Newspaper Page Text
2 D
Pledges His“ Whole Efforts Toward Assisting
War-Stricken Country to Shake Off Galling
Yoke Gireat, Powers Would Fasten Upon It.
-(-I:r:!—‘.‘nu:d“F;“;m‘ ;;;e 1.
all consulted in tha matter; serond,
the Prince and the C. I C. brought
no constitution with ghum; third, the
Eix great Powers were invading 1 no
tion withowut any right except that of
armed force. Yot they furnished no
eoldiers, The allied Balkan :itytes
had driven out the Turks, but had
not conquered the Albanians.
The Prince took a royaltitle,y “His
M%y. the King.”
n the curtain was rupg up
there was a King without power, fer.
yHary or subjects, a commissbon with
he purse-strings, officers without
soldiers.
A conspiracy was uncovered and
the Prince left Valona for Dunazzo,
another port to the north.
There were bickerings, hatreds, re.
criminations without and withingthe
C, L C, court and ministry.
Essad ls Banished.
Generous Issad plotted a coup
d'etat, was seized and shipped to
Ily.
m"f‘ho people meanwhile: wene not
e,
In the south Epirotesqdeclared its=
tndependence, with Mr. Zographos
Prosident. lnsurgent forces bottled
up the Prince at Durazzo.
But the worst mischtaf i out at
Pandorn's box, whers Italy and Aus
tria, each plaving a deep or shallow
game to outwit cach other. All pow
ers had warships in the harbor to
protect the Prince, while Austria and
Italy each wanted to grab the whole
country and determined that the
other shonld have none of dt,
'nder these condtilons T could not
make head or tail out of the busi
pess. There were reports and counter
reporty. Nobhody knew the truth,
At tuiw stage It occurred to me that
an unprejudiced witness might be of
value. 1 asked my Government to
give me power to go to Epirus, ob
serve conditions, report, and also
eommunicate with the C. L €.
Power was grantad me. [ went to
Argvrocastro, the capital seat of the
provisional governmeni, The pro
vistonal ministry had arranged an
agreement or protoeol with the C. L
C. whereby Epirus was to be deliv
ered over to the Wied rovernment.
Learns the Facts.
Misunderstandings had arisen over
the protocol. [ possessed myselt of
the facts and promised Zographos
that 1 wonld try to adjust the differ
ences, even though I opposed the pro
tocol as a 4 mere trick to get posses
sion of Epirus without force,
T also went Into the Albanian lines
under military escort, investigated
the massacre of Mohammedans by
the soldiery at Kodra, went to
Durazzo confident I could be very
helpful in securing an understanding
which would stop bloodshed at Epi-
Tus.
On arriving, 1 learned from one of
{ts members that the C, L €. wouldn't
receive me. 1 don't know why to this
day. It was evident, of course that
the commission was playing fast and
looge with Zographos, Elese it would
have welcomed me.
Thereupon [ proceeded to size up
.
l
American Women Not.
Good Buyers,She Says
PERKELEY, CA11.,, July 18 l
American women as a class do not |
know how to buy, what to buy, or
why they buy, according to Mary
Schenk Waolman, acting head of the |
department of honsehold economics |
at Simmong College and Instmetor in |
the summer session at the University |
of California.
“Waomen do not consider what
clothes they need,” says Miss Wool- |
man ‘They buy thing because |
somebody elge has something like it
or else they sre prong to wander
vaguely about and to acquire some- |
thing for which they have no real
need Plan carefully yvour clothes at |
home and then get whatever your
pockethook calls for” ‘
J .
Waives $10,000,000
' <
Right to Help Poor
ST. LOUIS J\ §.--The late Rev
Dr. Willilam B. Palmer, editor of the
8., Louis Christian Advocate, shortl)
before his death, walved his property
rights to a 3§l 0,000 estate for the
benefit of many poor families. These
familles had settle on 5.882 acres of
land in West Virginla to which Dr,
Palmer had a dead, he said
Dr, Palmer, who was famed as a
Jecturer, died Sunday in Richmona
Va
. .
1O "
Big Resentful Bruin
. .
