Newspaper Page Text
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1014.
7 A
DEMOCRATS PREDICT BID
BALLOT VICTORY TUESDAY
National Executive Body Declares Party Will
Win Five Senatorial Places, Besides Gaining
Majority of 100 in the Lower House.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—The Democratic National Commit
tee, in a forecast to-night, predicts the election next Tuesday of at
least five Democratic United States Senators and enough Congress
men to assure the party a majority of 100 in the House.
The forecast says:
“Reports gathered with particular care from all parts of the
country’ indicate a sweeping Demo
rratic victory Tuesday
“Our majority in the Senate will
be increased by the election of Sen
ators in Connecticut, New York,
Ohio, Kansas and Illinois, all of
which are now represented by Re
publicans.
"Stevens, in New Hampshire;
Johnson, in South Dakota; Purcell,
in North Dakota; Moyle, in Utah;
Phelan, in California; Husting, in
Wisconsin, have fine chances for vic
tory, according to the best reports
obtainable.
"Painter, in Pennsylvania, and
Connolly, in Iowa, appear to be gain
ing strength rapidly and our latest
reports from these States are very
reassuring.
Expect 100 Majority.
As to Congress, the committee
says:
"Making due allowances for the
fact that quite a number of the Dem
ocrats in the Sixty-third Congress
represent strong Republican districts,
which under normal conditions wc
could not hope to win, it is difficult
to see how the Democratic party will
fail to organize the next House witn
approximately 100 majority.
"In districts where they have at
tempted to make the tariff an issue
no candidate, so far as we have been
able to learn, has had the temerity
to pledge himself to the re-enact
ment of the Payne-Aldrich tariff,
which caused the split In the Repub
lican party and led to the organiza
tion of the Progressive party.
"Democratic sentiment is particu
larly strong in that section of the
country west of the Mississippi
River. This is well illustrated in the
former Republican State of Montana,
where the vote for Congressman
Evans and Stcut in the primaries ex
ceeded the combined vote of all other
parties
Confident of Gains.
"Gains are confident!*' expected in
Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Wis
consin, Minnesota and other Western
States.
"In the East our reports are par
ticularly gratifying. In the second
Massachusetts District for instance,
Professor E. M. Lewis has been mak
ing a wonderful campaign and public
sentiment there points to his election.
In the First New Jersey District and
other districts now represented by
Republicans, prospects for Demo
cratic success are exceptionally
good.
The committee alludes to the pro
gram of progressive legislation en
acted by Congress as having made
"a profound impression on the coun
try.”
"The opposition has been power
less to stem the tide of approval,” it
says. "They have been without an
ismie upon which to appeal to the
people, and although often challenged
to do so, have been unable to state
in what particulars they would
change the legislation of the last
eighteen months if returned to
power."
FEEL FINE! KEEP BOWELS ACTIVE.
STOMACH SWEET AND HEAD CLEAR
No odds how had your llvei, stom
ach or bowels; hc-w much your hiad
aches, how miserable and uncomfo *t-
able you are from constipation, In
digestion, biliousness a..d cLgged-uo
bowels—you always get desired re
sults with Casrarets.
They end the heada^.ie, biliousness,
dizziness, nervousness, sick. sour,
gassy stomach. Th^y cleanse your
liver and bowels of all the sour bile,
foul gases and constipated matter
which is producing the aiisery. A
Cascaret to-nipht will straighten you
out by morning—a 0-cent Lox keeps
your head clear, stomach sweet, live'*
and bowels regular, and you feel
cheerful and bully for months.
ASCARETS WORKWHILE YOU SLEEP.
BEST FOR THE EYES
Screws will get loose. Glasses will become wabbly on the face. It
?. & . gre ^j anao r yance - Our new method of making eyeglasses removes
this trouble. We now mount lenses without the use of screws—as shown
In the cut.
Hardwick Bitter in
Attack on ‘Moosers’
Calls C. W. McClure and G. R. Hutch
ens "Cheap Adventurers, Who
Bolted a Primary.”
