Newspaper Page Text
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HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, DECEMBER
1013.
PLUNGERS
Owtlight of Wall Street' Is What
Some Observers Call Present
Dullness, Which Brings Wolf
Close to the Brokers’ Doors.
Retired Merchants and Everyone
Else With Money Refuse Now
to Play Other Man's Game.
Exchange Members Sell Autos.
Panama Is the Luckiest Nation in the World
. •!•••£• +•+ -S**-:- •!•••!• +•+ +•+ •$•••!•
Canal Makes It Money Lender, Not Borrower
This, the latest photograph from the Canal Zone, was taken with a camera turned to the southward from Forebay. It shows I
one of the gates which guard the approach to the celebrated locks at Gatun. In ease of accident a second gate to the same lock is pro- |
vided. A heavy fender chain is also placed in the channel some distance from the gate. If the vessel- is proceeding at proper speed
this chain falls to the bottom, out of the way. But if the craft is moving too rapidly the chain remains stretched across the channel.
The vessel strikes it and is gradually brought to a stop.
VEW YORK, Dec. 6.—It is the
Twilight of Wail Street. The dar
ing and spectacular plunger Is gone
forever. The public is apathetic to
ward stock speculation. One of the
most picturesque elements in our
pnblio life Is passing. These are some
of the conclusions drawn from the
dullness on the Xew York Stock Ex
change, the failure of brokers to
make a living, the dry rot.
It was not so In the olden days.”
Wav back In the Black Friday era,
Jay Gould or Jim Fiske wouldn't hes
itate at all to appear In the public
share mart and flay the opposing
crowd of either bulls or bears with
the utmost freedom. Everybody knew
what they were about, and nobody
thought of complaining in the sense
of considering their faults as of a
public character.
Everyone Took Chance.
Later came the great speculative
eras of our national life, when a
“million share day” was considered
nothing, when doctors and lawyers
and merchants gambled in stocks
from every hamlet, when the little
speculators were myriad and the big
speculators were as fierce if slightly
more cautious, than in the seventels.
Harriman flinging railroads into
the gambling pit, John W. Grates and
other men of his type leading spec
ulative campaigns which netted them
'ens of millions, foxy old James R.
Keene, engineering pools—for many
years the American people stood for
them and simply laughed.
Then the great outcries began.
They've never led to the actual gov
ernmental reformation or abolition
of the Stock Exchange, but they seem
to have put it almost hors de com
bat simply by the force of public
opinion.
“Nobody's buying!” the brokers
cry.
“We never .sell anybody from up
town,” complain the hungry-eyed
ones, meaning that the merchants
vho accumulate fortunes no longer
follow’ the custom of retiring, seat
ing themselves next the ticker, and
proceeding graduallv to turn their
hard-earned wealth over to the men
of stocks and bonds. The “men from
uptown” are coming to realize that
this is the broker’s game—not theirs.
And the broker is selling his auto
mobile. He’s no longer known as the
wine buyer.” He’s no longer known
as the patron saint of the chorus lady.
Too Much Machinery.
The floor of the exchange these
days resembles the lounging room of a
clubhouse. The exchange is a club in
reality. Will it become one in name?
Will it turn into a mere social or
ganization, with traditions of busi
ness?
Hardly, because there are more se
curities to be traded In each year.
There must be a public auction room
where they can change hands. The
trouble just at present is the broker
age machinery is too big for its pur
poses. It is built on a scale to handle
great speculations and little specula
tions, and when it has to come down
to calm and peaceful transfers, it is
;ike a sightseeing automobile carry
ing a single passenger. There Is no
profit.
FIT JIB’
Everybody After
Hot Springs
Liver Buttons
IK
[Rich in Metals and Agriculture, but Long War-
Ridden, Prosperous at Last.
New Scheme Devised
To Lower Egg Prices
Sterilization Plant Being Erected in j
Pittsburg to Try Out New
Process.
