Newspaper Page Text
Page BUM.
THE ATHENS DAILY HERALJL '
SATURDAY EVENING. JANUARY 31, 1M4.
Changeable Climate
13 A CONSTANT THREAT TO THE
HEALTH OF THE PEOPLE.
I>r. Hartman, of Columbus, Ohio,
discusses an Important health topic.
He s*ya:
Yes. it is the climate, not the germi,
that we have to fear in this country.
The germs are present, to be sure,
and are of Home significance in
diagnosis. Climate, a changeable
climate, is the true cause of disease.
The atmospheric pressure varies, the
humidity of the atmosphere changes.
Every day the temperature rises and
falls. All this presents to the body
very great trials to adjust to.
The area of high pressure forms in
the northwest. Moves rapidly south
east, subjecting Trillions of our
population to Its influence. The re
sult is, thousands upon thousands of
people catch cold. A small per cent.
6t these thousands do not get well of
their cold. It goes Into pneumonia,
or chronic catarrh, or bronchitis, or
laryngitis, or pleurisy.
Now, what I am getting at is this.
These climatic changes are inevitable.
No one can prevent them. The very
best we can do is to prepare for
i them, defend ourselves against them.
Good health is the best preventive.
The very best. Vigorous health,
excess vitality, this Is Nature's
preventive and protection.
We do not all have this, however.
Some of us must have assistance.
The assistance that 1 use for myself,
would recommend for my friends to
hse, my neighbors and my country
men. is Pe-ru-na. Keep Pe-ru-na In
the house.
If the children indicate they are
catching cold, give them Pe-ru-n
If the parents, the grandfather or
grandmother, present those symptoms
that arc so well known which precede
a cold, a few doses of Pe-ru-na and
the deed is done.
Some people are very subject to
colds. Others who have weak lungs
and are timid about our winter
weather, take Pe-ru-na off and on
during the whole winter season.
The plan is a good one. The medicine
is Inexpensive. It does no possible
harm to the system. It keeps the
appetite regular and keen. It
•1st* digestion and helps the user
through the inclement weather
Winter.
Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna
Lucky Day Almanac for 1014.
[markets
LOCAL DATA.
Athens middling
basis,
Spots,
13*6 c.
Tone of local market, very steady.
SPOT MARKET.
New York, 12.75.
Liverpool, 7.05.
Liverpool Cotton.
New York, January 31.—Liverpool
cables were due to come 4 to 6*6
points lower. The market opened
steady, 4 to 5 points off and closed
steady, *6 to 1*4 points off. Spots
were 4 points off. Middlings, 7.05
Sales, 6,000, including 4,000 American
For speculation and export, 500. Im
ports, 7,000, of which none were Amer
ican.
Open. Close.
RADIUM AND THE EARLY
RECOGNITION Qjy,CANCER
WILLIAM KELLER
CLAIRVOYANT
CERTAINLY IS A WONDERFUL
MAN AND IS ASTONISHING THE
PEOPLE OF THIS CITY AND
VICINITY.
So positive am I of my power to
tell the past, present and future, and
exactly what you want to know, that
I will make no charge unless you ob
tain perfect satisfaction and find me
superior to all other mediums, clair
voyants, and palmists.
The future can be told. Seek and
find success, harmony, peace, power
and happiness.
Make no mistake when you under
take anything of importance. Get his
advice. Hundreds of others have been
put on the road to furtune by him, so
why not you?
Ladies ad getlemen can visit Mr.
Keller without fear of having their
confidence betrayed as he considers
his business as a sacred trust. Mr.
Keller can be consulted at private resi
dence 635 Collate avenue, corner of
Strong street (name on window).
Hours 9 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. daily.
Readings $1.00 . No more, no lees.
Mrs. Keller receives all callers.
< (Advt.)
HERALD WANT ADS
TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION
WANTED—Oil Stove,
WANTED—Good second-hand oil
Btove, not less than two burner..
Address, W. A. Harris, Bishop, Ga.
fie
MEDICAL.
