SATURDAY EVENING, HICKORY DAILY RECORD PAGE1 THREE YOU NEED NOT SUFFER FROM CATARRH TUBERCUE0S1S It was when physicians ' said it was impossible for J. M. Miller, Ohio Drug gist to survive the rava ges of Tuberculosis, he be gan experimenting on himself, and discovered the Home Treatment, known as ADD1LINE. Anyone . i i i : t. Red Cross Workers Bound of But You Must Drive it Out of dies! which touch only the surface. To pe rid of Catarrh, you must drivb the disease germs out of your hlocttl. . Sjwcudid results have been re ported from tlic uscs of S. S. S., which acts on the catarrh germs in the blood. If you wish turdical advice as to the treatment of your own indi vidual case, write to Chief Medical Advpscr, IJ :;v.Ut ypecthe Co., At lanta Ga. Your Blood. imenoi or rvussia fitarrli is annoyit.gennnf.Tli i V.. it .-liol-c up vour nostrils z ; n,i llPz!;U - f.'rpaiViitii: lthct; l'.co!iitorts. Kc it l.uiv.i't- u'tnrn when it reaches " uhv von :'li'nlil at once rr.!i'; iitin-'riym-r f the prop I.r't.r.itni'Ht, una " tic cx- '.crinulin:: with worthier reme t'. 5i".w SO P-3-r.iii lac rtt'i tarss sho4 wim cougns snowing .tu bercular tendency of Tuber culosis "may use fit under plain di rections. Send your name and address to t A DDI LINE 239 Area de Building Columbus, Ohio i p H i CH ESTER SJP I LLS (,..,r '.. -r; wl'.h U!nc- lUobn. V fc V,,t lu'.ii n .ilu r. li'W nf your v , J , t u , l, n..wi- rn IV t,i;nfis,t.Al ways UctlaM ' SOLD BV WuiGGISTS VERWHRE j To Prevent Snfiuenza CoMr-cause Crip and Influenza LA.XA T1VJ); BKOMO QUININE Ablets remove tho au3c. There onu; 0!MJ romo Qui is ae," K. W. (inoVE'S signature on box,;' 30e. of ttei Raiii P In 1.1 iu '. &mmm M sel! you a 56 I 4 For Wear MILEAGE 1 is what you wantgood, clean, trouble-free mileage. That's what you pay out your Tire and Tube mpiiey for. The more mileage you get, the more you getifor your money. Gillette Tires and Tubes cive you the longest run for your cash. They out-distance f tnem an in; wear ana oy many miles. The new Gillette' Chilled Rubber Process toughens them as iron is toughened by conversion into steel. Strengthens them; gives them vitality and come-back power unparalleled in the history of Tire and Tube manufacture. They give you miies of wear Imm -after others are -.VrA A lt-mtfa nnn nmrtt wil worn out 9 One Gillette will prove up 'j our claims and more and JOHNSON'S GARAGE Red Cross workers follow the fiag no matter how far into hostile terri tory. The picture shows a party of nurses and workers leaving- Vladivostok for the interior for work with the American forces. FORMER ATLANTAN LOST RETURNS TO CITY t 9 1 lL J Si 1 1 i ? VS.'k a'rrrrft ,cq& S3 14 V3 ziT.I-jiSa fc. if?saa BSse "rv m Vnfc By C. E. Bruffey in Atlanta Con stitution. Marcel lus E. Thornton, an Atian tan all 'his days up to Cleveland's fir.st administraticn and all that time enc of the leading citizens and widely-known journalists, hut now a wealthy and influental eiti zen of Hickory, N. C, came back to his old home a few days ago to shake - hands with old friends and to visit relatives. And before he had been in town two hours Colonel Thornton got lost in the highways and byways. Just think of that, you who knew him years ago when nothing less than all Atlanta was his home. Just think of ' , ' Colonel Marcellus E. Thornton be ing lost in the town with which he had grown up and which he had helped all his life here to build. Why, the time wras when Colonel Thornton could have drawn a com plete map of Atlanta and couk'-have done it with his eys shut. "It's a fact," said Colcnel Thorn ton, 'when twitted hy some - old friends about being lost. "And that isn't the worst of it. I was lost i. 1 j" ti t i i; i.wjco ana com Times i naa ro-appeai to the cap on the beat to put -mo right. First I got lost on Broad street, and it was on that street I passed more than hnlf the life I spent '-in. At'n ;'-', f c:i that street were th ; iicvipap.:r -shops and the pi !nt sh jps a;; l they were my homes ir. these good old days. Then I got lost iii front of the Kimbjall, Tho town was terribly torn up. I guess I had the first grocery store in Atlanta after Sherman went out. I get hold of a part of a stock and opened a place on Decatur street in about the only building left on thfit street. Shortly after Howell Glenn put up "a shack on Whitehall and opened a grocery store and, for a while, we had the field. When I used to write about the future of Atlanta I was advised to pause and heed. But I never doubted Atlanta's fu ture in tnose days, in either do l doubt it now. Here I see, in 1919, ta'o 3 . ... , . - m tit A TT ana f 4I - fit V M 46 Ask: " 4 " dimford Hai dware Go. 5T o i ! i t : i 'i .f -J' 4 1 .1 J.JU ' 5 I ,waavp u;.iA 4ji one Heat oi laxs rcaiar Icablo Iioater ss a ''cr iasihig fiicnd when economy and jvi neat oay and ngat aro a necessity. J4ays to inves&srate. 