Soup
Silencer Need
Is Urged by Judge
He Also Decides Against Carrying
Peas on Knife—Fines Two
. for Fighting.
Prevent 5Kin
Blemishes
By Using
Cutlcura 5oap
and Ointment
They do so much to promote and
maintain the purity and beauty of
the complexion, hands and hair un
der all conditions, and are unexcelled
in purity, delicacy and fragrance foi
the toilet and nursery.
''urlcure Po»p *Bd Ointment sold ’hro'igoouttt>*
~orl4 Liberal sample of earb mailed free,
book Address "Cutlcura. ’ Dept 8P.
*W“\ren who shave and shampoo vrltb Cut'eurr
'•ap will end It beat »»'r and aratr
PITTSBURG, Dec. 6.—A plant to
sterilize eggs is building here. An
egg, even in hot weather, can by the
sterilization process be stored for ten
months and when taken out be as
fresh as a newly laid egg, according
to those who have made the process a
success in Europe for the last five
years.
The promoters say the price of
fresh eggs will have to come down,
as it has in Europe, because the egg
thus stored can not be told from the
freshly laid ege.
The eggs are subjected to the ac
tion of carbonic acid and nitrogen
gases. This kills all the bacilli. They
are then packed in cases In which is .
sterilized air. and these cases are'her- I
metically sealed.
The eggs can then be kept for at
least ten months—the longest period '
yet tried.
Bones of Ancient
Race Discovered
JACKSON, MICH., Dec. 6.—That
Jackson County was once thickly
populated with the mound builders,
now extinct, is the belief of persons
who have made a careful study In re^
search work here.
Recently a large number of bones,
clay pipes and other articles were un
earthed in a mound on the hanks of
Eagle I.ake, and since then other dis
coveries have been made, which leave
little doubt that large numbers of
mound builders inhabited this part of
the Sta(e.
Kansas ManPlanning
Cruise of 7,000 Miles
KANSAS CITY, MO., I>ec. 0.—Be
fore the Sweetheart, Bid ward H.
Witte’s new ocean-going launch, with
her owner and a party of friends on
board, reaches Chicago next April,
she will put 7,000 miles of water be
hind her.
The cruise will take the Witte par
ty dow T n the Missouri and Mississippi
Rivers, through the Gulf of Mexico,
up the Atlantic coast to New York,
through the Erie Canal and the Great
Lakes to Chicago.
Kansas Too Rich as
Farmers Prefer City
CHICAGO, Dec. 6.—The State of
Kansas officially complains of being
too rich. Its cry of protest relates
particularly to the distribution of its
people.
The percentage of population liv
ing in the cities nas risen in ten
years from 34 to 39. In measuring
the significance of this fact one must
remember that a “city” is an aggre
gation of 1,000 persons or more.
A Panama Cleaning,
Need of Jerusalem
CHICAGO, Dec. 6.—The ancient city
of Jerusalem, according to the Jour
nal of the American Medical Associa
tion. needs just such sanitary measures
as were taken under Federal supervision
in the Panama Canal zone.
Out of the 70.000 people of Jerusalem.
The Journal says at least three-fifths
are suffering from enlargement of the
spleen.
$726.79 Nugget Is
Found in California
OROVILLE, CAL.. Dec. 6.—One of the
largest nuggets over found in this sec
tion of the State has been taken from
the works of ihe old Emma mine in
Ninishew section by O. IT Hugh, of this
eitv. The nugget was composed of
u:\rtz and gold, and minted *726.79.
The Emma has a record of one of the
p-odvers bi this section, and wa>
formerly worked by th~ Ximahew Gold
Mining Ooniuaru
HAMMOND, IND.. Deo. 6.—Jim
Stevens and George Pargins were din
ing at the same table In a Hammond
restaurant. While eating peas with
his knife, Jim’s hand slipped and peas
rolled off into George’s coffee. A
fihgt followed. Both men were ar
rested. Each charged the other with
assault and battery. Jim pleaded in
extenuation that when George drank
his soup it sounded like water rush
ing into a drain.
