Newspaper Page Text
4
Miss Frances Baker, Congress
man's Daughtar, First to Sign,
Offering Her Services as Army
Chauffeur in Emergency.
Hundreds Enrolled on Register
)
Just Opened by the Woman's
Section of the Navy League.
Prominent Names Among Them
WASHINGTON Dec. 4 ~Miss
Frances Whitaker Baker, president
of the Children’'s Auxiliary of the
Woman's National Made-In-U.-8.-A
League, and daughter of Representa
tive J. Thompson Baker, of Wili
wood, N. J., was the first American
to inscribe her name on the national
service register which has just been
opened by the woman's section of the
Navy League. Miss Baker, who Is a
licensed chauffeur, volunteered in that
capacity in the event of war. She
was quickly followed by her sisters,
Katherine and Mary Baker, who also
will volunteer as chauffeurs in case
of war
Hundreds of names have been sent
in for the register since it was opened
last Monday. Women of all walks In
life thronged to register their names
and place thelr services at the dis
posal of the country should an emer
gency arise. Offers of automobliles,
homes for hospitals and nursing
quarters, motor car drivers, nurses,
doctors’ bandage makers, neam-‘
stresses and cooks have come Ir,
while & number of young men and
boys have signed the register, prom
fsing to serve their country “in any
way possible” when called upon.
Hope for Vast Legion.
The woman's section of the Navy
League hopes t 0 organize and regis
ter a vast army of volunteer workers
who would be willing to serve as the
women of the belligerent countries
are serving to-day, in any capacity in
which thelr country might need ther.
The woman's section hopes in times
of peace to build up an organization
of trained women ready for practical
service In many lines, which woud
he of inestimable service to the coun
try In case of war.
Mrs. Vylla Poe Wilson has been
placed in charge of the national serv
fce department of the woman's sec
tion of the Navy League.
Prominent Women Sign.
Among the women who we.e added
to the membership rolls of the wom
an’s section of the Navy League la:’
week were the following: Mrs, Lind
ley M. Garrison, wife of the Secretary
of War: Mrs. Atlee Pomerene, wife
of the Senator from Ohio, and presi
dent of the Congressioral Club: Mrs
Ollie James, Mrs. George Sutheriani,
Mrs. R. R. Hitt, Mrs. Katherine K-
Kins Hitt, Mrs. Robert M Thompson,
Mrs. Edward McCauley, Sr, Mrs
Mary T. Key Mcßlalr, granddangh
ter of Francis Scott Key: Mrs. Alex
ander Graham Bell, Mrs. Thomas A
Edison, Mrs. Simon Newcomb, Mra
Hudson Max!m, Mrs. Henry Cleve.
land Perkins. Mrs Henry Wise Wood.
New York: Mrs Harry Payvne Whi+.
ney, New York: Mrs. D. C. Sands,
dr, Middleburg, Va.: Miss Pdith Ren
ham, Mrs. McKim Baltimore, Md..
Mre. Randolph H. McKim, Mrs. Irv.
Ing Bacheller, Miss Augusta Saint
Gavdens, Mre. Maxwell Parrish, Miss
Virginia Castleman Mrs. Rudolph
Kauffmann and Mre Edward T
Brotesbury, of Philadelphia |
A Washington branch of the wom- ‘
n's section of the Navy League will
soon be organized Notices of the
argarization meeting will be sent cut
Within a week or ten davs. and It is
expected that the Washington hranch
of the section will be one of the 'ar.
gest in the country., The Washinetn
Mmembers are working lard to bring
thovsands of women Into the mem
hershin In order to help the cam
oelen for a million members by Jan
nary 1, which is mesting with such
success throughout the country
»e * |
1
MhicaonTTniversity to
|
. .
|
Have Militarv (lass
CHICAGO, Dee o Miltary train.