7.1 '! sSiwial I ' k tTA7Mi - ------ f WiWST- 608. SLEfia AHD' B!1ICHT. OSES ANY FUEL l! IVIih This Great Fuel Savins Heaters Act WOW! Why S?lo Cee4 Yofir FuoS Bill in EJaS? !9? Vmt tfar fpaeiaw Da V WWII SaBlJWBJ w w wihile I was iiunting for the Kimball : did' the saluting itself. But that s not strange., con sidering that the Kimball had no Pcachtrce 'entrance back in the early eighties, .when I left here." But CoMcncl Thornton should not blame Atlanta because he did know, the Atlanta of today, not xor y-i-i.- nta not knew the tar-heel vis iter because he came disguised. Colonel Thornton this time . was not accompanied by his high silk hat, a dicer to which he has always been partial. Instead he ,wbre a derby, aild a derby does not sit so wsll on J ever left Atlanta but that came Colonel Thornton's head as a high i back again. But all these are gone ilk. now. All - were irood men. the best men in tho world, and they all loved, Atlanta. And that reminds me what I predicted forty years would be the Atlanta of 1925 and 1930. I remember my father buying six acres of land in Atlanta for $600 an acre, and today you can't buy a foot of it at ' that price, and there's .not a lot in all that acreage that is not now a home." It is not generally known, but just the same, Colcnel Thornton served the confederacy, and it is now in these days of reunions one of his greatest prides. . "I was first in the ordance de partment," says the colonel, "but at the instance of Vice-President Stephens, was . transferred ' to the commissary department. My father was with the Fulton Dragoons, one cf Atlanta's cavalry companies, and served through the 'war. Later in the 'war we organized here in At lanta an artillery company. General William McRae, after the war vith the Western and ' Atlantic, was made captain and I secretary. -After the war was over, Colonel W. A. Hemp hill was made captain of the com pany, and it was that company that Oakland ceme tery for years on Memorial day. "Yes, Atlanta, has changed very much. How I now recall the old days when the late Colonel Alston, the late Colonel Avery and the late Henry V. Grady were my chums and when his familly was away from home I used to livo with him and how I- en vied him that pleasant home. Then when Colonel Gary W. Styles, an other friend of those days, came back to Atlanta from Texas, I re member writing of him: No one . f 4rM THE PLAN r For 50 weeks, deposit weekly 25 cents, 50 cents, $1, 2, $5,. $10, $20, (or more). No cost to join. No dues. You do not lose any part of what you deposit. , t THE PURPOSE At the end of 50 weeks you can draw out $12.50, $25, $50, $100, $250, $1000 (or more) and have ready money. But the purpose of this club is to give you a way to save money regularly and let it accumulate for some future use, such as educating your chil dren, buying a new home or going into business. In only 250 weeks, which will pass by rapidly, ycu will accu mulate" $02.50, $125, $250, $5C0, $125$ $2500, $5000 or more. Our "Weekly Savings Club" is for those who can deposit eith th large or small sums. The main idea is to bank your money reg ularly. You can save do it. Begin now. You will receive three per cent interest Consolidated Trusto TUnr wa when tbfire was not a better known or a better liked man in all Atlanta than Colonel Marcel-j that I love Atlanta, still, and some lus E. Thornton. His , father's death back here. But . who . can tell? shortly after the war left him prac tically the head of the family and it was his greatest delight to care for those at th1? old home. And this he did well and chrerfuily, first at irange things have 'happened. And times I find myself wishing I were then there was my old friend, Joe Harris. Many is the time we had i.u&ivtiiv ft xi y vi 1111 alio 1111111 his trode, that cf a candymakcr, ' was away from home he islept half m tm to tvint i $ ij. 1 -,.vv V- fv-ii':1 'v,. -al:r.-7 . I and then as a newspaper worker In his very young days he had a hankering .for newspaper life and wlhei nt at work he wras almost constantly hanging around the print shops in the city. So it was not v! .van ire when cne day he found his efforts to become a worker reeog rized by employment as a reporter cn one of the -Atlanta papers. Carev "W.. Styles, Robert Alston, St. Clair Abrams, E. Y. Clarke, I. W. Avery, W. W. Scruggs and others of that time were his ideals, and it was these great newspapermen he tried his best to emulate. v Full of energy,' ever " ready to work, no assignment too hard to un dertake, Thosnton was not . long in making a foothold among the best. rf Atlanta s repnrtcrial workers. Always a hustler, his services were in demand, and, during the latter six ties and seventies, he worked at var ious times on every paper published in Atlanta ' during those years. And, besides that, he had the big gest string cf papers outside of At lanta to serve daily by wire.' Dui ing all those years he had an abun dant faith in Atlanta and its future y-nd wps ever ready, in his way to boost the good town along. "I always believed in John C. Calhoun's prophetic words ' about Atlanta." he was wont to sy in M . Shearing short trousers, but with out i i.. rig nose. Colonel Thornton was in Atlanta- during the seige ar.r: tell? et with vividness many' of the terrible scenes of, those days. . "Our home was then cn Forsyth street, at Garnett, where the J ewish synagogue was afterward erected," he says. "And after- Sherman went cut we couldn't walk the street be cause of the debris and dead horses. his nijrhts in rav room on Broad street, and there he wrote many of his first Uncle Remus stories. At that time I wns writing jny poem, Our Immigrant. That was back in 71, and I have only very recently completed that poem, which will make a 700-folio volume. "Atlanta is the same Atlanta of thirty-five years ago. and yet it i? no1 It irias the san:,3 narrow, crooked streets, amounting almost . to malformation. It has some of the same three and four-story houses of old But" my. Just look at the great, sky-touching ibuildings, that seem to. ' almost go out of sight. When I ( wras .working in Atlanta I used to 'keep up a tirade in the pa pers for a widening and straight ening of the streets. It could have been done then at no , cost. Now it is impossible. But do you know I have heard it said that these same narrow, crooked-istreets" have " al ways been an asset to Atlanta, and it may be that they have." WATER POWER SITE SEALED bids for the Thornton wnter- power site on Catawba river will be receiv ed bv mail addressed to P. O. Box 448 Hickory, N. G., until Tuesday January -20th ' at noon. , Right to reject bids,' reserved. 107 The Question of Proteciion No life insurance policy is complete unless it carries a dis ability clause, for the reason that protection against disability, with its consequent loss' of earning power, is just as important to the insured as protection against his death is necessary to his beneficiary. PACIFIC MUTUAL policies contain the MOST - LIBERAL disability clause that is possible in an insurance contract. It provides that in the event of the total and permanent disability of the insured, NO FURTHER PREMIUM payments will be required, and that a MONTHLY INCOME of $10 -a month for each thousand dollars of the face value of the policy WILL BE PAID THE INSURED as long as he lives, and the FULL FACE VALUE of the policy will still be paid to the beneficiary upon the death of the insured. ALL THIS AT THE REGULAR PAi CIFIC MUTUAL RATES. There is no extra charge for the disa bility provision. 5 CAN ANY INSURANCE CONTRACT DO MORE?. And why buy one that does less ? V PACIFIC MUTUAL policies cost no more, and many times the cost is less, than those , of other standard, old line, legal reserve companies. . r Now while you are thinking of taking out that life insurance YOU KNOW YOU NEED ask AIKEN about the PACIFIC MU-: TUAL policies. It v.T.l pay you to do so. H. R. AIKEN DISTRICT MANAGER , The Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. (Office over the McLellan Store) '"'' "aa--niwlT '''itriT.rrrmxtafliinjaf, V.! 1 - .. f"" KTT . jm mi Money back without Question if HUNT'S Salve fail in the treatment of ITCJrl, ECZEMA. -RINGWORM, TETTER or other itching skxn diseases. Try HICKORY PRAIii LIPM HAJOC 1 - ;sr . - 4 - - ' r ... aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWaaaaaaa)aaaaaaiaaaa ii ' lil'M - - 'V . Seel - : Si & Johnnsoini i I At