Judge E. H. Ames fined each man
1 cent, and explained that a knife is
not a conveyance for peas. He said
he hopes Maxim soon will invent a
soup silencer.
Craps, Roulette, Faro
Dead in Birmingham
BIRMINGHAM, ALA., Dec. 6.—
Gambling is at a minimum in
Birmingham to-day. This condition
has been brought about by activity
of the recent Grand Jury, Conrad
Austin, former chief of police, anu
the city officials.
Roulette wheels are said not to
have been silent for many years. The
craps table has been busy. Faro and
other games have been moving along
steadily in half a dozen and more
places. Internal dissensions have
been brewing among the gambling
fraternity for some time, caused, It
is stated, by proprietors hiring out
side men to do the work, leaving the
home talent to shift for themselves.
Several of the larger places, where it
is stated gambling has been going on.
have closed doors now and the craps
and card tables have been removed.
PANAMA, Dec. 6.—Panama is the'
most independent nation, financially,
in the world. It is the only nation
which receives interest on money it
has loaned instead of paying interest
on funds borrowed.
The country, vastly rich in re
sources of mines, fields and sea, has
come into its own—and all because
of the canal.
Panama has no bonded debt upon
which to pay interest. It has invested
in gilt-edge mortgages in the United
States $6,000,000. bringing in an in
come yearly of about 4 1-2 per cent.
There is $300,000 on deposit to guar
antee the parity of its currency, and.
after this year, the United States will
pay a perpetual yearly rental of
$250,000 for the canal.
The income from taxation amounts
to about $5,000,000 yearly, and there
is no army, no navy, and no expen
sive courts to keep up. All money is
available for improvements, and Pan
ama is the only nation collecting in
terest on its own money instead of
paying out interest on loans.
Schools Are Numerous.
There is one school to every 165
children of school age in Panama, and
nowhere in the country are there
enough unemployed laborers to sup
ply the demand for workers, and the
American colonies to declare inde
pendence. The social movement, in
Europe epitomized by the French
revolution, made headway on the
Isthmus slowly. When the other col
onies were deserting Spain Panama
remained loyal, the loyalty being
based largely on incompetence. The
lack of ethic unity on the Isthmus, of
economic independence, distrust of
Bogota, with whom her revolutionary
destinies must be placed, and the
presence of strong garrisons, all had
an influence on that loyalty, and the
home Government in 1814 conferred
upon the Panamanian cities the title
of “Faithful.”
Colombia Rule Unhappy.
Until February 8, 1822, it was an
independent State. Then it became
the Department of the Isthmlis of the
new Republic of Colombia, and its
troubles, far from being over, contin
ued almost without check until 1903,
when the independence from Colom
bia was effected.
The period of Colombian rule was
one of strife, for when Colombia
happened to furnish a capable and
kindly Governor, the Panamanians
themselves waged an Internal row.
In 1903 the United States attempt
ed to deal with Colombia in an effort
to build the Panama Canal. In the
large mining, agricultural and timber# ill of that year it became apparent
Critic Criticised, He
Sues Show Manager
JULIET, ILL., Dec. 6.—A suit for
$10,000 damages is the latest event in
the war between M. R. Kelly, dra
matic critic for The Herald, and the
management of a burlesque show at
the Orpheum Theater.
Kelly saw the show and was so
pained his review was far from com
plimentary. Charles LeRoy, manager
of the company, addressed the audi
ence and said the hostility of the crit
icism was due to Kelly having been
thrown out of the theater.
Kelly was accosted by one of the
troupe, who struck him in the /ace,
breaking his glasses and leaving him
on the street.
This disagreement was patched up
later,’but Kelly filed suit against Le
Roy and the theater.
'Jesse James Cave'
Found in Oklahoma
ALTUS, *)KLA.. D c. 6— Owing tu
the fact that the celebrated and no
torious Janies brothers made a ren
dezvous of a famous cave near Alt.us
it is called the Jesse James Cave oy
the people of the surrounding coun
try.