“w for stodents of the 'niversity ,\y‘
hirago will be inetit ited soon plana
having been comnleted to start with
A clasn of 4% upner classmen. The
tlags will he under the snt orvision
“® Afolvh Noe, a former member of
he Avetrian army who served e
nerns Francie Tnasnh hefore he came
to America sname venre nen
Noe i pesietant srofessor of (Jer
mar literature ot the univers!ts il
Wow ane of the re rulte wha tank 'he
favires of tralnine at the citleens’ enl
Mar samn at Por Bheridan 'aet
S e wint t the voune me
o, oh he tactics of the Unlted
Pipton arms
Preparedness Drill
Urged for Schoolg
DERRAN. K. H.. Dec. ¢.—ln an od
Arens 1o the students of New Hamp
Shire College, Major Prank Knax of
Manchester, outlined » plan for nhiitary
Instraction in high s hool and Nege
which he thought the only se stio !
he preparediess problem
He also sdvocated A BAYVY second at
Jeast only to that of Great Britair
M BUILDS CONCRETE WALL
CENTRALIA, KANE., Nov 3 T
RN ix ne ol as he feels, I A very mu st
be about 40 yenrs younger than the oig
Iy four vears the family Bihile save ke
. He has built & cement retaining wal
M feel long and 4 feet high around
his residence, mmnl the conerete wnd |
doing all the work himself
. »~ }
!. Prize Oifered Boys
and firls for Best
|
| Essay on Defense
‘ W ASHINGTON, Dec. 4.—A prize |
of $25 in go!d for the best '
|, essay on “Why National Defense |
[} 1s Insurance Against War” has |
If been offered to American girls and ¢
{ boys by the junior section of the )
’ Navy League. The contest is open ¢
14 to all under 18, whethdr in school !
’ or at work. The only restriction is 2
that any child competing multg
I$ sign the membership pledge of the
| junior section of the Navy League.
“, The essays must not be more
{ than 500 words, and will not be re
s ceived after February 1, 1916. The
:% essays are to be signed with a nom
é de plume, but the real name of the ‘
: contestant must accompany each |
entry in a sealed envelope, to be |
I opened only after the judges ren- (|
der their decision. |
¢ All children wishing to enter ;
should send their essays or apply |
'i for information to contest secre- 3
tary, junior section of the Navy
| League, Southern Building, Wash- i
l% ington, D, C,
Jury's Verdict I
“Killed by Gossip”
Woman Who Slew Bahkies and Herself
Victim of Loose Talk in
Town.
WESTERN BPRINGS, ILL., Dec. 4.
Although the Grand Jury gave to the
authorities the name of the “murderer”
of Mrs, Ida Bodman, formerly Ida Ste
vens, of Boston, and the ‘“‘murderer’ is
known everywhere in the world, there
will never be a trial, The “murderer’
is “Idle Gossip."
Eighteen months ago the Bodmans
and their baby daughter moved to West
ern Springs, where everybody Kknows
everybody else
Three monthe later the Bodman home
was made happy when the stork brought
little Priscilla a baby brother,
Then Mrs. Bodman began to receive
“poisoned" telephone calls and she knew
others were recelving them by the lift
ing eyebrows and the breaking up of
scattered groups of her mnew friends
whenever she went near them. Batur
day the woman could stand it no longer,
’Sho— tucked her kiddies in bed, kissed
them good-night--and then shot herself,
The jury's verdict as it appeared on the
record was
~ “Killed by idle gossip.”
| .
Adopts 13 Children;
)
Takes Them on Visit
TOLEDO, Dec. 4,~Mrs. O. H, Bos
worth, of Dickerson, 5. Dak., has just
arrived«here with thirteen children, all
of whom she has adopted. Mrs. Bos
worth i 3 on the way to visit relatives
in Bowling Green. Mrs., Bosworth for
merly was a rich ranch owner in South
Dakota, Recently she sold the ranch
and moved to Maine. Her desire to visit
her old home In Wood County became
Strong and she started West with her
“family.” The children range from 3
to 16
Mrs. Bosworth says that at one time
on her South Dakota ranch she had
twenty-three children. She has been a
widow for twenty years and had one
child
Bees in Possession
1 S 0 |
WILLIAMSPORT, PA., Dec “—A
swarm of bees being brought to this
city from Trout Run by Mr. and Mrs
Edwin Bender, who caught them along
with a large amount of game while
hunting near Oregon Hill, took posees
slon of a passenger coach on a Northern
Central train,
The bees had been placed In a paste
board box and on account of the cold
had previously given no trouble, but
when the steam heat of the passenger
coach reached them some emerged from
the box. Passengers rushed in a paniec
to another coach The conductor made
A dash into the car and hurled the box
out of the open window.