Thomas W. Hardwick, Democratic
candidate for the unexpired term of
Senator A. O. Bacon, gave out a
lengthy statement Saturday night, in
which he severely attacks the candi
dacies of C. W. McClure and G. R.
Hutchens, Progressive Republicans,
for the Senate.
Mr. Hardwick, in part, says:
"To the Democrats of Georgia:
"Since the nominations, Senator
Smith and myself are confronted with
opposition from gentlemen who style
themselves ‘Bull Moose’ nominees, al
though they were named as such by
neither primary nor convention, but
by a handful of discredited and un
successful politicians.
"Mr. McClure, who opposes Senator
Smith, participated in the primary of
August 19, voting ballot No. 80, at
Precinct A, of the Ninth W T ard in At
lanta, Ga. Mr. Hutchens, who op
poses me in the election, not only
voted in the Democratic primary, but
also figured in it and in the conven
tion as an unsuccessful candidate for
the Democratic nomination for the
Senate.
"How, then, stands the record?
"These men, McClure and Hutch
ens, who advertise themselves as
standing for ‘honest politics,’ are
nothing on earth except cheap ad
venturers, who bolt a primary m
which they both participated—one as
a voter, the other as both voter and
candidate.”
All Democrats Are
Urged to Cast Votes
The State Democratic Committee
Saturday night issued the following
official statement:
"To the Voters of Georgia:
"The Democratic State Executive
Committee earnestly calls on all ioyal
Democrats throughout the State to
see to it that a full Democratic vote is
brought out November 3. There are
opposition candidates running for the
Senate and in some districts for Con
gress.
"The Democratic county committees
are requested to see to it that we are
fully represented at every polling
place, and that records are made and
kept of every man who votes against
the party.
“In this connection, they are again
reminded that a rule has been adopt
ed as a party law that no Democrat
who participated in the primary Au
gust 19 and votes against the nomi
nees in November shall be allowed to
partiripate in the primaries of 1916.
The committee must enforce this rule.
It is fair for all to understand it in
advance, and the aid of local Demo
crats is requested in its enforcement. ’
Sam Jones Quits as
Moose Candidate
Sam J. Jones refuses to herd long
er with the Bull Moose. Jones was
nominated for Congress by Moosers
from the Fifth District to run in op
position to William Schley Howard,
but he has repudiated his sponsors
and has asked his friends to vote the
straight Democratic ticket from top
to bottom.
Here is what he had to say about
the matter in a formal statement Sat
urday night:
"The Democratic party is all that
the white man in Georgia has to look
to for safe guidance and self-protec
tion, and it is our duty to make the
election of the nominated Democratic
ticket as emphatic as possible on
November 3.
"I shall voje the/straight Demo
cratic ticket, and 1 hope my friends
will do the same. The so-called Pro
gressive party nominated me for
Congress from this district, but for
reasons satisfactory to me I ask
that my name be not considered in
that connection."
Vo Ho/es -No Screws ,
, Eyeglass an<j Spectacle^
Mountings
) A Leases Always Tight
Reduces M' ^
Breakage
Neatest in Appearance
Dilating the pupils of the eyes does not Insure correct fitting glasses.
We fit glasses for astigmatism, successfully, without the use of drugs.
Investigate our service before ordering new lenses.
FOLSOM & BLANCHARD
Optometrists and Opticians
7 Alabama St., Between Whitehall and Broad
New Morgan Bank to
Open Next Thursday
NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—J. P. Mor
gan & Co. will open for business next
Thursday their new $3,000,000 count
ing house at Wall and Broad streets.
This building is on a site that was
once the residence of Alexander Ham
ilton. founder of the currency sys
tem of this country.
The lands is now valued at $1,100.-
000. It fronts 132 feet in Wall street
and 90 feet in Broad street.
When You Sign This Pledge:
Beginning (Date) I will become an
American National 'WEEKLY SAVER," and will de
posit the sum of $. every week to my credit in a
Savings Account at the American National Bank for at
least 52 weeks.
Signed
You have taken a long step toward financial Inde
pendence.