That they did make a hiding place
of it is evident by the names carved
in the soft stones, "Frank James,
May L, 1870,” being foremost among
them,
The cave nroper is about a mile
long and at all times of the year filled
with water.
Love at First Sight
Ends in Divorce
SEATTLE’. Deo. 6. Ralph S. Hopkins,
Seattle capitalist and clubman, has been
divorced by Agnes V. Hopkins, the
beautiful and talented Superior, Wig.,
girl, who he married October 14. 1908.
Mrs Hopkins’ general allegation was
cruelty.
The couple was married under ro
mantic circumstance? she was in Seat
tle on a visit when Ralph Hopkins met
> ,.?• Hf immediate!’ laid siege to her
heart, followed b^r back to Superioi.i
and final!' won her there
interests are forced to import labor to
operate their plants.
The country is rich in gold and
hardwoods. There is a fine field for
agriculture and cattle raising. The
United States has made the cities
clean and healthy, and the interior
of the country always was so. And
so, after hundreds of years of strife,
Panama has come into its own.
Famed for Its Fish.
The waters of the Pacific Ocean
at Panama abound in splendid fish,
and there is a tradition that the name
Panama was the old Indian word for
“place of abundance of Ashes.” At
all events, after the execution of Bal
boa in 1519, the Spaniards began to
explore the Facile Coast and found
a small fishing village railed Pan
ama, and on August 15, 1519, Gover
nor Pedrarias announced that the
place would be the site of his future
capital, and established the first per
manent settlement in the New World.
Two years later a royal decree made
Panama a city, and it became the seat
of a bishop.
For 30 years expeditions were sent
out from Panama In search of gold,
and from here, in 1524. \yere started
the voyages of Pizarro and Almagro,
which ended In the discovery of Peru
and the vast wealth of that country.
On April 3, 1527, an expedition went
overland through the divide at Cule-
bra and sailed down the Chagres
River to the Atlantic, traversing ex*
actly the same route which the ships
will take when the canal is finished.
Panama was far from being a quiet
place. Whenever the ships came in
from Peru laden with gold and jewels
there usually was a tight for some
part of it.
Pirates and contrabandists har
assed the isthmus, but the city of
Panama grew, and before 1550 the
place had some 3,000 inhabitants, with
about as many more in the outposts,
and a cathedral had been built.
Harried by Pirates.
Thi^ period saw the rise and de
cline of Panama. Spain's own deca
dence played a great part in the fall,
as did the attacks of the English and
French on the trade of the Indies and
the inability of Panama to develop
its own resources as the transisth
mian trade decreased. But the pi
rates and buccaneers did more than
anything else to wreck the country.
Morgan and Drake and the others
burned the towns, killed the inhabi
tants, and stole the plunder which
had been brought up from the south,
lit 1671 the old city of Panama was
destroyed and a few’ years later the
present city, a few miles away, was
founded In what was believed to be a
safer place. To shut out the. pirates
and the enemies of SpTtin a sea wall
was built around the new town in
1674. and It was successful.
The King’s Jest.
This wall, which is still standing,
cost so much money that the King of
Spain said that in* did not uttder-
stand why he could not see it by sim
ply looking to the west out of the
windows of his palace. Actually the
wall is about 30 feet high and of the
same width. It is built of stone and
earth.
The milestones in Panama, after
the independence from Spain in 1821,
are the completion of the Panama
Railroad (1855) and the start of the
construction of the Panama Canal, in
1881. The first 70 years after the new
town was built were quiet ones,
marked by good government, but still
years in which Panama was prostrate,
because of the abandonment of the
trade route. Then came 90 years of
internal strife, and finally, on Novem
her 28. 1821. fame the declaration of
independence from Spain.
