Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 07, 1913, Image 5

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5 A HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, O.V., SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1013. She Waits 13 Years To Put $500 in Bank Woman Loses $369 Interest Through Her Long Delay in Deposit ing Money. I Will Obtain a Divorce and Let Them Be Happy,” Says Mrs. Martin Becker. HAS WEPT ALL HER TEARS rMan Fled With His Stepdaughter in September—Their Where abouts Unknown. !fl5W YORK, Deo. 8.—Her mother- love rising superior to all else, Mrs. Martin Becker, of Winfield, L. I., yesterday declared her only one wish N, that her husband, who eloped in September with his stepdaughter, Lillian Herbst, will marry the girl. "1 have shed my last tear," she [said "I can cry no more, and fur ther d. -trace so far as I am con- erned, Is Impossible. My daughter's future unless my husband marries filer can be nothing but the blackest If he will promise to come hack wit,, i.er and marry her, 1 will get a di vorce. It will he hard to go Into Court anil say that my home, my life, C-as wrecked by my own daughter, |t,ut it will be only telling on the [witness stand what the whole world [knows. It will not be nearly so hard as the blow their elopement was. Then, too, I want my child. It |was cruel for them to go away, but •more cruel to take my baby Evelyn. |i fnrglve them.' I only wish I could [forget as easily as I have forgiven.” Mrs. Becker was the widow of 1} leery llerbst when she married (Becker six years ago. She had two children. Lillian, 16 and very pretty, lend John. 11 Last summer she was i a hospital for four weeks. Lillian ppt house for—t^e stepfather, her brother and little sister. GIRL MAKES $222 AS FARMER. l OCA HONTAS. ARK., Dec. 6.—Thor ough demonstration "f what can be pro- < . . on a small piece of ground in ; a. . ph County has been proven by on- of the small girls of the Girls' Can ing Club of Hu- county. Lena Baltz, one of the prize winners in the county V-niest an,] who made a good showing at the Hot Springs State Fair, has made it net profit of $222.15 from one-tenth of an acre of ground. WATERTOWN, S. DAK., Dec. 6.— A woman living In the country near here brought In a package contain ing $500 that H. D. Walrath had wrapped up and paid to her Decem ber 28, 1900, thirteen years ago. The package had lain at the house unopened during that time and the woman brought it to the First Na- | tional Bank and took out a time cer- I tifleate of deposit on it. The $500 would have earned $369 interest during that time. ‘Velvet Slipper GirP Now Bride +•+ •!•§•!* •!•••!• No Book,Ring or Priest at Wedding Mrs. Gertrude Hassler Carpenter, the “Velvet Slipper Girl’’ who married a wealthy Chicagoan without other ceremony than signing a contract. Man Dies Poor as Riches Draw Near SALEM, OREG., Dec. 6.—Half owner of a gold mine worth probably $1,000,000, and so poor that he barely knew' how he was going to exist ono week hence, James McGuire, 65 years old, dropped dead here as he was starting to a hospital. He was an i ex-convlct. McGuire killed his partner In a mining claim. He was sentenced to serve ten years. While McGuire was in prison and after his release his mining claim was operated by persons who had purchased an interest in it. It now is worth $1,000,000. 40 Years in Office, Mayor Not Citizen SALEM. OREG., Dec. 1.—Although he has h*ld public office in this coun try for more than forty years, has served on Juries and otherwise acted in public capacities, J. R. Landon was unseated as Mayor of Wood- burn by Judge Kelly in the Circuit Court on the ground that he is not an American.citizen. Landon came to America as a child, and did not know naturaliza tion was necessary for him. PuslicartPeddledGets PushcartPeddlerGets President May Break Rule to Join Members of Society at Banquet. MINNEAPOLIS, Deo. 6.