywhere. The feverish money market, the disor dered and uneasy market for securl ties and the renewed advance In for eign exchange combined to bring matters to a hea.d.’ In the meantime the reserve against the legal tenders had fallen below the statutory mini mum. The same author states,, refer ring to the same period: ‘The public mind wag on the verge of panic. Dur ing a year or more it had been con tinuously disturbed by the undermin ing of the Treasury, a process visible to all observers. In all probability the crash of 1893 w’ould have come twelve months before had it not been for the accident of 1891’s great har vest, in the face of European fam ine.’ "In 1893 the panic In the West had reached the stage which seemed to foreshadow' general bankruptcy. Dur ing the summer of 1893 clearinghouse certificates were issued against the assets of the banks and w’ere used nearly everywhere Instead of cash. Many banks adopted the extreme measure of refusing to pay cash for the checks of their own depositors. Certified bank checks upon perfectly solvent banks could not obtain money on presentation, and were sold by brokers at a discount. Cleveland Restored Confidence. “Mr. Cleveland called Congress to gether on Augus* 7, 1893, to repeal the silver purchase law of 1890, and Mr. Noyes, in his work already quot ed, declares: ‘In the popular discus sion of the day, entire responsibility was laid on this law for the existing distress. * • * Repeal of the silver purchase law’ stopped future mischief of inflation, but it could not change the mischief already done.’ “It is true that Coxey*s Army marched to Washington in the spring of 1894. It Is true that many labor troubles existed during the spring and summer of 1894, but I have presented the facts sufficiently to show’ that most of those troubles, certainly the w’orst of them, and the causes w’hich produced them preceded tariff legisla tion. The causes which brought on the panic of 1893. were entirely dis connected w’lth the tariff bill of 1894. “I long for the prosperity of the en tire country, for a prosperity w’hich will bring wealth not alone to a few’, but furnish a broad opportunity to the great masses of the people. The doleful misrepresentation of he panic of 1893 should cease. It has no bear ing upon the present. To-day the Treasury of the United States con tains one billion, two hundred and fifty millions of dollars in gold. “It Is amply supplied with funds to meet the w r ants of the government. The Treasury Is so strong that it Is able to furnish a hundred millions of dollars to move the crops in the West and the South. Conditions are reas suring in all parts of the country. Splendid crops are be’ng gathered, the exportation of which in part will bring additional wealth to our people and add to our gold supply. Doleful countenances should give way to smiles. The time has passed when Liveliest Race in History of Or ganization Predicted for Chat tanooga Encampment. Percy Mackaye Writes Piece To Be Staged Out doors as Protest Against Slaughter. WINDSOR, VT, Sept. 6.—With Miss Eleanor Wilson, the President’s daughter, In one of the star parts, and her mother, Mrs. Woodrow’ Wilson, as patroness, a novel outdoor dramatic performance will be given on the evening of September 12 at Meriden, a village near here. The play, especially written for the occasion by Percy Mackaye, author of “Jeanne d’Arc” and “The Scarecrow,” is intended as a protest against the slaughter of birds that their plumage may be used to decorate women’s bats, and at the same time as an ap proval of the “feather proviso” in the tariff bill, which President Wilson fa vors. The piece is called “Sanctuary," and will be performed in a piece of wood land which has been established as a safe and sacred living place for birds, which are fed and watered and housed by the members of the Meriden Bird Club. A number of prominent members of the artists’ colony at Cornish, N. H , besides Mr. Mackaye, are arranging the details and costumes of the play let and will appear in pantomime as birds of various species. The Cast of Char**cr«r». The cast of characters is as fol lows: Quercus (a Faun) Joseph Lindon Smith Alwyn (a Poet) Percy Mackaye Shy (a Naturalist) Ernest Harold Baynes Taclta (a Dryad) Miss Juliet Barrett Rublee CHATTANOOGA, Sept 6.