LADIES — Sell Climax sanitary
aprons, belts, shields, etc.; can
make $35 weekly. Climax Company,
| .613 N .Taylor Ave., St. Louis. j31p
MATRIMONIAL.
MARRY if you are lonely. The Re
liable Confidential Club has large
numbers of wealthY eligible members,
both sexes, wishing early marriages.
Descriptions free. Mrs. Wrubel, Box
26; Oakland, California. J24Jt31p
WHY
Eat an inferior grade of
oysters when you can
get by askingyourdealer
at the same price, for
HOPKIN’S OYSTERS
—• 1 "
caught, in Chesapeake
Bay?
Jan-Feb. , ,
6.64
6.68%
Feb-Mar. .. .
,. .. 6.65 %
6.68%
March-April .
.. .. 6.66%
6.70%
May-June .. .
6.65
6.68
June-July .. .
6.61
6.64
Jul.v-Auprd ..
....6.57*4
6.60%
Aug-Sep. .. .
6.45
6.49
Scpt-Oct. .. .
6.29%
6.32%
Oct* Nov. .. .
.. .. 6.20
6.23 %
Nov-Dec. .. .
.... 6.16%
6.19%
Dec-Jan.
.. .. 6.65%
6.65%
New
York Cotton.
Open
High. Low.
Close.
March . .12.31
12.7/ 12.26
2.32-33
May .
July .
Sept.
Oct. .
March
May .
Sept. .
Oct. .
. 12.10 12.11 12.03 12.08-0!)
. 12.01 12.05 11.96 12.03-..
. 11.75 11.80 11.75 11.82-83
. 11.50 11.63 11.45 11.50-51
New Orleans Cotton.
Open. High. Low. CloS 1
. 12 51 12.53 12.45 12.50-51
. 12.57 12.58 12.51 12.56-57
. 12.63 12.64 12.55 12.61-62
. 11.57 11.69 12.57 12.61-63
CHICAGO QUOTATIONS
WHEAT.
Open High Low Close
July .... 88*4 88% 88% 88%
May . . . .93% 93% 92% 92%
CORN.
July .
Open High Low
. . . 65 <4 65 % 65
Close
65%
May .
.. . 66 % 6615 66*4
66%
July .
OATS.
Open High Low
. . . 39*4 39*4 39%
Close
39*4
May .
. . . 39% 39% 39%
39%
PORK.
Open High Low
Close.
Jan. .
21.25
May .
. 21.65 21.65 21.50
21.57
May .
LARD.
Open High Low
. 11.17 11.17 11.10
Close.
11.12
Jan. .
. 10.80 10.80 10.77
10.77
May .
SIDES.
Open High Low
. 11.62 11.62 11.52
Close.
11.67
11.76 11.75 11.65 11.70
Cotton Seed Oil.
,
Opening.
Close.
January . .
. 7.72-7.75
7.73-7.75
February . ,
. 7.08-7.12
7.10-7.15
Mareh . , .
. .7.16-7.17
7.18-7.19
April
. .7.23-7.29
7.23-7.29
May
..7.37-7.39
7.38-7.39
July .
..7.45-7.49
7.46-7.49
November ..
. 7.55-7.58
7.57 7.58
December . .
. 7.66-7.68
7.07-7.70
WOMEN AND WET FEET.
Cold and wet feet are a dangerous
combination especially to women, and
congested kidneys often result. Back
ache, urinary irregularities and rheu
matic fevers are not unusual results.
Foley Kidney Pills restore the regular
and normal action of kidneys and
bladder and remove the cause of the
trouble. Contain no habit forming
drug8. For sale by all druggistaJ'*
everywhere. (Adv.) ^
Editor Athens Herald: Apropos of
the prominence which radium is as
suming a-s a thciapeutlc agent in the
treatment of malignant tumors, it is
not untimely to lay special emphasis
upon its known limitations as a cura
tive agent in cancer.
Radium does not cure all cases of
ancer, and should not be regarded as
i panacea for all tumor ills.