—After scour- ir.g the country for eight years to give Walter Lilly, of Philadelphia, a for tune of $340,000, William Rohrer, an at torney, discovered the object of his search here. The money was left by Lilly’s father, said by Rohrer to have been a wealthy I . . r p who a is f 5 a oV u e r arVoid, h w" d H e, f p o h uni. hv 1 : | Documents of Legal Aspect Used When Plaintiff ing in a ramshackle cabin. He has lived here eleven years, and supported himself by selling coal from a pushcart. in ileart-Palni Suit Takes Husband. Don’t Let Your Dealer Tell You There’s Any Other MEDICINAL WHISKEY “Just as Good” or “Better Than Duffy’: Pure DUFFY’S He knows there is not, and so do you. Unscrupulous manufac turers and dealers some times seek greater profit from base imitations and substitutes of Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey because it is the standard of purity. But remember Duily’s Pure Mall Whiskey has been used by the medical profession, hospitals. sanitariums and in the home for more than naif a century with wonderful results. It Is an absolutely pure distillation of selected, clean grain, thoroughly malted, so palatable and free from Injurious substances that the most sensi tive stomach has no difficulty In Its retention. v In the treatment of pneumonia, grip, coughs, colds, malaria, low fevers. stomach troubles, and. ■ i ■ nr .*11 wasted and diseased conditions, it is used with remarkable results. The genuine Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey Is sold In SEALED BOTTLES ONLY, by druggists, gro cers and dealers. Should our friends for any rea son 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) al the following prices: % 4 Larne Bottles. $4.30 fi Large Bottles, S5.90 12 Large Bottles, $11.00 Duffy's Fure Malt Whiskey should be in every home and we make the above announcement so that you may become familiar with a source of supply. Remit by express order, poetoffice order, or certi fied check to , The Duffy Malt Whiskey Company, 131 White St., Rochester, N. Y. CHICAGO, Dec. 6.—Signed con tracts Instead of religious vows united Frederick A. Carpenter, a wealthy Chicago business man, and Miss Ger trude Wakefield Hassler, the "velvet slipper girl," as man and wife in the first ceremony of Its kind on record. Miss Hassler, who was a popular , concert and church singer, recently I came Into public notice through her | $500,009 "love balm” suit against Carl Santa Claus Is Now A Music Teacher A Different Sort of a Christmas Present for It Enables Any 1 One to Play the Piano in 1 Hour at Home. Without Lessons or Knowledge of Music Any One Can Play the Plano or Organ In One Hour. Wonderful New System That Even a Child Can Use. G. Fisher, multi-millionaire automo bile dealer and race promoter of In dianapolis. The suit was settled for $25,000. The jnarriage contracts were signed at Kenosha, Wis. The one signed by the “contract bride” reads as follows: “I, Gertrude Wakefield Hassler, do by the signing of this contract, give myself to Frederick A. Car penter to be his lawful wife, to have, to hold and to love. I prom ise to be faithful so long as he proves true and I will strive to fill with a vast measure of con tentment each day of our lives thus joined.” This was the agreement signed by Carpenter: “I, Frederick A. Carpenter, by this contract, take as my lawful wife Gertrude W. Hassler, and I solemnly promise and agree to be faithful In words and thoughts and deeds, to protect and love and devote my life to her to bring her the happiness and contentment she so well deserves.” After the reading and signing of the contracts Miss HassleUx mothef put both her daughter’s hands in Carpenter’s and said: “May all the good and truth of the universe com bine to keep your hearts bright.” Miss Hassler’s suit against Fisher attracted widespread attention. She herself furnished t^ie climax, whert she took the stand and told her story of the millionaire clubman. She said that Fisher at one time had begged her to allow him to take one of her velvet slippers with him to Europe. A BROWNIE Nothing will give the young folks more good, clean fun than a Brownie Camera Any child that has passed the kindergarten stage „tan readily take pictures with a BROW NIE. Every step has been made simple—easy. LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASY BROWNIE ( 1$ L0 ° to CAMERAS i FACTORIES i $12.00 GLENN PHOTO STOCK CO. Eastman Kodak Company 117 PEACHTREE “Nothing Could Have Pleased Me So Much. Why. I Can Play