Kicks Man Into River
OROVILLE J.'.—_\'fl ‘.;_ Ta be uncere
monious! hoved off a rock and thrown
20 feet helow to the Feather River hy a
bear he had just shot was the experi
ence of Antone Girarl, who spoted a
;;’.;x;-l\n,;ve: .:i‘. Lsr‘ beast, and shot
geveral times
The wounded animal ran betwesn two
big rocks and was caught in & wedge at
the side of the river irarl sclzed the
atill kicking beast by the nd f t
when the bear gave a spasmodic kick
and hurled Girari {nto the river
Sauthern Homes and Bungalows
e
i ‘
7/
¥ fifi i ‘y"“ N
{ S '”'-‘;Lflh_ 9 " ‘ »Q"
: PP sT S
Send for my plan book. Price, 75¢
Dook contains photos, fioar plans and desert
tlons of nearly 16¢ beauttul and practieal bun
lows end two-story yises costing to bulid $1
nd up. Compiete working bluepring plans and er
cations of ses shown In book, 85 te $lB. Hawe
wn plans for mon e : & theru honics
LEILA ROSS WILBURN, ARCHITECT,
Dept. & 305 Pelers Bidg, Allasta, Ga.
the situation, FEverybody told me the
facts confldentially. [ then came to
‘wvnzv that the whole aftair, from the
| %1% great powers down to the Minis
ir»rs. was a mnss of hypoerisy, hum
!l)m; and dishonesty
A Dreadful Reality.
[ conldn’t concelve how the whole
world, including myself, had been de
fluded intd the idea that the Wied
government was anything but a farce.
But there was one dreadful reality.
Bevand my chamber windows on a
{ marsh fusillades of musketry and
booming cannon gresoted my ears.
Men were dying before my eyes. The
men on both sides were all Alban
fans.
I found that Prince Wied, to pro
tect himself against the Moslem In
surgents, had brought down 2,009
C'hristians from the north. He was
,also fighting the Christlans of Eplrus
i with Moslems of Valona. He had set
brother against brother that he might
lh:wa the title as ruler.
| He was hiding in the pealace pro
| tected by marines and didn't dare
;v\'nn to review his troops before bat
i tle,
k Heart Sickensd at Sight.
My hear! sickened at the shedding
of the blood of Albanians that this
silly dog fancier might wear a crown.
I made up my mind to devote myseif
)n. wrecking his usurpation. I went
to Valona and stirred up people to
declare their independence, took
means to reach the contending forces
and show them thelr folly in butch
ering ench other that all might be
enslaved.
1 bogan my work to get the various
gections of Albanians to gnite in Ca
tenal and to create a federation for
mutual defense, .
I have some splendid helpers whose
work I shall disclose when further
advanced.
All Greace Responds,
i In Athens I issued & broadslde at
tacking the whole scheme. All Greece
responded with enthusiasm.
I was welcomed as the founder of
a new diplomacy of freedom.
Even Epirote, President, declared if
Epirus got her freedom it would be
due to the American Minister.
Mlilttary officers offered me thelr
fealty. I am in communication with
insurgents and Christians who fought
for Wied at lurazzo.
“A Good Wolf Hunter."
Of course, I had to resign as Min
ister from the United States for 1
couldn't plot against the six great
powers of Europe and hold my place.
A defensclesa nation is being at
tacked by a lot of ravenous monarch
feal wolves. Thanks to my expe
rience in United Stateg politles, 1 am
| a good wolf hunter. Let all my well
wishers rejoice at thilas,
A high privilegze has fallen to me.
We glory in the support which came
i from the l'nited States when Greece
lnml Poland were struggling for lib
erty,
Is this to be a Greece or a Poland?
We shall see.
. & K
Police Captain Lends |
|
irl B ine
v
Girl Bather $5 Fine
St |
NBW YORK, July 18.-—Misg Ro!:«l!