BEAR FAT FORECASTS COLD.
HOOD RIVER, OREQ., Dec. 4.
Nimrod prognosticators, making their
predictions from the heavy fur and
rolls of fat found on bears killed in
local hills this season, are prophesy.
ing that the winter will be unusually
severe,
DON'T ENDURE
| We urge all skin sufferers who have
;-ou:n relief In wvain. to try this liquid
wWash, the D ... D, Prescription for
iiirumm All skin diseases yield in
stantly to its soothing olls. Its ingredi
‘rmn. 01l of wintergreen, lh_\'mnfruml
’."\ erite, have been used by doctors for
years in the cure of the skin The
Hlquid form carries these healing in
gredients down through the pores ta the
root of the disease
Ty D. D D to-day Ask your druge
"!n for the generous 25¢ trial bottle
If you come to us we can Suarantee
you relief. Ask us
Jacobs’ Pharmacy
i
D.D. D,
| * - o the Standard
———wse O 1 Ren
@ The
.Jf‘&;.\'ax K~ .
& VoB Christmas
Ring
What more beautiful or suit
able for Christmas Giving
than the Gold Circlet of
Friendship? Our new stock
of rings include
SIGNET, JEWELS,
EMBLEMS.
Exquisite designs, a credit
1o you to give, a credit to us
to sell.
Moderately Kfio.d thess
Rings will be the fitting gift
for One You Love. .
E. A. I“ORGAN
Jewsler and Optician,
10 E. Hunter 8t
There's eoonomy in a few
steps around the: corncr. '’
'
$ i
University of Pennsylvania Expe
dition Finds Hitherto Un
known Savages.
PHILADILPHIA, Dec 4. —By
poking around a whole winter in an
80-below-zero cHmate, 700 miles from
the'nearest Russian exile camp, in the
wilds of Northern Siberia, an expedi.
tion of the University of Pennsyl
vania Museum has discoversd the
right way to live,
The Tungus, a hitherto unknown
tribe of wigwam dwellers, raw meat
eatére and joke crackers, whose
present code of living is of the 10,000
B. «C, period, have sclved the problem,
True happihess, the Tungus con
vinced the explorers, leads via the
gullet into the stomach, and after the
stomach is stuffed until primitive
vest buttons pop, the next rule in the
happiness code is to work the dia
phragm in a huge laugh, the huge
ness of which detarmines all further
soclal status in the community,
Simple Recipe for Happiness,
The happiness recipe, alon with
other interesting facts about Sfls lost
tribe, reacheg here from London,
where the expedition is now prepar
g a detailed report of its Siberian
trip.
“"lEat much, laugh much,” is the
Tungus code, says the report, which
further explains, “they are enormous
eaters and full of jokes.” The tribe
laughed and stuffed food at all func
tions, {hcluding weddings, prizefights
and wigwam pole dedications. Girls
who could eat the most and laugh
the hardest were congidered the most
According to Reports, Even Uncle Sam’s
Advices in the various newspapers several years SR ,/,, ,
. . == - e /”‘?f"-‘ r
ago stated that Mme. Algerie Rena Barrios, wife L
. ______\\h ~\~ .S\\ a{-‘\
of the assassinated President of Guatemala, was | ‘ \*-\.. i
i : s f { \‘\ \\' R \
detained on her arrival at San Francisco by the ( ( LRy R \:\
United States Customs Officials on the charge of \ | Y @ S
; 2 4 | q AR LEAYA
undervaluing her famous collection of Diamonds & N B\ ,‘,\}}}
which she had worn upon State occasions. Lead- ¥+ ) "‘fl W
. . - Y By