It doesn't matter whether you actually sign such a
pledge or not, 30 long as you make up your mind that you
will carry out the plan of regular weekly saving and de
positing at this bank.
The important thing is to DECIDE to be a "WEEKLY
SAVER.”
Then if you keep your decision the plan will auto
matically make you save and build up a capital for you.
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
OBITUARY.
Mrs. Lou Latham, 65, died at 2 o’clock
Saturday afternoon at her home.
Anderson avenue. Battle Hill. Mrs.
Latham Is survived bv a daughter.
Mrs. Janie McDonald; two sons,
William and George Latham, and
three sisters, Mrs. I>ela Parker,
Mrs. Maud McDonald and Miss
Mary Goodwin. The funeral will
take place Sunday afternoon at 3
o’clock from the residence, inter
ment to be in the family burying
ground near by.
Margaret Schj c k, 2 years old, died at
the home of Mrs. J. W. Harlan, on
Piedmont road, Saturday. She is
survived by her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. G. Schick, and two aunts,
Mrs. Lawrence Brown and Mrs. J.
W. Harlan. The funeral will be
conducted from the residence of
Mrs. Harlan Sunday morning by
P'ather Young, interment to be in
Marietta.
OFBULLIDSE
Voters Urged by County Com
mittee to Deluge ‘Progres-
’ November 3.
sives
An urgent appeal to the Democrats
of Fulton County to go to the polls
at the general election Tuesday and
cast their votes in support of the
nominees of the Democratic primary
was issued Saturday night by the
Fulton County Executive Committee.
The statement characterizes the
Progressive party leaders and nomi
nees as “a set of individuals who
voted in the Democratic primary on
August 19 and are now styling them
selves the Progressive party in
Georgia,” and calls attention to the
fact that not only did Charles W. Mc
Clure and J. R. Hutchens, Progressive
nominees for the United States sen
ate, vote in the Democratic primary,
but that Mr. Hutchens participated
in it as a candidate.
The statement follows:
“To the Democrats of Fulton County:
“A set of individuals who voted in
the Democratic primary August. 19
and now styling themselves th?
‘Progressive party in Georgia,’ have
offered^ opposition to the regular
Democratic nominees, who obtained
their nominations b • a vote of the
people and under the rules pre
scribed by the party.
Urge Big Democratic Vote.
“In addition to offering opposition
to the Democratic nominees for the
United States Senate, they have
brought out candidates against Con
gressman William Schley Howard,
Democratic nominee for Congress
from the Fifth District, and the
Democratic nominees for the Legis
lature—Walter P. Andrews, Judge
Spencer R. Atkinson and Robert B
Blackburn.
“We, therefore, urge all loyal Dem
ocrats to go to the polls on Tuesday,
November 3, and cast their ballots
for the Democratic nominees. The
straight Democratic ticket may be
obtained from the election managers
of the various polling places.
“We have no fear that the people of
Fulton County are unmindful of their
political obligations, or that any con
siderable number of them are so dis
honorable as to participate in a pri
mary and then bolt the nominees of
that primary. However, we do desire
to call to the attention of the public
that most of these Individuals now
running against the regular nominees
participated in the Democratic pr 5 -
mary on August 19, C. W. McClure,
who is running against Senator Hokc
Smith, having voted ballot No. 80, in
Precinct A, Ninth Ward, in the pri
mary, n.nd G. R. Hutchens, who is op
posing Congressman Thomas W.
Hardwick for the United States Sen
ate, having not only voted in that
primary, but ran in it on the Demo
cratic ticket as a candidate for the
Senate.
Others Also Voted.
“It is a certainty that s me of the
other alleged Progressive candidates
also voted in that primary.
"Although we have no apprehension
concerning the loyalty of the Demo
crats of this county, we desire to poll
the party’s full strength as a rebuke
to the few w r ho have no regard for
their political pledges and party obli
gations.
"While we do not question the right
of any man to give his allegiance to
any party he chooses, we do not be
lieve that anyone has a moral right to
participate in a primary and then bolt
the nominees.