Ressler Stainer, 19, of No. 50 Colum
hia street, Manhattan, who was ar- |
rested on Thursday by Mounted Po
liceman Herting for walking through'
the Coney Island thoroughfares wear
ing only her bathing suit, was so fa
vored a prisoner in the Coney Isiand
1 e court yvesterday morning that
Captain McAvoy lent her brother $5
to pay the fine that Magistrate Me-
Gulre imposed
Miss Stalper was the first woman
n years to be so punished It de
veloped that she was taking instruc
tion at an ethlcal culture school in
Mianhattan
.
$1,600 in a College
\ »r Game, He Savs
- Poker Game, He Says
i 1
| ABILENE, KANS., July 13.—The
l:.~~-v rtion of Dr. F. E. Mossman, pres
{ lent of Southwestern College, before
|the State Methodist Conference here, !
‘r!‘\,.: $1.600 changed hmnds in ape
tnight in a poker game beiween lead
ters of the Young Men’s Christlan As
!r»-\ lition in one of th State col
legos, has aroused vriends of “the
L‘"ln‘v} colleges
! They now ar sking President
| Mossmaz mik finite his charges
! nd present his information to the
| State Board of Administration |
|
.m_
| |
!
| TRIPOD PAINT CO.
! §7 and 39 North Pryor Street.
Manufacturers.
{ Wholiesale and Retall
! Paints, Stalns,
Varnishes, Etc.
Bell Phone 4710, Atianta 408
|
'Sun a2l'd Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots.
How to Remove Easily.
i
! . ‘
Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-foee,
ta try a remedy for frecz ea “vith the
j guarantee of a rellable dsaler that .t
| will not cost you a penny unless it re
j moves the freckles, while if {t does give
yvou a iear complexion the expense is
{ trifling
i Simply get an ounce of othine-—doubie
{ strengt? from any druggist and a few
!|;-.' ations should WW you how eas
{it is ta rid yourself of the homely
i,’rp.k"< and get & beautiful complex
{ lon Rarely is more than one ounce
| needed for the worst case
| Be sure to ask the druggist for the
double strength othine, as this is the
| prescription sold under guarantee ot
money hack if it falls to remove freckles
| ~ADVERTISEMENT.
HEARSTS SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA, SUNDAY, JULY 19, 1914,
Mlss FERN HALLIAN, ¢
& the eighteen-year-old |
Boston heiress, who elopedg
with Louis Eisman, the
family chanffenr. Both were |
arrested in Portland, Maine,
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T o o g
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] .
f Went 5,000 Miles
i On Half-Hour Joh
| S
{Romgontlng mngineer Repaired
% Plant That Failed in
[ Pernambuco.
| NEW YORK, July 18 —The Lamport
& Holt liner Vauban brought to port
from Bahia, Brazil, an engineer who
had just completed a 10,000 mile jour
rey to do a repair job that required
ll.alt an hour.
The traveler was Willlam R Son
ricker, employed by the Carbondale
Machinery Company, of Pittsburg,
!whlch has Installed several refriger
ating plants In. Brazil and the Ar
gentine Republie.
Several months ago the company
recelved a cable message from -the
Rossbach Brazil Company, of Per
lnlmbucn. stating that its refrigerat
ing plant had gone Wrong and no
!one in Pernambuco could repair It.
| Mr. Sonricker was sent at once to
| this city, where he boarded the Vau
' ban, which landed him at Bahia, some
4,500 miles from here, and 500 miles
south of Pernambuco. He boarded a
northbound coast steamer, which
landed him at his destination.
i He ascertained the trouble with the
' plant and made repairs within halt
Ean hour. A dozen mechanics had
taken the machinery apart three
times before he arrived, but could not
| tepair it.
' Mr. Senricker left Pernambuco In
time to catch the Vauban on her
innr!hhonul trip from Buenos Ayres.
\ He thought the sea voyage of 48 days,
| covering 10,000 miles, was rather ex
| cesslve for a haif-hour repair job,
‘ ———————————
| .
‘Annual Convention
l
‘S ' Called
-Of ‘Sneezers’ Calle
| BETHLEHEM, N, H, July 18—
)'l‘h» forty-first annual convention or
“sneezefest” of the United States Hay
Fever Association will be held in the
White Mountains in. September The
program for the public meating will
include discussion of and personal
lexperiences with hay fever resorts
and remedies.