ing experts upon close examination were : ot )
- . - h j"‘ ]
amazed to find her priceless jewels were b B ‘g"
BARRIOS DIAMONDS (PN
'-g - )
If they are good enough for a PRESIDENT'S wife to I{° // /fl“
wear, they should be good enough for YOU. b / \
: -
Beautiful Xmas Gifts at Introductory Sale Prices
Space permits us to illustrate but a few of the hundreds of ¥ ‘
$1.50 Values NURS designs of Rings, Scarf Pins, Brooches, Bar Pins, D e 3
5o c Lockets, Link Buttons, La Vallieres, Earrings, etc, set with $1 48 j
BARRIOS DIAMONDS. This great sale also includes Watches, s
DX Bracelets, Knives, Chains, Cigar Cutters, Cigarette Cases, Toilet $4.50, Values ;
‘ - ' Sets and scores of other elegant gift suggestions 19 8
98C (Be Sure of Address, 99 Peachtree St., Opp. Piedmont Hotel.) $ K {
We guarantee each and every BARRIOS DIAMOND to retain its trilliancy forever. We will give '
OUR GUARANTEE!“OOO to any charitable institution if it can be shown that we ever refuse to replace a stone that |
2% s does not give entire _!'"""“wl‘____,___u_-,____.,_._.._,_* iel e |
| 2N g | oy | | |
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e g """), &5: ‘ - Ys N = é’; \E '
F LU ] R | r
". e Genty’ Flat Beloher Ring '1:;7.1\':”""' or @ sur -‘"m "x'."n b.’ _‘.,“ . '
| uat ity mig | Sumbt O ma | "l Y| B et p | iperkne | Vorris :
|E e | eL B Tm'A e B el (T
= 5 08| I .Sl | |et R e u
Pendant ul.l .":u.'. - I I £» ' »
Mlled " and st .“"“‘ &\‘ :~ ‘s.-.u Stent Stwd ué ": .f“... £ '”““"'n a 8 .Ch_..fi ""
Rol | SRS o Ao e A e RL I o
e vae g 2 et S e jove | edTabell Woue il | Antler, Soge mise_ae |24 50¢
T. mc Gents (ur-L Fist B ‘:' .-” doc "‘"‘ "‘; ”' soc :’: .1“7_',"',," :‘.": lt"fl
St P ity g | Some————— | N | O
c;,_.. ‘'> o 8 d- - Mt - ’.','-“h" :‘ ’slz-so V‘l“e \"."\. “.48 ’\‘: ‘ !
k Ara ) i S “‘v.'“.l fiuars ’ ————————————————————— .
B | N N Ty A%
TR o Y R |
L Bo < &7 B
..‘...0:‘ i .‘ A
. - W® | Detachabie ‘ @ e| LY
‘l‘vnvl:ll ‘l'v.’t‘hu- i e s ‘w':::. : ¢ s7-‘8 :.,.“fi.”: :;:-:?' :‘: .‘,‘ \
. ~- )nv Gold Frast Brgeeh An ... - ;-::" ":'j Gold or White Diasl, -'1:"‘ R‘::*‘vv A'\r;-v.; i
e Par '.-W . c aeh ‘,' :;nw -l":'. ::N" "‘:..':.‘ .’nia.i ;.u. “""A’CmL".G"I!\Y“::O::C.‘O' :.. :‘1:: —".u’ ..,‘ (‘:':.. nu.«»fi-m: e
sh%Be | U 8 AT ke Wateh sné Sraseiet doie Pinies whae sieel sk U Vl%
Watches at Reduced Prices| . Do not confuse genuine BAR
opes vnnes vws | _IVIAIL ORDERS FILLED |s s sat
Out eut the designs you wish and send with CUITOREY Or MODOY OF. |Lamite or alleged fancy-named
Christmas der and we will immediatelv send articles selected, postage prepaid [crystals
[
E{f HARDING & CO.{
¢ ' ' "99 PEACHTREE STREET '
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA, GA. .SU.\'DAY, DECEMBER 5, 1910.
(
' Says End of World ;_
Is Almost at Hand
WASHINGTON, "PA;, Dec. 4.— |
{ The people of the world are now $
living in the “latter days,” and
that the end of the world is but a
( few days away, is the doctrine |
preached here by E. M. Reed, an §
elder in the Seventh Day Advent- {
ist Church. In a declaratian, $
which he has had published Inds
spread broadcast, he said that the ¢
time when the world shall end is '
almost at hand, and that people /
should prepare for the final day.