"To the end that those who do thl3
may not impose upon the party in the
future, the members of the Fulton
County Democratic Executive Com
mittee request all In position to do so
to record and report the names of all
bolters.
“E. D. THOMAS. Chairman.
"J. O. COCHRAN, Secretary.
"Fulton County Democratic Executive
Committee.”
Fate of 4 Counties
In Hands of Voters
The voters of Georgia will authorize
four new counties at the general elec
tion next Tuesday. They are Candler,
Barrow, Evans and Bacon, all of th^m
being named in honor of men who
have been prominent in the history of
Georgia. Bacon County was named in
honor of the late Senator A. O. Bacon.
Although no opposition to the new I
counties has developed since the Leg
islature authorized their submission |
to the voters, those interested in their
formation have been working hard to
get out a full vote. If any of the
counties fail to be approved by the
voters, it will be because of negligence
and failure to vote
Before the counties can be estab
lished they must receive a majority cf
the qualified voters of the State in
stead of a majority of those voting.
For this reason the county workers
are sending out literature urging
every man In the State to go to the
polls.
All of the counties that will be
voted on Tuesday are to be taken
from large counties, and the loss of
the territory necessary for the for
mation of the new ones will not be
felt.
SHOULD SPLIT
Progressive Candidate for Senate
Believes State Needs Two Po
litical Parties Badly.
Continued From Pago 1.
the Senate, filibustered for home con
sumption and kept Congress in ses
sion for several days longer than It
should have been, and all to no pur
pose. And he knew that nothing
could be accomplished when he start
ed the filibuster. Just as everybody
else knew it.
“The powers that be in the Demo
cratic party are not going to pay
much attention to the South so Ion* 1 :
as they know they have this section
tied up and delivered The Imperative
need of Georgia and the South is two
political parties. If I am elected Sen
ator, or If the Progressive ticket polls
a good vote, then the South will get
help, but nothing is going to be done
for us so long as the Democratic lead
ers know there is no danger of the
South slipping out of their control.
They are going to distribute the ap
propriations and the patronage in
those places where they have to fight,
not where all they have to do is to
walk in and take what they want.”
Mr. McClure will wind up his cam
paign Monday morning with an ad
dress at the shops of the Southern
Railway Company. Saturday rignt
he spoke at Douglasville. and Friday
night addressed a large meeting at
Western Heights, a suburb of At
lanta.
Gadsden Store Will
Take Cotton in Trade
GADSDEN, ALA., Oct. 31.—One of
the largest retail stores in Gadsden
has announced cotton will be taken
in tiade at 10 cents a pound.
The position is taken by the com
pany that the stock of goods carried
will depreciate more than cotton if
not sold this fall and winter.
To-morrow Starts a
GALA WEEK
The Great SUIT
and CLOAK Week
See Last Page, Main News Section
Festival Chorus to
Sing at Free Recital
Hour of the Organ Concerts Changed
for the Winter Months to
3:30 ©’Clock.
The Atlanta Music Festival chorus
of 200 voices will have a prominent
part at the free organ recital this
afternoon in the Auditorium. The
chorus has been growing steadily and
has progressed remarkably well un
der the direction of City Organist
Edwin Arthur Kraft. Charles A.
Sheldon, Jr., will be the accompanist
in the choral selections.
The time of the concerts during
the winter months will be 3:30 o’clock
instead of 4 o’clock. No recitals will
be given next Sunday or the Sunday
following, because of the American
Roads Congress, which will be in ses
sion here. A special recital will be
given in honor of the congress by
Mr. Kraft Friday evening, Novem
ber 13.
BIJOU
Starting To-morrew
V A U D El V 1 LLE
AND 1
MOTION PICTURES
Matinees at
2:30 and 4.
, THE WEBB-DUMONT
COMPANY.
"Trail of the Wolf."
VANE SPITLER.
"The Musical Tramp."
THE CAROLINA DUO
Singing and Dancing.
Nights, 7:30 and 9.
THE BRACHARDS
Contortion &. Balancing.