Dr. J. C. Bloodgood, surgical path
ologist to the Johns Hopkins hospital,
and a recognized authority on “tum
ors,” has repeatedly urged that more
cases of cancer can be cured by early
operations—by educating the people
and doctors to regard chronic ulcera
tions and growths on the body as
precancerous lesions. By a precan-
cerous lesion is meant a wart, or mole
or tumor which, under the influence
of trauma or brasion and increasing
age, manifests a tendency to become
malignant—to change from a benign
harmless growth into a growth the
cure of which defies the skill of the
greatest men in surgery. Some of the
cancers and obher malignant growths
start as such, and if the people and
the surgeons ' should regard all
growths as malignant until they are
proved to be otherwise, cancer would
not present such a fearful mortality.
Leadin-g-surgeons do not advocate the
radium treatment for those tumors
which are seen early and are amena
ble to radical surgical treatment.
It is imperative for the patient
with cancer early or late to under
stand that radium Is !n the experi
mental stage, apparently healing with
rapidity some cancers, aggravating
others, and having no discoverable ef
fect upon others.
Nearly all the cancers treated with
radium are in the late stage and are
not amenable to surgical treatment.
It is well for the patient with early
cancer to know that intelligent sur
gery gives the greatest hope of cure.
Dr. L. Amster has pointed out,
we need more radium, and until this
radium is secured we should give the
patient the benefit of every doubt and.
not experiment with small quantities
of the precious mineral. The surgeon
who sees the early case of cancer
holds the patient’s life in his hands*
and he should be willing to employ the
treatment which is known to yield the
greatest number of cures. - v .
As very little is known about the
cause of cancer and the conditions un
der which it flourishes our greatest
hope for reducing its high mortality
lies in its early recognition—its com
plete removal before it has invaded
the neighboring glands and territory
about the original growth. Unfor
tunately, the majority of physicians
have not had training which enables
them y> recognize the earliest forms
of cancer, and it is a known fact (a
shame upon our profession) that we
watch tumors grow until the patient
himself becomes alarmed and soeks
the advice of a surgeon who has to
fight the battle with a formidable foe
whose strength is triple or quadruple
what it was when first noticed by the
patient or physician.
The analysis of the cases of cancer
treated at the Johns Hopkins hospital
shows that the majority of the living
patients were among those having an
early complete operation—an opera
tion in -which the growth and tissue
about it and the neighboring glands
were removed.
Should radium, properly used in the
hands of skilled surgeons, be found to
sure the majority of cases, there still
remains tl^e most important consider
ation—early recognition.
As everyone knows, there is an in
cipient stage in nearly every disease;
let us compare tuberculosis with can-
cr in this respect. It is a settled fact
TWO ADDRESSES SUNDAY
AT BAPTIST TABERNACLE
WELL WORTH LISTENING TO
A treat is in store for those who
love the “best things” speritually, at
the Baptist Tabernacle on Sunday
Last Sunday in his sermon pastor
Neighbour reared to the aged vet
eran of the Cross A. F. Cowles as a
man whom he would like all his people
to know and hear.
Thursday Mr. Neighbour received a
letter stating that Mr. Cowles would
be here on Sunday.
Arrangements will be made for him
to deliver two addresses at the Tab
ernacle, one at 10 a. m. to men in the
Baraca room, and the other at 4 p. m.
open to all.
The four o*c!ock service will allow
many of friends from other churches
to attend and no one who is interested
in spiritual things can afford to miss
these messages from the man whom
God has kept on the firing line for
many, many years.
Mr. Cowles is head of the Tract De
pot of Swengle, Pa., and is being used
of God in many ways to scatter Bible
truths over the land.
He walks with God, and to be in his
presence Is a benediction.
Before buying the kid ^ new
slate, it might pay to rake over the
coal bin.—Columbia State.
Even Minority Leader Mann ia
now . willing to admit that Woodrow
Wilson is our greatest President since
William H. Tafe-lfe
the patient is given the benefit of the
doubt and adopts fresh air, dietetic
and other forms of treatment. Why
not try to grasp the situation in early
cancer, outspoken or doubtful, and
give the patient the benefit of honest
and skillful treatment from the hands
of a surgeon. Cancer is more fatal
than tuberculosis, and when treated
early would not necessitate pro
cedures which would be alarming to
the patient.