! Tha membership of the assocfation
ils made up of hay feverites, towns
people and proprietors of hoteis in
places exempt from hay fever; manu.
Itacturers of remedies for hay fever,
tand especially physicians who have
!llhldv a study of the disease.
S - £ In organized baseball since 1906 when he played under name of
G e .‘.‘*‘@3 i ‘‘Sullivan.’”’ Now with Philadelphia Athletics. Student at Columbia
- 3 “'{" University where he excelled in baseball and football. Developed
e< (i by Connie Mack and is now one of the greatest 2nd basemen in the
SRR game. A left-handed batter and right-handed thrower. Pronounced
AR m\\, by John McGraw as fhe greatest ball player. He is the Hub of
.5 «.fiwii\ Connie Mack's $lOO,OOO infield. 27 years old—S £t. 10 in. 160 Ibs.
AR ”\ Rty TR He is a quick thinking, brainy player—that's why he
Lo g Drinks
O
(TN
* _-3*:--‘,&“'.:\%‘“s“»;‘3*' L 35 »
‘«fl v N @o\*,fl;\
fsdiis % o=
&gm = The quickest answer to every B
thirst. Chosen by men of brain i
133
i ! and brawn for its wholesomeness. tm
Hiied I Nt o
‘ it 1 i W ."
T R
WA
,%t\("
e o ° :
Delicious and Refreshin (o]
Demand the genuine by full name— s 3
Nicknames encourage substitution. 5 il L
Whenever AAR A L 0 =
At THE COCA-COLA CO. R |,
Arrow think ATLANTA, GA.
ot Coca-Cola.
}
|
. '
Father of Eighteen-Year-old Girl,
However, Threatens to Prose
cute Her Companion,
] -
! BOSTON, July 18.—The curtain
' has fallen abruptly on the .romance
ot Fern Halllan, the winsomse 18-
vear-old heiress of Hull and Arling
ton, and Louis Elsman, the Ha)llcm'
family chauffeur, who ‘eloped from
“tha movles" in Hull on the night of
July 1 and were captured in Port
land, Maine, on June 4.
JFern and her sweetheart say: the
curtain will rise again and they’ will
yet be married and live happily ever
afterward. James Halllan, Fern's
tather, a millionaire of Hull, declares
that the little drama is ended “for
Reeps,
In the meantime Fern has been
forziven and taken home. Eilsman
has bgen locked up in jail charged
with abduction. Mr, Hallian'declares;
that he will prosecute him.
Determined to Wed.
The locks that bold fast the iron
doors of a jall are not the kind love
is supposed to laugh at. However,
both the young peéople are hopeful.
“I want to marry Louis” sald Fern
to-day. “and I wiil marry ‘him some-|
how, somewhere.”
“Of course, I love her,” said Els
man, smiling from between the bars;
of his eell, “I want to get married to
her right away. Whatever the kid,
says is all right.”
While Miss Hallian was at a mov-#
ing pieture show in Hull with Mrs,
Baxter as chaperon, Eisman sent in
word he wished to see her. Fern,
whispered to Mrs. Baxter that shej
wished to step outside and “speak to’
Louls a moment.” Mrs. Baxter didn't
chject, and Fern did not come back,
She and her sweetheart took the
train for Portland, where they put up
In an asartment house. Upon her
mysterious disappearance her father
offered a reward for her, and a police
hunt was begun that enlisted the in
terest of all New England.
Caught by Mother Love.
It was Fern's longing to quiet’her
mother's fears that led to the arrest
of the elopers,. When the girl step
ped to the telegraph window in Port
iand and sent Mrs. Halllan a message
not to worry, the operator recognized
her from her pleture published In the
newspapers and notified the police.
The police informed Mr. Halllan by
wire of the arrest of the couple and
the millionaire hurrled to Portland
with Chief of Paolice Reynolds, of
Hull.
Upon the arrival of the party in
Boston Eisman was taken to jJail
"'ern was motored in her family car
to her home. As the machine drew
up her mother and grandmaother
came out to meet it.
“IHere she is, mother,” saild Mr.
FHalllan, “our darling Fern.
“You are welcome and forgiven”
sobbed the mother
“Everything Forgiven.”