ADMISSION lO Test's
MAGNETISM
TRIUMPHS
Mrs. J. H. Cooper, of Dover, Ga., After
Trying All Other Methods at a Cost
of $3,000, Finds Cure In Vital
Magnetism.
THE BIG SHOW COMES TO-OAY!
rf TIIZTQ WILD WEST DAYS
IN ATLANTA!
TWO DAYS ONLY—AFTERNOON 2:15, NIGHT AT 8:15
EXHIBITION GROUNDS. JACKSON AND BOULEVARD
MON. and TUES.
FRONTIER PARADE 10:30 MONDAY MORNING.
ROUTE OF PAKAI)E—Showgrounds to Auburn avenue, to Peachtree, to
Broad, to Mitchell, to Whitehall, to Peachtree, to Auburn and return to grounds.
MILLER BROS. & ARLINGTON’S
101 RANCH
The Show That's Made
Ml America Talk
3 TRAINS
PEOPLE
HORSES
PONIES
WILD
WEST
The One and Only
REAL WILD WEST
E
Mixed With Juniper Is Old Folks’
Recipe for Clogged Kidneys
and Backache.
Most folks forget that the kidneys,
like the bowels, get sluggish an 1
clogged and need a flushing occa
sionally, else we have backache and
dull misery in the kidney region, se
vere headaches, rheumatic twinges,
torpid liver, acid stomach, sleepless
ness and all sorts of bladder disor
ders. dizzy spells, spots before the
eyes, frequent desire to urinate. To
avoid above troubles, you simply must
keep your kidneys active and clean
by taking a spoonful of Stuart’s Bu-
chu and Juniper Compound after
meals. Also stop eating sweets cr
sugar. This is old folks’ recipe for
strengthening weak kidneys and blad
der. In a few days your kidpevs w.l!
then act fine and natural. Stuart’s
Buchu and Juniper is harmless to
flush clogged kidneys and stimulate
them to normal activity. It also neu
tralizes the acids in the urine so it no
longer hurts to pass water, thus end
ing bladder disorder-: and strength
ening the kidneys.—Advertisement.
Don’t Marry
Pimples
Pimples Mean Soggy, Clogged
Liver and Bowels and These
Mean an Ugly Disposi
tion Most of the
Time.
—PAPE’S DIAPEPSIM
Digests All Food, Absorbs Gases
and Stops Fermentation
at Once.
Wonder what upset your stomach—
which portion of the food did the
damage—do you? Well, don't bother.
If your stomach is in a revolt; If
sour, gassy and upset, and what you
just ate has fermented into stubborn
lumps; your head dizzy and aches;
belch gases and acids and eructate
undigested food; breath foul, tongue
Coated—just take Pape’s Dlapepsin.
and in five minutes you will wonder
i what became of the indigestion and
distress. Millions of men and women
to-day know that it is needless to
have a bad stomach. A little Diapep-
sin occasionally keeps the stomach
regulated and they eat their favorite
foods without fear.
If your stomach doesn’t take care
of your liberal limit without rebellion;
If your food is a damage instead of a
help, remember the quickest, surest,
most harmless relief Is Pape’s D'.a-
pepsin, which costs only fifty cents for
a large case at drug stores. It’s truly
wonderful—it digests food and se-s
things straight so gently and easily
that it is astonishing. Please don’t
go on and on with a weak, disordered
stomach; it’s so unnecessary.—Adver
tisemenL
Hot Springs Liver Buttons Clear Com
plexions and Tempers.
What’s the use of pimples? Same as
the r**<l flag—Danger Signal. Ited flag
r . #. vU/ 8 a y 8 : “Track
not clear!
Pimples say:
-wftNRt "Li v e r and
V bowels not
■ML clear!”
Give Hot
Springs Liver-
Buttons just
L one chance and
f find out the dif
ference between
the way you
feel to-day and
the. nrav Vrttl’
if ft
the way you'll
' feel to-morrow
Never mind what else you’ve tried or
what you think. This will only cost
you 25* cents.
Get acquainted with these w’onderful
little buttons and you’ll improve In
health and disposition, be happier, make
more friends and more money.