—Every Indication points to a spirited contest at the Chattanooga encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic for commander-in-chief. Five States have 8r> far made entries, and each entry is a popular man. The States already in the contest for the prize are, In alpha betical order, Indiana, Michigan. Ne braska, New Jersey and South Da kota. The Department of Indiana has In dorsed O. A. Somers, a private in the ranks. Mr. Somers lives at Kokomo, and is a popular man with the mem bers of the Grand Army. He has the active and undivided support of his State and counts on hedp from a num ber of the strong States of the Cen tral West and from every member of the Grand Army; to use the words of a friend and supporter, “who believes that the time has come when & pri vate soldier should be honored.” Nebraska has entered the lists with Colonel C. E. Adams, a banker and farmer, of Superior. Nebr. He is In dorsed by his State Department, and has a war record linked with the his tory of the Fourteenth Army Corps. Colonel Adams won distinction on many fields, is loyal to ’the Grand Army’s interests and a successful man of affairs. Michigan Presents Gardner. Michigan will come to the encamp ment carrying the flag of the Hon. vVashington Gardner, of Albion, the well-known editor-Mtatesman, and en ter him as a candidate for the honor. Colonel Gardner enlisted in the serv ice when only 16, was with General Sherman during the campaign from j Chattanooga to Atlanta and sustained a serious w’ound at Resaca, which ne cessitated retirement on an honorable discharge. He w as a member of Con gress from Michigan ten or a dozen years, serving with high honors on a number of Important committees, making a national reputation as one of the Republican leaders. New Jersey's candidate for the hon or is Colonel Ralph D. Cole, a popu lar Grand Army man, who hf.s a cred itable war record. He has' <ne in dorsement of the New’ Jersey Depart ment of the G. A. R. and is regarded as the candidate of the Eastern sec tion, although sectionalism plays but little part In the selection of the com- nmnder-ln-chlef. South Dakota has indorsed Captain N. H. Kingman, of Selby, and will come to Chattanooga determined to land him. Captain Kingman organ ized a company in the Thirteenth Wisconsin Regiment, and served w’lth that organization until the close of the war. He has been one of the prominent figures In the Grand Army of the Republic since Its organization and his strength is general. j With five strong candidates, said to I be the greatest number ever presented before a national encampment, the fight for the honor promises to be spirited and full of interest. It should be explained that these men are can didates in the sense that their re spective Sta,te Departments have in- | dorsed them. 20,000 Veterans In Parsde. General Alfred B. Beers, command er-in-chief, has forwarded to the Chattanooga Encampment Association the formation for the parade of vet erans at the forthcoming national en HAILS CALL US Transfer From Morning Field Is Accompanied by Many Im provements in Service. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. g.-fThs o Call, the oldest of the ?’t n F t anc,sco dal ly papers, trans ferred its activities from the morning to the evening field Monday. The Call wae founded In 1856 as a morning paper and was for many years the leading morning paper of San Fran cisco. Of late years, however the competition of The Examiner ‘ and h r°EL,, c e has been too strong for It, and The Call saw Its better oppor tunity In the less bitterly disputed evening field. The Call's first appearance In the evening field showed It to be a greatly Improved newspaper. It made the following announce ment, which seems to be Justified: The San Francisco Call Is the oldest paper In San Francisco and will be the greatest evening pa per. Every arrangement has been made to give the people of San r ranclsco the highest grade of newspaper product for the small est price. Lease Special Wire*. The best news associations have been secured, the best American and European news paper connections have been made, and special wires have been leased, the best special fea- tues and syndicate services have been obtained, the best newspaper managers, editors and writers have been engaged from all parts of the country; the best and big gest newspaper machinery manu factured has been ordered and will be Installed In the newest and most commodious quarters In San Francisco. Everything has been done that we, the publishers, can think of to make The San Francisco Call the best newspaper In America, but we will welcome suggestions from our readers. The San Francisco Call appears to-day, Monday, as San Fran cisco’s leading evening paper. Ask Aid of Readers. Tell us how It can be made bet ter. Help us to give San Francisco the best paper printed anywhere. we have the determination and the resources to make The San Francisco Call the leading even ing newspaper of the nation. If thoro Is anything we haven't thought of, think of It for us and we will do It for you. F. W. K FT,LOCO, President and Publisher. JOHN D. SPRDCKEL8, Vice President and Treasurer. The managers of The Call claim that the wisdom of the transfer to the evening field Is proved bv