Par o mu u u* 'Hu ' ■ j t r n 9 Mia S3 mi t to
that the government at Bogota, the
capital of Colombia, would not ratify
the treaty allowing the United States
to construct, the waterway. Then fol
lowed the bloodless revolution of No
vember, 1903, when, with the assist
ance of the United States, Panama
became independent of Colombia.
Treaty End9 Trouble.
On February 26. 1904, Panama
signed a treaty with the United
States which practically ended its
troubles fur all time, for then it be
came a protectorate of the United
States, which since then has assisted
largely in choosing its Presidents,
cleaned up its cities, and contracted
to pay it enough money to. make it
the most independent country, finan
cially. in the world.
To Have Smooth, White,
Soft Skin All Winter
Stock Broker Shares Residence
With Former Spouse and
Accused Man.
SAN FRANCISCO, Dev. Her-
bert L. Nelson, frenzied financier and
promoter, is held by the San Fran
cisco police for the police of Detroit.
He is alleged to have stolen one
wife from H. S. Warren, stock bro
ker, and to have swindled a Detroit
woman cut of $2,000.
Warren, stock broker, and his wife.
May. accomplished, and the mother of
a beautiful 13-year-old daughter.
Evelyn, met Nelson in 1908.
“You understand.” says Mr. War
ren, “sometimes a . woman can not
control her emotions. That was the
case with Mrs. Warren.”
Nelson was married to a daugh
ter of W. J. Brown, prominent com
mission merchant of this city.
“In January. 1911, I received a let
ter from my wife, asking me to
divorce her. that she might marry
Nelson,” said Mr. Warren. “I filed
suit, charging desertion, and the de
cree was granted. In April. 1911,
Mrs. Warren and Nelson were mar
ried, somewhere in Oregon. I have
always considered our separation,
not as a divorce, but as a dissolution
of partnership.”
So in September. 1913. when Nel
son. said to have been a fugitive from
a swindling charge, arrived in De
troit. penniless, with the former Mrs.
Warren and Miss Warren, Warren
met them at the depot and took them
all to his own home, at No. 104 Hol
brook avenue. There the former hus
band. his daughter, his divorced wife
and her present husband Jived until
June, 1913. when, according to Mr.
Warren, they left all of a sudden.
“My daughter was of an age when)
she should have a mother’s ca,re, and
I felt that she should be with her
mother; but 1 wanted her, too. and
did all in my power to help Nelson
to stay and make his home here, that
my daughter might have us both,” he
said.
Cuts Off Finger to
Fool Law; Plan Fails
Birmingham Sheriff Stands
Chance of Being Put on Salary
Instead of Fees.
BIRMINGHAM, De<\ 6.—By the
time the date of the State primaries
Is made known, there will be several
political canvasses again In full
swing.
B. H. Comer former Governor of
Alabama, has given it out that he will
begin at once on a campaign in North
Alabama, and that he expects to
reach all parts of the State within
a few months. The announcement
is also made that Representative
Richmond Pearson Hobson, candidate
for United Btetsi Senator, will re
turn to Alabama about December 16.
Representative Oscar W. Underwood
probably will return to the Htate and
resume his campaign at about the
same time.
In Jefferson County the people are
likely to be relieved of a fierce po
litical campaign if the Legislature,
called in special session, should adopt
laws eliminating the fee system. The
Sheriff of Jefferson under the fee sys
tem nets more than half the salary of
the President of the United States.
If the fee system is abolished and a
salary fixed for the position, it is not
probable that there will be such a
scamper for - the work. With the tee
system still in effect, indications are
there will be a half dozen candidates,
and the voters will be harassed early I
and late.
Birmingham business men are ask- J
ing for a special session to eliminate
the fee sysetm.
The return to Washington of Con
gressmen Underwood and Hobson has
given the people just a little breath
ing spell. Business men in the north
ern part of the State have been com
plaining that j politics lias been getting
the center of the stage too much.