Down here in Hot Springs we make
a business of curing people of their
ailments These buttons are made after
a formula that Is undoubtedly the best
ever devised.
Hot Springs Liver Buttons are rapid
ly becoming as famous as Hot Springs
itself.
Every druggist who is alive to the
times sells Hot Springs Liver Huttons
and Ms price is 25 cents. In every box
is a valuable “Diet Slip" that Is worth
health to you if you are troubled with
indigestion., constipation, biliousness or
kindred ailments.
Either buy a box from your druggist
or send to us direct - let’s get rid of the
b'le and take a fresh start. Hot Springs
Chemical Co., Dept. 11, Hot Springs.
Arkansas.
HER SKEPTICAL HUSBAND TELLS
AN INTERESTING STORY OF
THEIR EXPERIENCE.
The miraculous cures by vital magne
tism in serious chronic cases of years’
standing that were pronounced incura
ble have carried joy and gladness to the
hearts und homes of many in this vl-
ctnity since the Human Magnet came to
Atlanta, in numerous instances suffer
ing people who failed to find relief In
any other method of treatment have
been speedily restored to health by this
wonderful force of nature.
All chronic afflictions yield readily to
the conquering potency of magnetism.
Weak and shattered nerves, tired brain,
poor blood, debilitated system, female
troubles, physical exhaustion, sleepless
ness, despondency, mental depression,
hysteria, paralysis, numbness, neuralgia,
rheumatism, epilepsy, palpitation of the
heart, sciatica, headache, indigestion,
biliousness, loss of appetite, constipa
tion, impotency, prostatlc troubles, kid
ney and liver diseases, and nearly all
diseases of the nervous system, piles,
hemorrhoids, and many other conditions,
no matter how serious, quickly and per
manently succumb to this marvelous
power.
To those who desire relief and cure,
hut hesitate bfraust* they do not think
the cures are permanent, the following
unsolicited letter from Mr. J. H. Cooper,
a prominent resident of Dover, Georgia,
will be interesting and convincing:
DOVER. C,A.
Dear Doctor Mav: I wish to express my ap
preciation of the truly extraordinary cure that my
wife received under your maam-tlc treatment. The
lienvflt she obtained is so much greater than were
my most sanguine expectations that It appears to
me as being really wonderful.
For the lieneflt of other husbands who are skep
tical as 1 was, I want to give a brief recital of her
suffering during the last eight yeara. She has been
subject to attacks that would begin with a feeling
of depression, n foreboding of evil, a bilious con
dlUon of her system, followed by an excruclallng
headache, Uie climax of which was lnvarlaldy at
tended with a rellex action of the nerves that would
draw the sinews of her lower limits and arms uni 11
It would look as If they were going to lacerate U.e
flesh and akin at her elbows, wrists, hands, knees
and feet. These attacks would leave her in a very
weakened, prostrated and miserable condition. So
persistent have these attacks been that it seemed
to me she w as In the clut< hes of some insatiable
demon. There really seemed to be no escape from
what then looked like inevitable death.
The pains In her head and body were so severe
they brought on spasms and convulsion** that could
only be relieved by morphine She suffered
such awful agony she would either get hysterica)
or lose consciousness. Rheumatism extended all
over her already pain racked body. Every joint
was sore and Under as a boll. Her liver was out
of order, the stomach and kidneys were affected,
and then, to cap the climax, a'ter spending over
$3.000.00 in a vain search for relief, die was taken
down with nervous prostration In It* very worst
form. She often wished and prayed that she
would die.
Between these attacks she suffered acute pains
In the abdomen, cheat, side and back. During the
Intervals between her attacks she has had change
of climate, spending the winters on Hnnlbel island
and on the west coast of Florida. She has been
constantly under treatment by able and usually auc-
cessful physician* In all parts of the country, as 1
was constantly seeking a cure; but the very best
she has had has only been a little temporary relief.
It seemed to me and all our friends that she was
beyond treatment, and you can not realize how
grateful I am to the kind Providence that caused
me to Induce her to try magnetism.