G| T e I R TP WP T N
eligible for marriage,
The Tungus veligion is nil, save
that they believe in certain good and
evil spirits to be propitiated. Trad
ing reindeer and white fox hides is
the principal occupation, and in bar
tering anything, from-a Siberian ice
plant to the tribal crown, the report
declares, they outpoint the New Eng
land® Yankee in a . hundred different
ways. The delight of the Tungus in
getting the better of a trade, accord-
Ing to the report, “is the finest ex
perience of his life.”
Medicines Novelty to Tribe.
Until the arrival of the. museum
explorers the eat-and-laugh code had
cured ills from the day of the first
tribesman. Then the medicines of
the visitors made a . hit, and one
woman swallowed enough poison to
kill an elephant, but with no more
suffering than if she had drunk 80
much water,
No young Shakespeares or new
Longfellows were discovered, as- the
Tungus code of living makes no pro
vision for public schools, and conge
quently reading and writing with
them are among the lost arts.
The expedition reports that it Wwas
met with kindness and curiosity, The
members made a thorough study of
the language, manners, customs and
bellefs, and obtained many ethnologi
cal specimens covering all the Tun-
Bus arts and trades. . U. Hall
headed the museum's party, which
accompanied that of Oxford Univer
sity.
Out-of-Town Waifs in New York
School Must Find Foster
Parents in City,
NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—One hundred
Hunter College girls are looking for
guardians who are residents of Naw
York City.
Unless the ‘“college waifs”—as they
are known at Hunter—all find New
Yorkers for. guardlans at once they
will have to leave the college. The
flock looking for foster parents in
this city all live outside New' York.
Under the recent opinion of an emi
nent attorney Hunter College can no
longer offer free education to any
but residents of this city.
There are 600 girl students at Hun
ter. Five hundred meet the require
ment of “actual residence in New
York City.”
Several of the remaining hundred
have dlready found obliging friends or
relatives to adopt them, according to
President George Samler Davis.
The legal decision was handed
down by Paul Fuller, Sr,
“In view of the financial stress
under which Hunter College now
finds itself, it seems incumbent upon
the board to be strict in its interpre
tation of the term ‘actual resident,’ "
Mr. Fuller says in his opinion,
“The term ‘actual resident” has
herctofore been construed to mean
people who live in New York City,”
President Davis told The American
recently. “Those who come here to
gain the advantages of Hunter are
‘actual residents’ if they live in this
city while they are attending the coi
lege. we have believed.
“Many people consider that the
stand of certain taxpayers who pro
test against this liberal application
of the term, is short-sighted. In some
cases women from the outside bring
their’ families to New York. Houses
or apartments are opened up. Tax
values depend upon population, and
the presence of these families here
helps boost real estate values.
“Many of Hunter College’s friends
believe it far more patriotic for vs
to give free education to these Amer
icans from outside our city than to
young women born and raised across
the seas, and merely ticketed to New
York.”
Dons Bridal Gown
" Then Drops Dead
BINGHAMTON, N, Y., Dec. 4.—Miss
Edna Keyes, 23 years old, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. G. Keyes, dropped dead
while preparing for her marriage to
Gordon Sweetland.
Miss Keyes had not been in good
health for the last few weeks, but all
the presarnlons had been made for
the wedding and she refused to consent
to a postponement, especially as she had
been feeling better for the last few
days and she and her fiance had ar
ranged to start immediately after the
ceremony on a trip to California.
She arose early, and while putting on
her bridal gown collapsed. She died
before medical aid gould be summoned.
Finds Lots of Thi
In Pushecart Rai i
PHILADELPHIA, Dee. 4 —Here's
what a chemist found in raisins sold in
bulk from a pushcart by William Wolli
son:
Pleces of prunes, beans and rice,
strands and human hair and cat fur,
cotton and wood fiper of all colors, straw
and snatches of bran, a batch of in
sect wings and a few legs, cigar and
cigarette ashes, a cigarette paper mel
lowed with age.
The chemist, Professor Charles H. La-
Wall, of the State Dairy and Food Com
mission, testified to finding that assort
ment In Wollison's raisins when the
pushcart merchant was arraigned bey
fore Judge Davis. A jury quickly con
victed Wollison and Judge Davis fined
him S6O and costs.