the results of the first day of Issue, 'The circula tion of The Call has been doubled and the paper In Its new form has met with the most universal commenda tion. Song for Arkansas Takes Hoosier There Letter* That Follow Publication ef Lyric Result In Songeter Adopt ing State. EVA NSVTLIJ5, IND., Sept \r- With hi* fiddle ringing out “On the Banks of the Wabash,” Cash Y. Hen derson. song writer and for twenty years a merchant at Hasleton, Ind^ started in a covered waron for a chicken farm near Hot Brings, ArlL, where he expects to spend the re mainder of his life. Henderson, a cripple, unable to walk, uses a wheel ohalr. Henry Ingle, who expects to be a tenant on Henderson’s farm. Is driving the wa gon. He has gained a reputation as a song writer, his biggest suooess be ing the song, “Take Me Back to Old Arkansas ” Henderson was never In Arkansas In his life, but shortly af ter his song was published he be came interested in the State by re ceiving letters from people In that State who had read his song. “GETS-IT,” for Corns, Surely Gets Them! It’s the Com Cure on a New Plan —Gets Every Corn Quick and 8ure, “If you’re like me, and have tried nearly everything to get rid of corns and have still got them, Juot try the new, sure, quick, easy, paln- ‘Talk About Your Corn-Getters, •GETS-IT’ Surely is the Reol Thingl” less way—the new-plan corn cure, ‘GETS-IT.’ Watch it get rid of that com, wart, callous or bunion In a hurry.” "GETS-IT” Is as sure as time. It takes two seconds to ap ply—that’s all. No bandages to stick and fuss over, no salves to make corns sore and turn true flesh raw and red, no plasters, no more knives and razors that may cause blood poison, no more dig ging at corns. Just the easiest thing In the world to use. Your com days are over. “GETS-IT” Is guaranteed. It is safe, never hurts healthy flesh. Your druggist sells “GETS-IT,” 26 cents per bottle, or direct if you wish, from E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago. ( the people of this country will »ub- m't ot the inexcusafaaly high protec tive tariff which even President Mc Kinley condemned. 'We believe in this bill, the passage of which we are pressing. It is an honest revision of the tariff down ward, free from all favoritism. The bill is framed primarily to procure revenue, but at the same time we geek to attain this end in a way that will not injure legitimate industries. It is constructed not only to free the con sumer from unjust burdens, but to place the manufacturing industries where they will not be confined to American markets. It is built upon the competitive theory to the end that revenue may be raised and no con cern be able to feel that It has a mo nopoly of the home market gained other than through the fact that It Is able to furnish better goods at lower prices than others. “It is true that some of our manu facturing Industries will feel the spur of competition where heretofore they have been without It, but there is no reason why they should fail to con tinue In lines of prosperity with broader trade. Given no longer the privilege of arbitrarily taking the dol lars of their neighbors, they will reach still further int Omis (the Bird Spirit) Miss Eleanor Wilson Stark (a plume-hunter) Wlttner Bynner The scene Is laid in a sylvan glade, the guardian of which is Quercus, who Is discovered rising out of the ground bearing in his hand a huge pitcher plant filled with water ob tained from a subterranean stream. With this he replenishes a bird-bath, and from a pouch slung over his shoulders scatters seed Into a bird- house. Both bath and house are nat- _ ural “properties” in the Meriden sane- j campment. General Beers gives the j tuary. He sings and makes music I number of veterans likely to partlcl- ! with his pipes. - j p«te in the parade at from 16,000 to , Alwyn appears, and the faun ex- ! 20,000. The parade Is made up of the ! plains that, instead of the old, useless national officers of the Grand Army, 1 job of piping ditties to nymphs, he the officers of the departments and i now takes care of birds, undejr the representatives, and then the mem- 1 direction of Shy. Tacita Is next on bere of the organizations who are ! the scene with her approval. ; present at the encampment and the Voices Birds’ Appreciation. Sonn of \ eterans. i v*j_ T>rti . , , . The average age of enlistment dur- | h .?.™ \ jy,. ion > speak * In *>«- I In* the Civil War having been 25 and . fl © birds and expresses the the war having continued through i the f J: a f hered °rea- f our we ary years, It stands to reason L bj’ 171 * taken of that most of the living veterans are them and the efforts of mankind to n0vV nearly 80 years old. prevent their slaughter for their j This indicates that for every vet- p urnage. ! eran who Is physically able to make J . 