She began Improving with the very first treat
ment and she continued to Improve, until to-day
she looks, act* ami feels like a new individual, and
Is enjoying life as much as anyone.
Gratefully yours.
J. H. COOPER.
Such transformations are of dally oc
currence as a result of treatment by
vital magnetism. Those desiring consul
tation and treatment may call at 665
Peachtree street any day from 10 to 5,
or Sundays and evenings by special ap
pointment.
GENUINE
ROUND-UP
BRONCHO
BUSTING
REAL
INDIANS
REAL
COWBOYS
REAL
COWGIRLS
Most Sfrenuous Show on Earth!j
Horseback Push-Ball —101 Indians, led by!
Chief Iron Tail, whose profile Is on the New
^ Nickel—Real Ranch Cowpunehere—World’s
Greatest Ropers and Crack Shots—Last of !
the long-haired Scouts—Last of the long
horned Steers—Last of the Real Buffaloa— ;
Indiana' Attack on the Pioneers.
A Show of Thrills, Without a Dull Momant
veum "i 7T -
RESERVED SEATS, both days, at tne ELKIN DRUG
CO., Five Points, at the same price as on the grounds.
ATLANTA FRIDAV
SAT’DAV
Nov.fi-7
Mai
Sat.
(JOHN
COW
pqchnts
MCINTYRE
HEATH
BOOK BY GEORGE V HOBART LYRICS BY WILLIAM JIROtlf MUSIC BY JEAN SCHWARTZ
Nights 25c to $2; Sat. Mat. 25c to $1.50
SEATS TUESDAY 9 A. M.
PRICES:
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 9 Wednesday and Saturday
OLIVER MOROSCO presents
PEG O’ MY HEART
J. Hartley Manners’ Charming Comedy of Youth
Sane Cast of Last Seaton, Inoluding BLANCH HALL AS “PEG"
DDIPCC ■ Nights, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1 and $1.50. Matinees. 25c, 50c,
I IWtfCd ■ 75c and 5L Seats on Sale Thursday at 9 A. M.
HAYNERS CHEAT SPECIAL OFFER
To NEW customers only—full quart bottle of fine old
HAYNER BOTTLED-IN-BOND WHISKEY
For Only 80 Cents—Express Charges Paid By Us.
T his is a special introductory offer we are
making to NEW customers only—and if
YOU nave never tried Hayner Whiskey,
we want you to try it NOW.
We Want To Show You
We want to place some of our fine old whis
key before you so you may know how rich,
pure and delicious it really is—and here’s
the greatest offer you ever heard of—
Send Us 80 Cents—
And we will send you a full quart bottle of
our Hayner Private Stock BOTTLED-IN
BOND Whiskey—in strong, sealed case—
and we will pay the express charges.
Remember—It’s Bottled-in-Bond
And every bottle sealed with the Govern
ment’s official Green Stamp over the cork
—your assurance that it is fully aged, full
100% proof and full measure.
Of Course You Know
Shipping one quart, express paid, means a
loss to us—but we want you to have some of
this whiskey—we want to show you what
a magnificient quality we are producing—
and what a great saving our “Direct from
Distillery” plan of selling means to you.
Take U* Up
On this offer—order as many quarts as you
like—you can’t go wrong—you can’t make
a mistake—we MUST send you a quality
that will win your instant favor and hold
your future trade—and we will do it.
Rush Your Order
And we will see that the whiskey goes
forward by first express.
Uf“\TIT.Orders from New Mex. Colo. Wyo. Mont,»nd ill itifei
HUIL. West must call for $1.00 for one quart—express paid.
(Future orders must call for FOUR quarta or more)
Addree Our
Nearest Office
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO., Dept. B 156
28-N
Daytoa, 0. Si. Lo«U, lo, Guloa, Iiii. Wiikli^n. D. C. New Orle.oa, La.
Toledo, 0. Indianapolis, Ind. Kaasaa City, Mo. St. Paul, Mioa. Jatkvoovillf, Fla.
Oaoital
>800.000
HAYNER
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