3Y Needed to
Build Alaska Road
SEATTLE, Dec. 4.-—Thomas Rigfs.
Jr.” member of the Alaska Engineering
Commission constructing the Govern
ment's Alaska railroad, sald on his ar
rival here that if Congress appropriated
$9,000,000 a year the line from tidewa
ter, at Seward, to Falirbanks, the in
terior terminys, could be ‘completed in
three years. ,Rifigs said theQeurveoy vir
tually was completed and ready for the
constructors. Eight miles of steel have
been laid.
“Mining near Fairbanks ghould see
great development as soon as the coal
from the Nena fields can be laid down
ready for the operators,” said Riggs.
'C. D. CHEATHAM
@ GENERAL DISTRIBUTOR
l For the GREATEST AMERICAN WHISKEY
Distilled and Bottled by ‘
TAYLOR & WILLIAMS
Registered! Distillery No. 240, sth Distriet, Ky.
- I whiske
wby o ddoulit
i i’ ] 'mi r.d the fl:“uw::j i
T
| i ed a rich, l-d}lo"; |
‘, )] l{ 'l):\ uuu..nldp endi
| oW isite
AL el
P g caie st
0 \ s 1 i
fPI o
Y, QLu‘A ,14" ou can get just that
73 "gf"f“‘-v'fi {indc(whiskey it
, {{ SERAR vill be really good.
1 ‘qut A\ 3 |
b P AaS YELLOWSTONE
“WD::&&‘N .| Pesesses all the
v above qualities, and
y«;:! kcn .ul:e‘;his
s wit
BN o] o vou health and
Ofy IRANR | satusfaction to your
{WW ] taste,
i . bmt_ .&F.TMU Price, Expross Propaid
< RN 1 Quart, $ 1.50
1 "I ‘l 'li!"I B 2 Quarts, 2.60
i ((EEEE] 4 Quarts, 5.0
il :l!, | 6 Quarts, 7.50
ki v ¢ 12 Quarts, 12.60
C. D. CHEATHAM , SERERAL
QK Wholesale Mail Order Liquor Dealer
| P.0.80x 244 1221.1223 Market Street |
l Chattaneoga, Tennessee )
. B - '
Get Ac inted With Us Through the
Wor’d’c Most _Wonderful Offer {flfi
Not a 4-Year-Old Whiskey—Not a 5-Year-Old Whiskey ‘.‘ > L.
But Genuine 6 -Year- Old Bottled - in- Bond b e
0 " S _’;
Vv B
GEF
BOTTLED IN BOND N —
]
1 Quart 75 Cents (Express 2
4 (Juarts $3.00 PAID 7
Ilaf 8 ¥ ' 43' e P <
Introductory offer to new cusfomers R I
only —and but one shipment te each. ] Be PR | N
An offer never before made. An offer absolutely BDT“_[ DIN BONU
unraulleled sodnm‘r(hatnoonebut Detrick k -
sel ln'dl'«”mm the distillery to you—would attempt it. Just think, «T,".\"_ :
Bettied in Bond Pure whiskey of the rarest flavor, most en. lE@) s /
trancing aroma and genuine medicinal qualities, practically Seven 5 “tj .