J. A. HUNNICUTT, M. D.
Athens, Ga.
STEAMSHIP COMPANY FINED.
San Francisco, January 31.—Immi
gration authorities have imposed a
fine of $1,000 against the Pacific Mai)
Steamship company for transporting
ten aliens affected with hookworm.
The authorities held that company
should have had the aliens examined
at the port of embarkation.
Trade in -Athens. f u;'
A Difference in Working Hours.
A man’s working day is 8 hours.
His body organs must work perfectly
24 hours to keep him fit for 8 hours
work. Weak, sore, inactive kidneys
can not do it. They must be sound
and healthily active all the time. Foley
Kidney Pills will make them so. You
cannot take them into your system
without good results following. For
sale by all druggists everywhere.
YAdv.)
ATTENDE DSHRINERS’ MEET.
Commercial Agent Bloodworth, of
the Central of Georgia Railway Com
pany, returned today from Augusta,
where he attended the big meeting of
the Shriners yesterday. He reports a
splendid time in the city at the other
end of the Georgia railroad.
Gets Skin Nice
• And Clear
PutFMife into Mutcles—-ixires
Juit the Slight Exhilaration
; -Needed for Health
Nature has supplied us with wonder
ful .materials for* thf restoration of
health. It Is from our own forests
that diorgla people have the best
HELPLESS AS BABY
Down in Mind Unable te Work,
and Wbat Helped Her.
Summit Point, \V. Va.—Mis. Anna
Belle Emey, of this place, says: "I suf-
lered for la years with an awful pain in
my right side, caused from womanly
trouble, and doctored lots for it, but with
out success. I suffered so very much,
that I became down in mind, and as help
less as a baby. I was in the worst kind
of shape, was unable to do any work.
I began taking Cardui, the womar's
tonic, and got relief from the very first
dose. - By the time I had taken 12 bot
tles, my health was completely restored.
I am new 43 years years old, but feel as
good as I did when only 16.
Cardui certainly saved ine from losing
my mind, and I feel it my duty to speak
in its favor. I wish I had some power
over poor, suffering women, and could
make them know the good it would do
them.”
If you suffer from any of the ailments
peculiar to women, it will certainly be
worth your while to give Cardui a trial.
It has been helping weak women for
more than 50 years, and will help you,
too.
Try Cardui. Your druggist sells it.
Writt /#.- Cha’Unoora Medicine Co.. Ladies*
Advisor} Deqt.. Chattanooga. Tann.. (or Sh
for theatrical folks can’t tarry long
in one place, and the lady of Apala
chee waited for his return. Return
he did just like he does in so many
of his stage roles, and he found Ath
ens was only seventeen miles from
Apalachee. At Apalachee was a cer
tain “interest” for Mr. Taft.
Well, wedding hells last Wednesday
—Walker-Taft.
The marriage was kept quiet until
yesterday when the happy bridegroom
I broko the news to his fellow thespians,
j and congratulations were showered
on the newly-weds.
The "Mischief Quartette” and It’»
Work.
Each year the month of January
numbers its list of victims from influ
enza, la grippe, bronchitis and pneu
monia. The prompt use of Foley’s
Honey and Tar Compound will check
Subject to the dcm wrjli
I respectfully announce
tion to the offiec of i as
Clarke county. || || i
For Tax Collector (lark, r,
I hereby announci
for the office of T
Clarke county, subject to t , -
of the Democratic party.
w - A - malloh
th® onset of a cold and --top
preventing the develo Pment
serious conditions. K ecp j t J
For sale by all druggist,, ev,^[
W
A Romance Not
In the Regular
I Repertoire
Those who go this evening to the
Colonial theater to witness “A Ken
tucky Feud,” will see Mr. Charles Taft
in the role of Sky Reynolds. Mr. Taft
is an especial object of interest to
members of the company at present
on account of him being the “leading
man” in a little drama of his own,
which had its scene laid far from the
fields of Kentucky; in fact the scene
of the play is Athens and Apalachee
Ga., and it is quite romantic.