Then the grandmother kissed the
girl and said: “Everything is for
given, dear"
“We did everything for Fern," said
her mother to-day. “Her father gave
her plenty of money to spend. She
was educated abroad. She had beau
tifu! clothes and jewelry, She de
lighted in anto riding, and Eisman
was an expert chauffeur. It may
lave been his skill that attracted her.
That is all I can think of. He is
almoat illiterate.”
Fisman is 23 vears old. He had
bheen employed as chauffeur in the
Hallian family & vear. He had Sf\flfl!
with him when arrested, It repre
sented his savings, and he had drawn
it from bank He and the girl were
heading for Canada, where they ex
pected to be married.
’ |
Back to Big, Padded
1 I
Shoulders for Men
ATLANTIC CITY, July 18-—The an- |
nual session of the National Association |
of Clothing Designers has prepared !
some surprises in the styles for men's |
clothing for the ensuing year ’
I'he suits this fall will have the !
padded shoulders, with sleeves wide at '
the shoulders and tapering at the wrist. |
The coats will be cut low and fit to |
form, the trousers narrow and the waist- |
ecoats wiil be ecut low with a peculiar |
convex sweep at the top to give a |
chasty look to the wearer, l
. .
Birmingham Court to
Ring With Old Hymns
“Sacred Harp” Bongs to Wake
Echoes at Annual Convention of
State Assoclation.
BIRMINGHAM, July 18-—Jefferson
County’'s big courthouse will ring
with the voices of from 200 to 300
singers when the annual convention
of the State Sacred Harp Singing
Association meets here July 24, 25 and
26, J. Wi Higgins, of Cresaline
Helghts, a suburb of Birmingham,
who is president of the assoclation,
announces that the City Court room
in the courthouse in Birmingham
will be used for the conventlon and
that invitations have been extended
to Sacred Harp singers in Georgia,
Tennessee and Misgissippi.
Almost every county in Alabama
has a Sacred Harp Singing Associa
tion, and there will be delegates from
most of them. An organ will be
leased and an organist has offered to
help.
The courts of Jefferson County are
how in recess, so that but few of the
occupants of the building will be dis
turbed.
Announces Names of
.
>
Four New Battleships
WASHINGTON, July 18.—The names
of the four new super-dreadnoughts now
building or authorized will be the Ari
zona, California, ldaho and Mississippi,
Secretary of the Navy Daniels an
nounces. The last two were so named
in order that the States of Mississippi
and Idaho might not lose their !hfps
because of the recent sale of two bat
tleships to Greece. ’
“It isn’'t every day,” saild Secretary
Daniels, ‘‘that a Secretary of the Navy
has the privilege of naming a quartet
of battleships. With the newly named
battleships every State in the Union
now has a battleship named for {t ex
cept Maryland, Montana, South Dakota,
Washington, West Virginla, Colorado,
g(;?ehe _(',urouna. New Mexico and Ten
e s
Courted by Mail
ELIZABETH CITY, N. C,, July 18.—
A trip of many hundred miles, alone
among strangers, did not deter Miss
Lucy Only, a pretty little country
maijder «f Pasquotank County, from
starting on a trip to Columbus, Ohio,
where she will marry her sweetheart,
whom she has never seen. This mar
riage will be the culmination of a ro
mance which was begun by corre
spondence about a year ago between
Miss Only and a gsntleman in Tip
ton, Ind.
A mutual friend introduced them by
correspondence, and they have writ
ten to each other continuously since
then. An exchange of photographs
convinced them that they were in
tended for each other,
‘B 'for Animal
eaven Iloor Anlmais,
i
Is Kansas' Latest
KANSAS CITY, MO., July 18.—A rest
ing place for dogs, horses and cats when
the economic pressure of the world be
comes too great for them, has been
opened by the Wyandotte County Hu
mane Society in Kansas City, Kan.
Homeless and mistreated animals will
be received and homes will be found for
them. An hour each day will be de
voted by an officer of the society to
teaching childdren kindness to animals.
The kennels for the dogs, ‘‘runs’ for the
cats and stalls for the horses were buiit
by the Boy Scouts of the city.