Already.” Impossible, you say? Let us prove il at our expense. We will teach you to play the piano, or organ and will not ask one cent until you can play. A musical genius from Chicago has invented a. wonderful system whereby anyone can learn to play the Piano or Organ in one hour. With this new method you don’t have to know one note from another, yet in an hour or practice you can be playing your favor ite music with all the fingers of both hands and play it well. The invention is so simple that even a child can now master music without costly instruction. # Anyone can have this new method on a free trial merely by asking. Simply write, saying. “Send me the Easy Form Music Method as an nounced in Hearst’s Atlanta Sunday American. FREE TRIAL The complete system together with 100 pieces of music will then be sent to you Free, all charges prepaid and absolutely not one cent to pay. You keep It seven days to thoroughly prove it is all that Is claimed for It. then if you are satis fied. send us $1.50 and one dollar a month until $6.50 In all is paid. If you are not delighted with it. send it back -in seven days and you will have risked nothing and will be under no obligation to us. What a splendid Christmas present this course would make for some friend or reJatlve who Is fond of music but un- j able to play. As a special Xmas offer we will send, all charges prepaid, entire ! system as above on receipt of only $5. if it Is not found satisfactory you can return It in 7 days and your money will he promptly refunded. This offer will be withdrawn Xmas Day—and should be taken advantage of at once. Be sure to state number of white keys I on your piano or organ, also postoffice ! and express office. Address Easy Method Music Company, 484 Clarkson Bldg., Chicago, ILL Boy Sobs for Week; His Mother Freed KENOSHA, WIS., Dec. 6.—Here ia a real “sob” story—the story of how a three-year-old boy sobbed his mother out of jail and reunited a family. Little Joe Kovich was the hero, and he established a record for sobbing when he kept it up for a sblid week. Five months ago Joe’s mother sloped from Argo with a man and took the lit tle boy. The father finally found Joe and his mother in Kenosha, and the woman and the man were, arrested and sentenced to serve six months In the county jail. Then Joe began sobbing. Finally the boy was taken into the court to snow Judge C. E. Randall what real grief was. “Mother.” he said. “I will reduce your fine to $50 and costs with this under- standing—that you return to your hus band.” She went back to her husband. The twenty-eighth annual dinner of the Southern Society 6f New York will take place in the Hotel Waldorf Wednesday evening. The principal speakers will be Wil liam Harmon Black, president of the Georgia Society; James C. MoRey- nolds, Attorney General of the United States; John Purroy Mitchel, Mayor- elect of New York; Dudley Field Ma lone, Collector of Customs of New York, and Ardolph L. Kline, Mayor of New York City. The front page of the menu card will be a color leaf, showing the Bat tle of Guilford Courthouse, a picture of Bunker Hill, the siege of York- town, and a full-sized statue of Gen eral Daniel Morgan. Menu Cards Elaborate. The next page will include a hand somely embossed badge of the socie ty, which is a combination of the coat-of-arms of New York and what Js affectionately termed by the Southern people the “Southern Cross.” Each following page of the menu will be beaded with a picture of some important battle of the Revolution. The anniversary festival of the Southerners In New York is char acterized by unbounded cordiality and hospitality, The President and several members of his Cabinet have been invited to attend. Following are the invited guests: President of the United States, t Woodrow Wilson; Governor of New York, Martin Glynn; Mayor City of New f York, Adolph Kline; Mayor-elect of the City of New York. John Pur- roy Mitchel; James C. McReyiiolds, Department of Justice. Washington, ! D. C.; Carruthers Ewing, Memphis, j Tenn; Dudley Field Malone, Collector I of Customs, New' York City; the Rev. ; St. Clair Hester, chaplain; St. George’s I Society. Henry W. J. Bucknall, presi dent; St. Andrew