Summers Old —such a whiskey as costs $1 or more every day inj 78
the year--for 75 cents a quart or $3 for four quarts—with every cent] ”
of the express prepaid by us,
Why such a generous offer? Because we know that every person ’
who tries this whiskey will use no other brand. The first #:.!o fi (931’.0
will delight you—the first quart will convince you—you will never Lp
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is genuine bottled-in-bond whiskey— absolutely pure. The United Végglskk‘,
States Government ?mn stampg protect you and are a guarantee &
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medicine chest or sideboard should never be without a bottle of
Detrick’s in time of"emrr;c:\'(r‘ _l.g"::'a:ftm necessity. Our whis- b IN WO
kt‘.:"ndt,:o:d :!:lu:":'-whn: ?-oul can taste the goodness and “ nm.umm'
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DETRICK DISTILLING O.ANY Dept, 19 DAYTON, OHIC
\
. DOLDEN JUBIL EE Ao ’
! m P h > " I
{
O-IN.,
GREAT SPECIAL OFFER KL
To commemorate our 50th Birthday (A e
—to celebrate our half-century of 3 )
unparalleled success—we present the ( L
greatest offer in our entire history, (,
SEND US YOUR ORDER FOR ~m ‘
—— g g 4
Four Full Quart Bottles s 20 ’ -TQ\ R
Hayner Private Stock — i ; Dog | 2ty
Bottled-in-Bond Whiskey : - J"'"
at our regular price of o ""\
AND WE WILL INCLUDE i
One Pint Bottle of , X
Hayner Golden Jubilee B 3 A (1
Whiskey (value 75¢) ¥ ’%\ :
Express Charges Paid by Us. ’RN
Nuthin‘ to compare with this offer hasever
been known. Hayner Private Stock nAY m \
Bottled-in-Bond Whiskey is the greatest - ‘3
value in America at our regular price of TOCH
$3.20 for FOUR full quarts, delivered—the | WHISKEY
only Bottled-in-Bond whiskey of this de- BOTTLED | BOND
lightful quality to be had anywhere at the N e pgrum
rice we name. And now, in honor of our s:;:__’ e
Eou\ Anniversary, we f{nclude, without s | Yegwis Ga 2
charge, a full pint bottle of Hayner Golden
Jubilee Whiskey—a rare, old whiskey we y )
have been reserving for this occasion, and ;“ %fi ) )
which would sell regularly for 75¢ a pint. W '
With every EIGHT With every TWELVE
QUART order at 56_49 QUART order at s9-’29-
Wewill eond ONE FPULLQUART w
h:fl.‘ of h::!“m Juh“l‘.u shhlfl ‘(fi‘.fl"?:“m:wgiwa“’:m
FREE 9 quarts in a 11—57.90 value for FREE~I4 quarts in all-$12.60 value
oniy I 40— 01 press ¢ harges paid. hru.b-qmchug- pad.
Mm.mdtmhth—mlwmumm.
THE HAYNER DISTILLING CO.=Dept. G-156
Address our nearest office
Da O Sl Mo Mass: Wask 2 ’
f.:::: Oh“:: Hhunmlu.'h‘mo Cit r.. m:‘sm -~ 'j::b?::“"'flk. h.
Distillery st Troy, Ohle, ESTABLISMED 1868 Capital $500,000 Full Paid
R
Chinese Gift Sh
A magnificent stock of Silks,
China, Tea, Inlaid Tables and
Chairs, imported directly from
the Orient. The first direct im
portation from China to At
lanta. %
Special Costumes For Rent
All kinds of Chinese Musica!
Instruments.
.
Quong Yau Hing Go,
JOE JUNG, Manager.
34 Luckle Street.
PARALYSIS Speeretsitan
r or f
By Dr. Chase's Special Blood and Nerve T:::loeu
Dr. Chase, 224 N. Tenth Street, Philadelphia, Py
DR.TI.T.GAULT
SPECIALIST (for men)
32 inman Buikding
b Qooruts
NADIr TF) 5 4
SOl :' ONLY :
' A W it d
oo f=N gy TR
) regs J, i
: f »‘?‘ :?&h:lkey or qull?s 1,3:{“
Bl 4 Quarts $1.95
SEEE e -
§ W 100 PROOT
g oo WHISKEY.
'/.f f BOR PN ‘(-):;fisninxlootu(b wil
oL L eYy
e 1 than nl'i cgcl}‘y :'«3.’;
yOO PROC ) g-lng. >
STRUGIn HNEST J Rememberwe turnis
; ‘ ;ou wish more than
! - our quarts, remit so;
Sol 2 Gallons $3.7 %
‘ fl 3 Galions $5.50
1 1 7 ' 1 gthh full 100 PROOS
] s ) Il Government teste.
' N N o 1 fihfi?ki'l direct from
M, g Vi Resinirna Do
! {ou ever tasted ship |
! ack and we will re
e fund your monox.
w_‘_”__'_,_:,_' <1 drl:::urn ad and 24
RUSH DIST.CC
§ Jacksonville, Fia