The fact of the matter is Mr. Taft
lately became a Benedict, and the
charming lady of his choice was
Hughey Walker, of Apalachee, Ga., a
pjretty little village on the Central of
Qeorgia between Athens and Madison.
f£ome years ago when«Mr. Taft was
playing in “The Squaw Man,” ho
came to these parts. He had a friend
who knew Miss Walker. Result—in
troduction, knock out blow by Cupid
*t first sight, mutual, too, and then
the going far from here by Mr. Taft
HEAR THE
NEW FEBRUARY RECORDS ON SALE TODAY
NEW DANCE MUSIC NEW SONG HITS
DORSEY FURNITURE c5
A Modern Furniture House.
GEORGIA RAILROAD
Efficient and Reliable Passenger and Freight Route
Ample Train Service and good connection,
Elegant roadbed and superb equipment. S]
rates for special occasions very often in effect. Ask
the Georgia Railroad Agent for rates andschedules.
J. P. BILLUPS,
General Passenger Agent, Augusta, Gi
medicine In the world. 8. 8: 8.. the
famous vegetable blood purifier, baa
been a marvel for more than forty
year*. And its action in overcoming
all akin troubles and blood risings
eruptions is easily explained.
The skin is but a network of fine
blood vessels. And It Is perfectly natural
that any unhealthful influence in the
blood makes Its first appearam-
the skin. There is one Ingredient In
which peculiarly stimulates
cellular or glandular activity to select
from the blood.or from this fine net-
of blood vaasclf in the skin,
thos* elements which It requires for
regeneration.
Thus pimples, holla, ectema. or any
Other blood condition that attacks the
skin or seek* an Otitllt through the
skin, is met with the antidotal effect
of S 8. S.
This is why skin traublM vanish so
OUR ANNUAL CLEARANCE
SALE ©F SHG
Starts Monday Morning and Continues
FOR TEN DAYS
mdiijr and wbgithey da nat raturn.
And la ridding the blaod of Impurltlea.
8 8 s. Impart, a lint tikllar,tlon to
tha entire system »nd you foal Ana.
.. , , , g. 8. & I* prepared only by The Swift
that tuberculosis is more amenable to Specif!,■ Co., o-i, Swift Bldg., Atlanta,
treatment in the early stages, and we I ° a * 7°i; will And 8. B. 8. on aala at
begin to institute treatment as soon ju«'b. 1 '*,*””Vkln^lm‘tion'a*Ba°w“i
as a diagnosis is made, or if doubtful, I at imitations eg substitutes.
Will You Be Satisfied With
A. D. S. REMEDIES?
When we recommend A. D. S. Remedies we do
so with the belief that we are offering you the best
family medicines that can be produced. ■ The curative
value of ehch remedy has been definitely determined.
These remedies are offered to you as the simplest,
most valuable and safest of family remedies.
They are guaranteed to you by the makers and
by us.
- A remedy for every ill Many toilet specialties
also.
See our window.
Citizens’- Pharmacy
Comer Clayton and Jackson Streets
ATHENS, - - - GEORGIA
.-■M 1
•L-sUOvV.
This is a chance where you can speure the very
best styles of
shoes at a great saving, as there is nothing reserved
Women’s Shoes formerly $5.00, now
$3.45
Women’s Shoes formerly $4.00 and $3.50, now
$2.S5
Women's Satin and Silk Evening Slippers, formerly
now "
m.oo, 5« t oO
¥
Women’s Rep Evening Slippers formerly $3.00, now..
.... $1.50
Men’s Bovden Shoes, formerly $6.50, now
$4.85
Men’s Shoes, formerly $5.00. now. .
$3.45
%
Men’s Shoes, formerly $4.00 and $3.50. now .
$2.95
20% Discount on All Boys’ and
Children’s Shoes
On account of the extreme low prices on these Shoes, the terms
of this sale are cash; nothing sent on approval.
Johnson Shoe Co.
433 Broad Street