Society, George Austin Morrison. Jr., president; Friendly Sons of St. Patrick. Edward E. McCall, president; Canadian So ciety of New York, the Rev. Charles A. Eaton, president; British Schools and Universities Club. Bishop F. Courtney, president; The Virginians. Robert L Harrison, governor; Con federate Veteran Camp of New' York, General Henry T. Douglas, command er; Ohio Society, William H. Trues- dale, president; Pennsylvania Society, Henry P. Davison, president; Mary land Society, Albert Ritchie, presi dent; North Carolina Society, George Gordon Battle, president; The South Carolinans, Augustus VanWyok, pres ident; Georgia Society, William Har mon Black, president; Alabama So-, ciety, Dr. John A. Wyeth, president; Kentucky Society, Richard Reid Rog ers, president; Tennessee Society, Jno. G. Lonsdale, president; Misouri So ciety, Roland R. Conklin, president; West Virginia Society, William deH. Washington, president: Delaware So ciety, Henry- R. Robertson, president; John Marshall, Nokesville. Va. McCorkle Is President. The president of the Southern So ciety is Walter L. McCorkle, a gradu ate of the University of Virginia, and a olose friend of President Woodrow Wilson, whom he attended when the latter visited his birthplace, Staun ton, Va., just after his election to the Presidency. The Southern Society is now the largest of the many societies estab lished here by former residents of other sections. Its members are most conspicuous among the appointments of President Wilson, himself a mem ber of the society. He attended the last annual dinner held just before his inauguration, af ter w'hich he ceased attending public or semi-public dinners. However, the Southerners yet hope that President Wilson will make an exception in the case of his own so ciety and attend the dinner of next Wednesday. Postal Cleanliness Fiat Is Promulgated Intanitary Roller Towels to Go, and j Each Employee to Have Own Cloth, WASHINGTON. Dec. 6 —Post- I master General Burleson is in the market for 10.000 huck towels, and later on he expects to Invest in about 200.000 more, as the fiat has gone forth that the insanitary roller towel must disappear from all establish ments under control of the Postoffice Department, and each employee of the service must he provided with an in dividual drying cloth. Later the Postmaster General may provide each employee of the service W'ith Individual cakes of soap and drinking cups, as a further sanitary measure, though he has not yet deci ded on this step. It will take 200,000 towels to sup ply all employees of the postal ser vice. 127 True Bills Found* Deputies Kept Busy BACK-TO-IM PLAN EXCITES BIRMINGHAM. Dec. 6 *-Deputy Sheriffs of Jefferson County are be ing kept busy serving the writs is sued by the recent grand Jury, there being 127 true bills In the last partial reports. This work is being added to bv a large number of warrants being sworn out by Uonrad W. Austin, for mer Chief of Police of Birmingham, against men whom he alleges hang around gambling places, the changes being vagrancy. It la estimated that the grand jury which started its work in September returned nearly 600 true bills. Bees Acquire Opium Habit From Poppies 75 of McAdory Clau Present at Wedding BIRMINGHAM. Dec (U No *less than 75 members of the McAdory Clan of Jefferson County, brothers, half-brothers, aunts, uncles, sis ters, cousins and other kin, at tended the marriage of Helen Mc Adory. daughter of Sheriff Walter B McAdory. ajid Carlton Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Zack Smith. The wedding, which was one of the most interesting of the fall season, occurred at the First Methodist Church and was followed by a re ception at the McAdory home. Town Factions Row Over Sunday Law MARENGO. ILL.. Dee 6—John S. Rowland, a barber In Marengo, believes it Is his duty as a good citizen to shave his friends on Sunday, despite an ordi nary f making it an offense to k^ep a barber shop open on that eay. In con- sequence he i.s the center of a fight in th^ courts which divided the town and caused no end 9f discussion. Rowland has been arrested five times since Labor Day. Barrou Case Opeus Augusta Liquor War AUGUSTA, Dec. 6.