Wed Again After
! 1
10 Years' Separation
SPRINGFIELD, MO., July 18 —H. B.
Woed, 83 years old, got a license to
marry Mrs. M. A. Wood, 69 years old.
They were wedded immediately and left
for their home near Strafford.
They were divorced ten years ago
They recently agreed to forget their dif
ferences, Wood sa‘d, and decided t¢
spend their remaining years together.
S .OO | For Best Clothes
A Your Credit Ia
WEEK | Good Here
USE IT!
-
N EVER look shabby. We sell the
best Clothes made on the eas
{est terms in town. Come. Wae are
head to foot outfitters on weekly
payments,
People’s Credit Clothing Co.
59 W. Mitchell St.
u |
' '
Pinkertons Spend Two Years Dis
proving False Romance Before
She Is Given Money.
ST. LOUILS, July 18.—It has taken
the Pinkerton Detective Agency near
ly two years to run down the imag-
Inary romance of a black sheep, there
by securing a $40,000 legacy for Mrs.
Emilee Dieckriede, who was an Oak
land, Cal., stenographer until a month
ago, but who is heiress to one-eighth
of the estate of a pioneer Missouri
manufacturer.
Charles B. Dieckriede, Jr., who shot
and killed himself in San Francisco,
invented a history of his career that
pasced muster with his relatives in St,
Louis, and which cost thousands of
dollars to disprove. These are some
of the incidents which did not hap
pen, but upon which Dieckriede man
aged to extract funds from his moth
er and father:
His Inventions.
He married a charming girl named
Gretchen Loeb on June 23, 1910, and
he required money for her support.
He was building a home for his
bride and he required a large sum to
complete the building.
An infant daughter was born, dying
two days later, and he needed money
for expenses in a maternity hospital,
nurses, doctors and a plot in Cypress
Lawn Cemetery.
His wife, Gretchen, dled and he
needed money for funeral expenses
and for unpaid doctors’ bills.
To disprove the statements made in
this series of fairy tales involved a
search of marriage and death records,
cemetery accounts and an investiga
tion into Dieckriede’s meteoric career
ir. San Francisco, extending over a
reriod of many months.
Spent Money Recklessly,
During all this time, as shown by
the accounts of a bank, Dieckriede
was spending money at the rate of
£5OO or $6OO per week. Immediately
fellowing the arrjval of a remittance,
ostensibly for the death of a baby or
a wife, he would draw daily checks
for $lOO or $2OO, and the size of the
checits thereafter would gradually de
crease to $lO, $5 and even §2, by
which time it was necessary to invent
a new necessity.
A month before he shot himself
Dieckriede married Emilee Smith, of
San Francisco. Not until after the
tragic termination of their honey
moon did she learn he was the son of
a wealthy man of the same name, at
whose death there was left, in trust
for his family, an estate of over $250,-
000,
. .
City Opens Mountain
Camp for Children
LOS ANGELES, July 18.—For $7.50
any boy or girl of Los Angeles can spend
two weeks at the city's first municipal
mountain camp, which has been opened
at Seeley Flats, in the San Bernardino
range, 40 miles from Los Angeles.
Scores of newshoys and street urchins
will be sent at weekly intervals. Au
ust will be given over to the girls, and
s.uring September adults will be admit
ted.
%DR. J. T.GAULT
Specialist (for men)
Established Eleven Years
32 Inman Building
Atlanta . Georgla
' o esiiaaEe S I TNe Ia .
SR SR
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THE GREATEST IN THE SOUTH!
The versatility of her crops is unequaled. The fame of her watermelons, peaches,
QGeorgia cane syrup, pecans and apples is known to all men.