1 ‘^ n arrives Stark In search of the trip to the forty-seventh national trophies He is dissuaded and every- encampment of the Grand Army of thing ends happily for the birds. I the Republic at Chattanooga in Sep- I lie costumes, it is said, will be 1 tember there must be at least 25 who beautiful and striking, as will be the can be present in spirit only, incidental music, which Ts also the Cornish colony. of the artist, of the cqnVICT TAKES VACATION preparing A N D R ET U R N S TO PR I SO N Mrs. Kenyon Cog, Mr. and Mrs. Her- The Remedy of Greatest Value In the Family Medicine Chest Is Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey It is an absolutely pure distillation of carefully selected, clean grain, thoroughly malted, and should be in every home as a safeguard in emer gencies requiring a stimulant. Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey cor rects the defective digestion of the food, increases the appetite, strength ens the heart, gives force to the cir culation, relieves throat and lung troubles, and insomnia, and brings restfulness to the brain and nervous forces. It is prescribed by doctors and recognized as a leading family medicine. ,.nuli>. Duff,-!, Pur, Mult WhUkoj- I. v>l<1 In SKAIJTO BOTTLE* ONI.i . try moat drugglRta, grocers and dealer*. Should our friends for any reason be unable to secure It In their locality, we will have It shipped to them from their nearest dealer, express prepaid (cash to accompany order) at the following prices 4 Large Bottle*. 14 30 6 Large Botllea. 15.00 12 Large Botllea. i 11.00 |3 Potfr's Pure Malt Whiskey should be In every home and we make the 1 shore announcement *o that you may become familiar with a source supply. Remit tap express order, postoflVe order, or certified cheek to The Puffy Malt Whiskey Company. 131 White 8t.. Rochester. N. Y. COLUMBUS OHIO, Hept. Joseph Dickerson, an “honor” convict at the Ohio Penitentiary, returned to that in stitution this morning after a week’s “vocation." announcing that he had*] had a splendid time Dickerson went to his home in Ur- bana. There he got Into a flght and It is not known whether President ! a thrashing Thence he r«- Wilson will be able to attend ‘ pa,r# * -*? Springfield and had numer- j bert Adams, Mrs. Augustus Salnt- Gaudens, Maxfleld Parrish. Miss Ann Parrish, Miss Louise Evan Shipman, Miss Ellen Shipman, Mr. and Mrs. George Rublee, Miss Frances Arnold, Mias Annie Duncan, William Howard Hart and Charles A. Platt j ous drinks. CLEM YOUR LIVER—DIMEA SAVE YOUR WASTE PAPER AND RAGS Our Wagon Will Call and Pay You =lCASH!Bi— For All Watte Paper, Newspapers, Books, Magazines, Rags, Old Mat tresses. Quilta, Etc. YOU MAY AS WELL SAVE THIS MONEY AS THROW IT AWAY- CALL US. BELL PHONE MAIN 3810 ATLANTIC SUPPLY COMPANY W. and A. R. R. and FOUNDRY STREET. You’re bilious! You have a throb bing sensation in your head, a bad taste In your mouth, your eyes hurt, your skin Is yellow with dark rings under your eyes, your lips are parch ed. No wonder you feel ugly, mean and ill-tempered. Your system is full rv tn,^pv., bile and constipated waste noj the*'markets'oT’the Properly passed ofT, and what you need is a cleaning up “Inside.” Don’t continue being a bilious, constipated nuisance to yourself and those who world for the sale of their commodi ties. “The great body of consumers will feel a lightening of their burdens. A wider opportunity will be given for Individual effort. The average man will have a better chance. I do not mean that these changes will come instantly. They will come gradually, and be more and more perceptible each year for several years. “We may turn to the future with confidence. The wrangling over the bill is practically ended, and the busi ness of the country will resume normal conditions with the passage of the bilL” love you. and don’t resort to harsh physics that Irritate and injure. Re member, that vour sour, disordered stomach, lazy liver, and clogged bow els can be quickly cleaned and regu lated by morning with gentle, thor ough Cascarete; a 10-cent box will keep your head clear and make you , feel cheerful and bully for months. | Get Oascarets now—wake up refresh- ; ed—feel like doing a good day’s work i —make yourself pleasant and useful Clean up! Cheer up! CANDY CATHARTIC I P-R-I-N T-O-R-I-A-L-S I No. 238 Our Service Dept, is at Your Convenience! We know that OUR best Interests, as well as those of oar PATRONS, are dependent on SERVICE—not alone tn QUAL ITY, PROMPTNESS and ACCURACY; but In initiative and origination; the planning, writing and illustrating; and every other adjunct ive feature that “rounds out” a per fect piece of Printed matter—As “Happy” is wont to say— “Let us help youse” I Phones M. 1560-2608-2*14. BYRD Printing Co. 46-48-50 W. Alabama, Atlanta.