—C. A. Picquet, ! attorney for Sol Barron, proprietor , of the Metropole near-beer saloon, ! must show cause Monday before | Judge Henry C. Hammond, of the Su perior Court, why his place should not be closed a«s a public nuisance. Barron has been ordered to produce in court his Federal license to retail whisky. This is expected be an im portant factor in the case, as tending to show' Barron’s intent to sell malt and spirituous liquors. The opening skirmish in the Au gusta campaign will be watched with intense interest. There unquestiona bly is a hard fight ahead of the Law Enforcement League, for it has been remarked “it will be as hard to get whisky out of Augusta as it was to rid Sodom of sin.” Augusta never has been totally dry. COLUMBUS, Deft. 6.—Just add this one to ail the queer things (bat have happened In the year of grace 1913. and believe it’s true because VV. E. Baker, Deputy Auditor of the State of Ohio, says he can prove it. The honey bees near Fostoria. which is Baker’s home town, have contracted the opium habit. Like the Chinese, they get theirs from the poppy. Baker and many other residents of Fostoria grow Oriental poppies. The bees have found this out and of late they are leaving acres of clover blossoms to hunt out the poppy beds. They work vigorously for an hour or so und then fall to the ground appar ently a« stupefied as are Chinese opium smokers after “hitting the pipe.” ’Judy/ an Elephant, Easily Lifts Truck NEW YORK, Dec. 6 Judy, an ele phant, which had been taking part In the recent Carnival of Joy at the Grand Central Palace, was going north on Third avenue recently when she scared a team of horses so that they threw a truck they were drawing into the gut ter. A rear wheel was wedged in the sewer. The horses couldnTt dislodge the wheel. Neither could more horses and a dozen men. Judy's keeper grinned and said something to her in her native language. * She rubbed her nose up against the back part of the truck, and truck, men and horse rose into the air. The wheel was released. Pastor Says Cooking's Our Biggest Business CINCINNATI, Dec. fi.—In a sermon to-day In the Unlversallst Church, of Walnut Hills. Rev. A B. Beresford, with “Sense and Sentiment in Life,” his topic, said: “Cooking is the biggest single busi ness in .America The American house wives spend $14,000,000,000 annually for food. Ten per cent of fills is wasted before it reaches the dining room table. Women spend 90 per cent of the money man earns.” Many Offer to Wed Aged Man; HeRefuses DECATUR, ILL., Dec. fi. -John Mil- ton Bowman, the 82-year-old heir to the John Bowman estate of $250,000 at Stonlngton. is being besieged with love letters from all parts of the country. The aged heir has placed the love let- ter in the hands of his trustees with instructions to inform the fair writers that he proposes to remain single for the rest of his days. Redfield Going After South America Trade WASHINGTON. Dec « -fam- paigning in the interests of the Amer ican exporter, to South America wilt be Included in the program of Sec retary of Commerce Redfield next year. It became known to-day. Secretary Redfield has included an Item of $100,000 In his budget to Con gress, which will be used In sending advance agents to South and Central America, to prepare the way for greater sales of American goods with the opening of the canal. Denied Forever Right To Run Automobile FRE8NO. Dec. -That he bo denied forever the privilege of running an au tomobile was one of the provisions rec ommended bv County Officer Sessions In reporting for parole in the case of R L Herring .of Reed ley, conv icted ^of failing io stop and give aid and his name after running down a young man last summer The victim of the automobile acci dent wad killed. How lo Assist the Professional Service That is Rendered You >a u Ires considerable fore thought on the part of your physician as to wnat drugs will ease your pain and bring about your rapid recovery. Kn much depends upon the pre scription, that you do your phy sician an injustice, unless it is tilled exactly as he ordered if. We work so closely with your physician, that you can unhesi tatingly trust us to carry out the results of his diagnosis. Prescription compounding Is our specialty, and in it we excel. Don’t take any chances—let us fill your prescriptions. Our stock of drugs U the most complete in the city. We are always prepared to fill any prescription, no mat ter how rare or how the drug cal’ed for may be. EDMONDSON DRlft CO. Prescription Specialist. 