Capiain Reuben F. Kolb and John
H. Wallace have announced that they
are very much wrought up over the
reports that two men have with
drawn from the Gubernatorial can
vass in Alabama, and all Intimation
that they are about to retire from the
race is bitterly denied. Very little is
to be heard in North Alabama as to
the eondidacy of Charles Henderson,
of Troy. That he Is making the fight
yet is not denied.
People Coming for Miles Around for
Wonderful Constipation Remedy That
It Better, Safer and Surer
Than Calomel.
Tone up your liver, clean your bowel*
of foul waste, drive out poisonous gasea.
end constipation and feel fin* and full
of energy in twenty-four hours.
Throw away calomel, it’s dangeroow
you know it, everybody knows it.
HOT SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS
are different. They are harmless, act
gently but surely on the bowels, and
do not cause a particle of after misery
and are fine for children as well as
grownups.
They are joyfully laxative and more,
they are fine for laziness, dizziness,
biliousness, sick headache, sallow skin
and malaria.
They make everybody feed good be
cause, they net an a general tonic, driv
ing Impurities from the blood and mak
ing the entire intestinal tract clean and
pure in short order.
Little chocolate-coated HOT SPRING®
LIVER BUTTONS are 25 cents at all
druggists, and money back, if dissatis
fied. Free sample from Hot Springs
Chemical Co., Hot Springs. Ark.—Advt.
Neglected Kidneys
cause headoohe, dizziness, lame
back, torpid liver and dropsy. If
you arise unrefreshed in the
morning, are weak, depressed and
have indigestion, ail are symp
toms of kidneys so diseased that
the blood is improperly purified.
You need
Warner’s Safe Kidney
and Liver Remedy
because it goes right to the seat
of the trouble and is the most re
liable and successful kidney and
liver remedy known to-day.
Nothing else can do you so much
good,’for It has a persistent re
storing action on the kidneys and
liver which brings perceptible re
lief almost immediately.
Mrs. E..Arnold, Kersey, Colo.,
writes: “I suffered from kidney
trouble and found no relief until I
commenced using Warner’s Safe
Kidney and Liver Remedy. Two
months after I began using it I
was a well woman.”
Each
far a
purpose
Sold
by all
Druggist*
1— Kidney and Liver Remedy
2— Rheumatlo Remedy
•T—Diabetes Remedy
4— Asthma Remedy
5— Nervine
, Constipation .
•—Pills (
Biliousness
Write for a free sample, giving
the number of remedy desired, to
Warner’s Safe Remedies Co.,
Dept. 435, Rochester, N. Y.
NEW' YORK, Dec. 6.—An attempt
to beat the finger-print system proved
unsuccessful to-day when Joseph j
Sniple was identified at headquar
ters^, though he had had a sixth finger
on his hand amputated to fool the
experts.
As the prints of the remaining fin
gers of the prisoner were the same as j
those in the record of Hniple, the'
police examined his hand closely and
found a tiny scar where the sixth
finger had been. He then admitted
that a specialist had operated on him.
Sniple was caught with three other
men in a basement on East Fourth
street. In which the police say they
{found $2,000 worth of stolen hair
goods.
^-Dcwnlij ^ICouotjtuin
ENGRAVED TO ORDER IN A
DISTINCTIVE MANNER
IS A MOST APPROPRIATE CHRISTMAS
GIFT FOR A LADY
OUR NAME ON THE BOX IS A GUARANTEE OF QUALITY
ORDER NOW
J. P. Stevens Engraving Co.
47 WHITEHALL ST . ATLANTA
FREE! “FREE!
(From The Woman Beautiful.)
Does your skin chap or roughen easily
in this weather, or become unduly red
or blotchy? Let me tell you a quick,
easy way to overcome the trouble and
keep your complexion beautifully white,
smooth and soft the winter long. Just
get an ounce of ordinary mercolized wax
at the nearest drug store and use a lit
tle before retiring, as you would cold
cream. Upon arising, remove the coat
ing with sudsy water. The wax, through
some peculiar attribute, flecks off the
rough, discolored or blemished skin.