VALUE OF GEORGIA'’S 1913 CROPS
Cotton, Cotton Seed, ' By-Products ....$252,000,000 Sugar Cane and Pr0duct5.....,...........52,500,000
; Live Stoelk, P0u1try...... ... cosso.+- 88,000,000 BEY i slcliiicidiiiiiiias s esa i 5000 000
Date. WhHeRE: (. iii i mei i is i 10000000 PPUIRE . ocicrvncenieneatinesivsiinsninaanss 1,500,000
Sweet Potatoes, Irish Potatoes ~..... 4,250,000 PRARULE ... .. i iiiiiol sLTSR 00
s ol ciseesamesecssssesansss 75,000,000 Other Products....cececvevcucesceanssessss 5,000,000
Vegetables and TrucK..ewwees:eessooees. 8,000,000 MOMERIE . el i 6,500,000
Farm lands can be bought in Georgia to-day from $lO per acre upward, but according
0 Government Census are increasing annually in value 10 per cent. Last years total
| srop ranked fourth in value of all the States in the Union, and yet two-thirds of her il
dep unfallowed.
_ Everyone who 1s thinking of a new location is looking to the South, and pars
deularly to Georgla.
| INFORMATION GIVEN FREE
. We have a Land Information Bureau, where facts, figures and statistics
I from recognized authorities are kept constantly up to date. This information x
i {s yours for the asking. Write us.
l Address applications for information to / e
e s : |
t : v Land Information Bureau ‘(" %
- - e RARITR : 4
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Se S 3
‘Nulsance’ Law Finally Effects What
Previous Prohibition Statutes Nev
er Could Accomplish,
NASHVILLE, July 18.—It took five
yvears almost to the day to enforce
State-wide prohbition in Tennessee.
The general prohibition law that was
to have been effective in July of
1909 did not finally have the effect
of closing the saloons of the State
until July of this year, and only af
ter a bitter fight.
In the cities the law of 1909
was ignored as to the sale and the
guestion became more and more a
political issue, and twice the fusion
Legislators filibustered and left the
State in their effort to maintain the
prohibition law when there was any
real or imagined fear that it would
be tampered with, At the last ses
slon of the General Assembly, bills
were urged by Governor Hooper for
more cerain prohibition and were
called, on account of their drastic
features, the “Hooper force bills.”
The law closing saloons by de
claring them a nuisance was passed
and became effective Manch 1. This
law has just run the gantlet of the
courts and having been passed on
favorably by the Supreme Court, it
is now invoked to wipe out the last
of the saloons in Tennessee
After closing nearly seventy liquor
shops in Nashville in one day and
permanently enjoining the operators
from reopening it is not thought that
there remains a single open saloon in
all Tennessee, and thus the dream of
the members of the W. C. T. U., who
five years ago made the State Capitol
ring with “Tennessee is Going Dry,”
is at last realized.
Why the Kidneys
Do you know that every ounce of
blood in your body passes through the
kidneys every three minutes? Well, it
does, and, as it is the duty of these
frail tubular structures to filter all im
purities from the blood, it is readily
realized that the least inflammation or
irritation results in imperfect work,
which is sure to impair your health.
That is why, if you suffer
from backache, headache,
rheumatism, heart weak
ness, or some acute forms
of disease, it is an indis
putable warning that
your kidneves need help,
and just the help they
need is supplied by War
ner’'s Safe Kidney and
Liver Remedy. It soothes
and heals inflammation
and Irritation, and gradu
ally restores the kidneys
to their normal condition.
At all druggists in 50c
and §sl.oo bottles. Sam
ple free if you write
Warner's Safe Remedies
go.,YDepl. 435, Rochester,
Health,Strengthand
Vitality for Ali
| o The Dr. Lorenz Electro
‘ s Body Battery is the
‘ A greatest self-cure for
‘ WA weakness and debllity the
Y world has ever known
No drugs, no medicines,
g no dieting, no unusuai
demands of any sort:
; i) Juat cease all dissipation
e 4 end this invention will do
f 2 the work. It sends a
\ A% stream of vital life into
" A | 2N ycur nerves, organs and
Ei A % , blood during the time you
# ,&/VJ, are asleep. For the treat
-3y “h‘ al) m"‘l: b"k rheumatism,
7 = 5 wea, ack. nervousness,
f \\\‘ stomach, liver and kidney
A ) disorders, varicocele and
i (g} losses, it 1s incompara
ble. Dr. Lorens’ Dry
Cell Storage Battery is a high-grade battery, re
quires no charging with vinegar or aclds, is 300
per cent easier apphed, gives 400 per cent-greater
service, and is sold at a low price without added
cost for fancy books.