11 N. Broad St., 106 N. Pryor St. Ashantee Chief Sam of the Guinea Coast Says He’s Coming With Colonization Plan. GUTHRIE, OKL.A, Dec. 6. Ne- groea of Oklahoma, Kansas and Mis souri are excited over the prospect of a visit from Chief Alfred C. Ham, of the Akim tribe, Ashantee, on the Guinea coast of Africa, who sends word that he carries an invitation from all the tribal chiefs of Ashantee fof the negroes of America to be come colonists in that country. The chief is expected in Boley, Okla., a strictly negro town, in a few days. According to a Boley newspaper, 64 a^res of land have been set aside by each of the ten tribes of Ashantee on w'hich American negroes are asked to build modern towns. Free Land Offered. The land Is promised without price and with no taxes to pay—a» much as a man can cultivate—with free transportation to Africa thrown in to each American negro who pays $25 for a share in the Akim Trading Uompany, Ltd. W. H. Lewis appears to be Chief Sam’s chief sponsor in this State. Signing himself “Professor W. IT. Lewis,” be has a long article In his newspaper about the plans of “our own dear Chief Bam.” He says that Dr. P. J. Dorman and Professor J. P. Liddell, listed as contributors to The African Pioneer, asked the Akim Trading Uompany about the chances for American negroes in Africa, and Thief Sam and his fellow chiefs de cided to permit colonization to share holders In the trading company, which. Recording to Editor Lewis, is organized under the laws of South Dakota. Tells of Chartered Boat. Mr. Lewis says that in order to car ry the products of Ashantee to this country and to take American colo nists back to the Guinea coast Thief Sam “has secured a ship 318 4 '**et long by 40 feet wide, 2.400 tons ca pacity, which will make regular trips between the Gold Coast and America, beginning** December 18, 1913.“ Among the riches of Ashantee to which Lewis calls attention are “ma hogany trees ten feet in diameter and over 150 feet high.” needing only a sawmill; two crops of cotton a year; cocoa beans selling at $13 a hundred pounds, and “gold in paying quantities.” Schoolboys to Shoot For U. S. Army.Prizes WASHINGTON, Deo. fi. At the instance of the National Rifle Asso ciation, the War Department has de cided to offer prizes for marksman ship in competitions of pupils In the public schools of such cities as will recognize rifle shooting as a legiti mate branch of sport, like football or baseball. Already attractive nrlaes have been offered to the pupils in the public schools of Boston, In which cadet corps long have been maintained, and the offer has been accepted by the authorities. In connection with the offer, the de partment promises to supervise the competitions and to throw around them every possible protection for both spectators and those who take part. Pastor Wants Gun; Fears Bootleggers GRAND JUNCTION, COLO., Dec. 6. Rev. Edward C. Cameron, pastor of the Baptist Church at Palisade, appealed to the sheriff for permis sion to carry a gun. He declared he and other ministers of Palisade had been warned that they would be run out of town if they did not stop their war on bootleggers. New Scheme Devised i To Lower Egg Prices | Sterilization Plant Being Erected In Pittsburg to Try Out New Process. PITTSBURG, Dec. 6.—A plant to aterlllze 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 egsr. 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 w’hich is sterilized air, and these case* aTe her metically sealed. The eggs can then be kept for at least ten months—the longest period yet tried. “OW!” Corns? Use “GETS-IT” “GETS-IT,“ the New Plan Corn Cur%. Makes Any Corn Shrivel, Vanish. You’ll say. "It does beat all how ? ulck 'GETS-IT' got rid of that corn, t's almost magic!” “GETS-IT” gets every corn, every time, as sure as the •un risea It takes about two seconds “Madam, If You’d Use ‘GETS-IT' fo» Corns, You Could Wear Any Tight Shoe Eaeilyl” to apply it. Com pains stop, you foe get the corn, the com shrive!.