The worn-out cuticle comes off just like
dandruff on a diseased scalp, only in
almost invisible particles. Mercolized
wax simply hastens Nature’s work.
Used as required, It keeps the face con
stantly free from devita'lzed scurf skin
and only the healthy, young-looking skin
Is in evidence. It’s the best treatment
known for weatherbeaten, aged, muddy,
freckled, pimpled and all unbeautiful
complexions.
Some skins wrinkle easily in winter.
There’s an excellent remedy In a harm
less wash lotion made by dissolving 1
oz powdered saxollte in *4 pint witch
hazel. 'Hiis will quickly eradicate every
line.—Advt.
Slopped Nigh! Sweats
and Banished Cough
Tf you arp suffering with a continued cough,
s cold or Lung Trouble which does not yield to
Huy treatment. It might be of the greatest value
• to you to Investigate what Eckman’s Alterative,
1 g medicine for the Throat and I.ungs. ha* ac
complished for many similar sufferings. Many
who hare investigated and used It have voiun-
) tartly declared that It was the means of earing
) their live*. Read this case:— .
> "Gentlemen:—Fur four years I was troubled
with a cough, which gradually became worse.
) I had night sweats and pains in my cheat. I
was losing ray appetite and had become so thin
) and weak 1 could not attend to my household
duties. A physician pronounced my disease
Lung Trouble. Not being satisfied. I was exam
ined by the physicians of the Polyclinic Hospital.
They also confirmed my trouble, and I waa or
dered away for treatment. My nephew would
> not allow me to go until I had tried Eckxnan’a
' Alterative. Before 1 had taken the medicine
S three weeks I had marked relief, night sweats
ceased, pain In the breast relieved, cough be-
) ramo loose and easy, fever left me. and I enm-
’ menced getting well My health became nor-
! mal. I sm in excellent health now, and have
been for twelve years "
(Signed) (MRS.) MART WASSON
Care YA. Green, 1722 8. 17tli St., Phila.
(Above abbreviated; more on request.)
Kckman’s Alterative has been pmv-ai by many
years' - test to be most efficacious for severe
Throat and Lung Affections Bronchitis. Broil-
, ch1al Asthma. Stubborn Colds and In upbuild
, trvg th'’ system Contains no narcotic*, poisons
or ha).1t forming drugs. Sold hy all Jacob*'
fre-ug Store* *nd «ther leading druggist* Write
> the Eckman Labora’ory. Philadelphia. Pa . for
booklet tell^f of recoveries and additional evl
11 GRAND CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
1 Beautiful Silver Tea Set
1 Chest of Silver, 18 Pieces
1 Diamond Locket
Making up the Santa Claus Smile,
2 Parisian Ivory Clocks
2 Watch Fobs
4 Silver Picture Frames
Can you find them ?
iMrwtiou. Contain** tn
this picture are the head*
of Tvelva Children, which
are use* to make up the
Santa Claue SMLLJE. Out
line them an* tuu in leee
than 2$ words why Old
Santa should make every
one smile. For the beat
analysis of this picture (to
be determined by three
Judices, compose* of Jack
sonvllle business men) will
be given the Tea Set; the
second beet, the chest of
silver; the third beat, the
Diamond Locket; the next
two beet, the Parisian
Ivory Clocks, the meat two,
the Watch Fobs; th>
next feur, the Picture
Frame*. an* to the next
thirty will be given a Ptir
chasing Order, good in the
purehaae of a lot la Grand
Boulevard. Each person
sending in aa answer will
be given a souvenir lead
pencil, tf sailed for.
SEND IN YOUR SO
LUTION ^ODAY,
contort close* Decent
ber 18, lg!3.
“ Important"—Write Name and Ad-
GRAND BOULEVARD
dress Plainly
INVESTMENT CP
Name
202-204-206 Bisbe* S’dg.
Address
JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA