OCR Interpretation


The Chattanooga news. [volume] (Chattanooga, Tenn.) 1891-1939, January 08, 1918, LATE EDITION, Image 12

Image and text provided by University of Tennessee

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85038531/1918-01-08/ed-1/seq-12/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for 12

12
THE
CHATTANOOGA NEWS
TUESDAY, JANUARY , 1918.
Smoke Inhalation
Expels Catarrh
Send Ten Cents for Trial Outfit
I Cmfi
There must be reader Buffering from
chronic catarrh who would like to know
how they ran atop catching: cold after
cold, for they must reallae that aooner
or later hl may lead to aerfou deaf
ne and Jnjury to the nyatem In Keneral.
Dr. Bloaiier, a reapected physloinn, and
for forty-three year an enormously mir-
cecsrui apeciHiisi in
catarrh, la the dis
coverer of a pleaa-
ant, direct metnod
that can be lined
by man, woman or
, child.
His Remedy la
made from medic
inal herbs, flowers
and bcrrloa, which
you smoke In a
dainty pipe or cig
arette, and Inhale
the vapor Into all the air pasnaices. It
contalna no tobacco, even though it ia
uaed in the aame manner.
Dr. Bloaser'a Catarrh Remedy is equal
ly effective in all forma of catarrh, bron-
cniai irriiHiion,.an-
t h m a, catarrhal
headache and ear
troubles that may
load to deafness.
You will breathe
better and feel
better after using
it.
For ten cents (In
coin or etamps) a
small package will
be mailed, contain
ing some of the
Remedy made Into cigarettes, also some
Remedy for smoking In a pipe and a neat
little -pipe. Month's supply, either form,
costs one dollar. Address The Blosser
Company, Box 2711. Atlanta, Oa.
NOTE Should your druggist not carry
Dr. Bloaser'a Catarrh Remedy In stork,
he can secure it for you. Druggist do
not supply the Trial Outfita (Adv.)
MOGULS TALK OVER
DIVISION OF SPOILS
National Baseball Commission
Meets in Cincinnati p 3ettle
Year's New Problems.
CM. BUCK
Consulting Accountant and
, Auditor
Associated With Chattanooga
Adjuntment Bureau.
Hamilton Bnk Building
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Clnninatl, Jan. 8. The Annual meet
ins; of the national baseball commls
aion began here today with many Im
portnnt matters before it ror consul
eration.
One of the principal question I
the dlvlMlon of the world's aeries
money. It was stated aeml-ornciaiiy
that alight modifications In the plan for
dividing the receipts among- the first
four clubs in both the National and
American leagues would, be consid
ered. The new plan, It was under
stood, would provide that a fixed sum
for each member on the pennant win
ning team, namely $2,000 for the win
ners of the world's Bcries and
$1,400 fo rthe losers, would
anply only to such players as had been
with their teams at least eight weeks
before the series. The amounts to be
paid the other players who had been
with their clubs only a short time
would be fixed by the commission.
The schedule committees of both
major leagues will hold their Joint
meeting after the commission adjourns
and decide upon playing dates for the
Beason,
MISS STINSON TELLS WHY WOMEN
SHOULD MAKE THE BEST FLYERS
MAMAUX AND HERZ0G .
TO BE TRADED SOON
t
New York, Jan. 8. With major
league magnates heading toward Cin
cinnati for the first big meetings of
the year today, ttilk of baseball trades
was In the air. The disposal of Char
ley Herzog by the New York Giants is
Interesting fandom here and it Is be
lieved Henog will eventually land with
the Chicago Cubs. The Boston Braves
are also said to be after the Giant
captain.
Though the name of Al Mamaux ap
pears last on the list of National
league pitchers announced yesterday,
the young Pirate slabman Is In great
demand. His sale, or a trade that will
release him from Pittsburg-, is expected
by tonight
SERVICE FLAG
COUPON
Remember the Fighters
How you can yet this
splendid Service Flag
for only 60c. All that
is necessary for you
to do is to clip this
coupon and bring it
or send it to The
News with 60c in cash
and this Patriotic
Flag is yours. If or
dered by mail add 7c
for packing and postage.
BE A BELL TELEPHONE
OPERATOR
Here is a splendid opportunity for a
few girls between the ages of 16 and 24
years, who have a Grammar school edu
cation and who reside permanently in
r this city.
WE PAY YOU TO LEARN
and increase your pay with regularity.
No piece work. No slack work. No lay
ofrs.
You can do your tfbit" amid pleasant
surroundings in a congenial occupation
by acting quickly.
CUMBERLAND TELEPHONE
ec TELEGRAPH COMPANY
INCORPORATED
k f ''NW
Mias Katharine Stinaon, her shown at the wheel, probably thinks and acts more rapidly than any man
iator. From hands and feet to the brain along courses indicated by dotted lines sensory impressions and
otor impulses travel more rapidly in woman than in nan, du to her higher nerve ear-up. This is ens big
avii
motor
reason why women ars destined forair supremacy, she says.
(By Kstherine Stinaon.)
xMisa Katherino Stlnson, a "chit
of a frlrl," only 22, recently broke
the American nonstop aviation
record for both women and men
and set tip a new world's record
for a flight by a woman by flying;
610 milos from San Diego to San
Francisco, Cat., in nine hours.
Miss Stlnson became an aviatrix
in order to earn money to Irain
herself as a concert pianist. She
says she would rather be a song
bird singing throuph dor fingers
on the ivory ltey" that the eagle's .
mate. She wants to complete her
musical studies in Europe. She
. has written exclusively for The
News a scries of three 'articles, ot
which this is the first, on why'
women make greater fliers that?1
men and how other girls can fol
low tier example nnd become
queens of the air. Editor's Note.)
Woman, tf'henever she wants it, can
have mastery of the air.
Nature has especially equipped her
for soarings physically as well as spir
itually. From sweeping, cooking and moth
ering to cldud-skimming may seem
liko a far flight, but it Is precisely
these domestic virtues which qualify
her for aerial pre-eminence.
Cleanliness, patience, attention to
detail and caution, coupled with a
more highly organized nervous sys
tem and "intuition," give her essential
advantages over the other sex. ,
It was a fine bit of symbolism which
Bent Mother Gooae, the first sky-rider,
tnto tne piue on a uroom.
Science frays that a woman's sensory
impressions are translormed into mo
tor impulsts more rapidly than man's:
that her mind works by short-cuts to
relinble conclusions.
This means closer co-ordination be
tween brain and eyts, and hands and
foet manipulating the controls, giving
a big advantage when split seconds
may count for life or death,
1 am never conscious of reasoning
as a man reasons, step by step, wihil3
sof.rlng. My decisions are impulsive.
That they arc reliable is testified to by
six years of tf.ying without a esrious
mishap. .'.
And-1 tWnk I'm typically feminine
In this respect.
Woman's natural t'diness and atten
tion to detail count swpromeiy in avia
tion. They impel her to keep the deli
cate machinery polished and clean.
Pust in the motor might prove fatal
carelessness. Sp.fety in flying depends
upon tho most minute watchfulness.
It begins on the ground by detecting
In my record-breaking flight from
San IUgo to Snn Francisco this waa
brought heme to me acutely. On the
day I was to start I found the motor
was "misRln.tr" and other things wore
wrong. So I waited until I had per
sonally gone over the entire machine.
Only a little dust in the carburetor.
But it would have prevented a record
flight athj could ha.ve been serious.
A man might have gone on, trusting
to luck.
Patience Is another cardinal virtue
of aviation. Lack of it has written
much of the profession's tragedy,
Here a woman also excels the average
man. That, together with her regard
for detail, makes her an excellent me
ehanic, once hor talents are' thua di
reeled.
I think the "tomboy" the girl who
possesses both the intuitive faculties
of t er sex and the initiative faculties
sourcefulness of the boy la ideally
fitted to excel in aviation.
I am Just an ordinary girl, no more
courageous, clever or self-reliant than
the avernc-e American woman.
learredito fly six year ago, after two
months' training. Conquest of the air
has come to mo very naturally and
easily. It has been my work, stripped
of nil romance, mystery or hunt for
thrills.
I went into it purely to earn money
to study music, which is my great am
bition. !'?. rather master a piano than
make an altitude record or perform
new skv stunt.
But aviation offers a remarkable op
portunities for women. It is an almost
nnexnlored realm, and one field where
actually the "sky Is the limit."
VANDY SEEKING GAME
WITH TECH NEXT YEAR
rSenro-fn. Terb han rn.llpil off necrttlfli
tions seeking a game with Kutgers in
New York for Oct. 19 of next season
Pourparlers of the two institutions
have been unable to agree upon guar
antees and other considerations, and
Frank Freeman, representing the
Golden Tornado, has dropped the venture.
Vanderbllt has offered to play Tech
In Atlanta on the open date, but the
Commodores have demanded such an
enormous guarantee that Dr. J. B.
Crenshaw, athletic director at the
Georgia School of Technology, has
stated that he will not meet it Coun
ter proposals have been made, and It
seems likely that Tech will Invade
Nashville or ' the Commodores will
agree to appear in the Georgia city.
The failure of Georgia Tech to land
the game with Rutgers will be a dis
appointment to 1fie southern fans who
wanted to impress the New York fol
lowers of the 1 gridiron with the
strength of this section, but it has
paved the way for two big games in
1919.
It is almost certain that Georgia
Tech and Pittsburg, the two most fa ,
mous teams in the country today, will
clash in the Smoky City.
CARDINAL CHIEF
LOVES HIS ROGERS
A few days ago Branch Rickey, the
facetious president of the St. Louis
Cardinals, was in a humorous mood
and decided to tell the world just what
he would take for his bright shining
star, Rogers Hornsby.
To Chicago the magnanimous
Rickey offered Hornsby for $100,000
and Pitchers Grover . Alexander and
Jim Vaughn.
To New York he consented to trade
Hornsby for a cash consideration
(amount unknown) and players
Fletcher Kauff, Bums and Schupp.
Of course these offers were not made
In earnest. It was just Rickey's way
of telling that Hornsby was not for
sale at any price which would be con
sidered reasonably by anyone else.
But thenj was something to think
about in the two offers and it dates
back several years in baseball.
Along about 1908 the New York
Giants paid Indianapolis something
like $12,500 for Rube Marquard.
The baseball world sat up In aston
ishment. Marquard was the highest
priced baseball player who had ever
-been bought or sold.
That was the beginning of the era of
buying ballplayers; an era which con
tinues and is costing men who would
build up , championship ball clubs,
thousands of dollars every year.
Marty O'Toole was the next big sale.
Marty brought $22,500 on the Market.
Larry Chappelle waa the next to come
from the minors at a fancy price.-
Then Connie Mack decided to break
up his wonderful ball club and the
climax came when he disposed of Eddie
Collins for $50,000.
This was the greatest deal in base
ball until Charley Weeghman came
along this fall and bought Alexander
and Killefer for a price estimated at
from $75,000 to $80,000. although in the
meantime Tris Speaker was sold by
Boston to Cleveland for a price said to
equal that paid for Collins.
Is there a limit? ;
Probably not so long as men in base-
bnll are willing to pay money for ball
players who will give them a pen
nant winning team.
The only thing Improbable about
Rickey's offer is that he should ask
for valuble players In addition to a
lot of coin. The coin that is any
amount . within the wildest kind of
reason probably would bo forthcom
ing if the player was wanted badly
enough, but the man who Is after a
championship will not trade his good
players.
OUR JITNEY OFFER This and 5e.
DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this
slip, enclose with Be and mall, it to
Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave,, Chi
cago, 111., writing you iy name and ad
dress clearly.- You will receive in re
turn a trial package containing Foley's
Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs,
colds and croup; Foley. Kidney Pills,
for pain in sides and back; rheuma
tism, backache, kidney and bladder
ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tab
lets, a wholesome and thoroughly
cleansing cathartic, for constipation,
biliousness, headache ' and sluggish
bowels. Jo Anderson, Druggist, Chat
tanooga, Tenn. (Adv.) ,
son. The barge line plan involves the
expenditure of about $18,000,000 in the
building of 200 steam barges -ana six
teen towboats. The use of such s
fleet, it is claimed, would release more
than 12,000 freight cars and many lo
comotives.
CROUP at MIDNIGHT; WELL In
MORNING -
' "A few nights ago one of my patrons
had a small child taken - with croup
about midnight," writes M. T. Davis,
Bearsville. W. Va. "They came to my
store and got a bottle of Foley's Honey
and Tar. Before morning the child
was entirely recovered. The father's
name is C. C. Craven." Isn't it unwise
to experiment with unknown cough
medicines when you can get the gen
ulne Foley's Honey and Tar? Best
for coughs, colds, crdup and lagrlppe.