** up, uwj it’s gone! Ever try anything Ilk# that? You never did. There’s na more fussing with plasters that pres* on the corn, no more salves that take off the surrounding flesh, no more bandages. No more knives, files or razors that make corns grow, and cauae danger of blood poison “GETS- IT” Is equally harmless t o healthy or irritated nesh. It “gets” eevry corn, wert. callous and bunion you’ve got “GETS-IT” Is sold at all druggists at 25 cents a bottle, or sent on receipt of price bv & Lawrence Company, Chicago. Our coals will please you. Call us. CARROLL & HUNTER. Buster Brown Camera $2.00 A perfect machine-satisfaction guaran teed. Mize picture 2‘ ix4' a . Leather cov ered: all metal parts highly polished. Loads in daylight, 6 or 12 pictures on a film. Mail ed on receipt of price. Send for catalog G. E. H. CONE, Inc., 2 Stores, Atlanta. Pain! Without Oil Kemarkable Discovery That Cuts Down the Cost of Paint Sev enty-Five Per Cent. A Free Trial Package is Mailed to Ev eryone Who Writes. A. L. Rice, a prominent manufacturer of Adams, N. Y., has discovered a pro cess of making a new kind of paint without the use of oil. He calls It Powdrpalnt. It comes In the form of a dry powder and all that is required is cold water to make a paint, weather proof, fireproof and as durable as oil paint. It adheres to any surface, wood, stone or brick, spreads and looks like oil paint and costs about one-fourth as much. Write to Mr. A. L. Rice. Manuf’r.. 1050 North St.. Adams. N. Y., and he will send you a free trial package also color card and full information showing you tiow you can sAve a good many dollars. Write to-day. n:ti-M*nqa atLL IVY4372 MILLER S MINUTE MESSENGERS Dr.Bulls Everybody After Hot Springs Liver Buttons People Coming for Miles Around for Wonderful Constipation Remedy That Is Better, Safer and Surer Than Calomel. Tone up your liver, clean your bowels of foul waste, drive out poisonous gases, end constipation and feel fine and full of energy in twenty-four hours. Throw away calomel, it’s dangerous, you know it, everybody knows it HOI’ SPRINGS IJVKK 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 act as 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 SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS are 25 <fents at a'l druggists, and money back, if dissatis fied. Free sample from Hot Springs Chemical Oo., Rot Springs, Ark,—AdvL COUGH SYRUP For a hoarse, deep rough and raw, sore chest—cold attacking bronchial tubes or lungs, there Is nothing better nor as soothing. Price, 25 eta. Mo Morphine or CKlo* roform. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE "Have used Dr. Bull’s Cough Byrup for years when I have had bad coughs. It is fine.” Mrs M E. Boyer, Middletown. Del. „ Write A. C. MEYER <& SAMPLE FREE “«■ OLD-TIME DISTILLERY One Relic of the Past Is Still Busy Producing Corn Liquor inAabama Alabama has one thing no other State has -that is the only corn whisky dis tillery of the old type so prevalent a few decades ago. In this case the seeming lack of progress Is real prog ress, for by the old method the distiller got only two and a half gallons of liq uor from a bushel of corn, and It was considered to be a generally healthful and palatable beverage. By the newer modem method the dis tilleries add what Is known as a cooker to their equipment, and boil out the last drop of juice from the corn, getting as much as five gallons to the bushel. But the quality is said not to be so good This old-time distillery is busy every day turning out corn liquor for people who prefer the old-time article. “Yes.” said Mr Moore, proprietor of this old plant at Girard. Ala., “we are satisfied to do It the old-fashioned way. because we turn out so much better ar ticle No. we charge no more than the others. “Oh, yes. we will mail orders and pav the express, too. Of course, unless a man really appreciates an old-time su perior corn linuor. we don’t care for his trade, for we sell about a'l we can make. “However, anybody that wants to try some of our Good Stuff Corn Liquor can send $3.00 for four honest quarts. Ad dress Moore’s Distillery. Box 23, Chrard* Ala.’ ’—Advt, i 3