A Booklet with full particulars and factory prices
by mail FREE® sealed.
A. G. LORENZ ELECTRIC WORKS,
2240 Lincoln Avenue. CHICAGO, ILL
( g -
; Many Recoveries
i From Lung Trouble
E FEckman's Alterative has restored to health
3 many sufferers from lung trouble. Read what
(it did in this case:—
$ Wilmingten, Del
{ “'Gentlemen:—ln January, 1908, 1 waa taken
! with hemorrhages of the lunga My physician,
{ 8 leading practitioner, sald fi;lt it _was lung
{ trouble. 1 got very weax, Vi A.*luplnm(.’
{of Lippineott's Derulmtut Siong, Imington, |
Del., recommended Eckman's .siterative that?
had done great good. I began taking it at!
§ once, I continued faithfully, using no other,
{ remedy, and finally notleed the clearing of thes
lungs. 1 now have no trouble with my lungs.
; 1 firmly believe Eckman’s Alterative saved my
life.”’ (Abbreviated. )
(Afridavit) JAS. BQUIRES.
Fckman's Alterative s most efficacious in
bronchial catarrh and severe throat and lung
affections and upbuilding the system. Contains
no harmful or hlblt-rormmf df\l’i. Acczgt no
ésubsmuten. Sold by all Jacobs’ Drug Stores
and other lndh.xx druggists. Write Eckman
%La!mnmry, Philadelphia, Pa., for booklet of
recoveries.
i AAAN R SAN SSAAIARD
——— . ————————r
e
Parrie Nichols, Laurel, Miss., writes:
“Seems to me if I had not obtained
your remedy when I did I would not
have lived much longer. I am glad you
discovered this wonderful remedy that
will cure Pellagra. When I began tak
ing Baughn's Pellagra Remedy, my
weight was 60-odd pounds; now it is
90-oodd. I would like to have this pub
lished and sent to sufferers of Pellagra.”
This is published at her request. If
you suffer from Pellagra, or know of
anyone who suffers from Pellagra, it is
yvour duty to consult the resourceful
Baughn, who has fought and conquered
the dreaded malady right in the Pella
gra Belt of Alabama.
The symptoms—hands red like sun
burn, skin peeling off, sore mouth, the
lips, throat and tongue a flaming red
with much mucus and choking, indiges
tion and nausea; either diarrhea or
constipation.
There is hope. If you have Pellagra,
you can be cured by Baughn's Fellagra
Remedy. Get big free book on Pellagra.
Address American Compounding Com
pany, Box 587-D, Jasper, Ala., remem
bering money is refunded in any case
where the remedy fails to cure.—AD
VERTISEMENT.
Blood Purified
Quickly in Summer
All the Body Responds to Action of
Famous Remedy.
T e ——=
0 7 ~/;:4?1,», g
;12@ =N 7)) o B
Ti- S =
(i Y (-
P ST A R —
Vs e BN - e
A e
g TN 2 AR -
TR
Just as thunder shakes the ground
and stirs it into action; and lightning
clears the air, burns up impurities; so
does 8. 8. 8. arouse acfion in the bleod.
It is cleansed, purified and impurities
are converted Into substance easily and
quickly eliminated.
In the winter time we get our natu
ral purifying agency in fresh, cold, fros
ty air, but most people spoil the ef
fect by habits of living. And so we rely
upon summer with the help of 5. 8. 8.
for it is now that the liver, lungs, kid
neys and skin will be more active with
out the danger of severe colds.
All such troubles as pimples, boils,
rash, blood risings, eczema, acne and
other forms of limpure bloocd will be
rushed out of the system and new skin
will quickly replace the diseased tissue.
Get a bottle of S. S. 8. to-day of any
druggist, but don't permit anyone to
fool you with something claimed ‘‘just
as good.”
Write to The Swift Specific Co., 111
Swift Bldg.. Atlanta, Ga., for a beauti
ful book, ‘“What the Mirror Tells.” And
if you want advice on any severe form
of blood trouble write the company's
medical department.