Jo Anderson, Druggist, Chattanooga,
Tenn. (Adv.)
;dmondsoi
a School of Business fcl
Shorthand. Typewriting, Bookkeeping.
canning, renmansnip, , civil Service
and all commercial branches. Indi
vidual Iratructlon. DAY and NIGHT
SCHOOL.
IX V. ECMONPRCN. LL.B.M.ACCU..
Preat. ,
th Floor Volunteer State T.lfe feld
HEINEMANN AGAIN
, LEADS PELICAN TEAM
" New Orleans. Jan. 7. A. J. Heine- I
mann waa re-elected president of the j
New Orleans Baseball and Amusement I
company, the New Orleans member of
the Southern association, at a meet
ing of the directors tonight Heine-
tnann stated the 1918 -managership
would be offered to .John Dobbs, who
handle the Pelicans last year.
I., - i
ST. LOUIS-NEW ORLEANS
BARGE LINEJARLY PLAN
St Louis. Jan. 7. Predictions that
i a St Louis-New Orleans barge line
wouia oe in operation on the Missis
sippi river within eight months was
made today by James E. Smith, pres
ident of the Mississippi Valley Water
ways association, on uis return from
Washington, where he conferred with
Secretary McAdoo ar.d President WU-
r
Old Age
Will
Hesitate'
to lay his fingers across the
face of' the man who has at
tended to his eye wants and
kept his vision clear with
the KRYPTOK, the lens
which gives and returns the
youthful appearance ' and
which as a double vision
without the marring lines
common to ordinary glasses.
Harris & Hogshead
Optometrists and Manufac
turing Opticians.
13 East Eighth Street.
Phone Main 676.
" THE OLD HCUARLI"
k'-f- .. - 1 -1 smvtx a
3i.
REMHOYron MEN
OF COURSE YOU WANT TO JOIN OUR
CHRISTMAS SAVINGS CLUB NOW,
; FORMING.
Thousand of people find it an easy way to accumulate money.,
for vacational purposes, for taxes, insurance premiums, to
build a home, or for sunny days. , . . , V
FOR FULL INFORMATION SEE WINDOW NO. 5.
Hamilton Trust Savings Bank
Corner Market and Main Sts. Branch Bank, Fossville, Ga.
RESOURCES ................ $2,500,000.00
REPUBLIC and DIAMOND TIRIS
Out-of-Town Dealers Write for Proposition. . .
1146 MARKET ST.
Phones Main 115, 608, 1475
I
jftjjgjg Pile Remedy
Let us show you a different remedy from any other, . Merltol Pile
Remedy is used both externally and Internally. Neglect the treatment of
Piles and the conditions .rapidly become worse. Relieve' .yourself of this
ailment at home by using Merltol Pile Remedy. A tclal will convince you
of Its merit Sold only by us. '60c and $1.00 the package. '.
JO ANDERSON, Chattanooga, Tann.
IF
tyg uiiu uvl
WE HAVE IT!
Chattanooga Lumber Co.
n i
IT'S
. rinass n
il nSIMOPI'r
jiiiiwm u
21st and Whiteside.
Phones M. 440-441.
As Friedman's Go, So Goes the Fashion.
Buy all the
Clothes You
Possibly Can
-NOW
Next winter, the
same quality, if you
can get it, will cost
considerably more.
As far back as last spring,
when we were making our
purchases of woolens for
this Fall and Winter, we
foresaw the present wool
situation and increased costs
in the production of men's
clothing.
So, now, while you can
still buy Friedman's all-wool
Suits and $
Overcoats "Jl
we advise that you buy all you can. t . ' r
You know that our Government will require more and'
more woolen fabrics as the army grows bigger. Uncle Sam is
already recommending the use of cotton and wool mixtures
for clothing. And you know that such a recommendation is
only one step from a command. Therefore, while Friedman
ran H11 cave mn Stinnn til nn .11 1 1 ..
j y.v.uu ,,v i.vu uu an-wooi ciotnes,
had better buy to your limit.
2.50j$jJ.50
u
JOU
"A LOOK COSTS NOTHING"
t
MAKER TO WEARER
&
830 Market St.. Cmattanooca.Tcnn.
830 Broadway , New York City
. Buy Thrift or War Saving Stamp Every Day.

xml | txt