Newspaper Page Text
Pare TV*,
THE ATHENS DAILY HERALD.
TUESDAY EVENING, MARCH 3,1914.
SPECIAL NOTICES
| SAVANNAH POLICE
J HUNT FORTREASURE
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION.
Notice is hereby given that the
firm of Davis-Mathis-Elliot Company
heretofore engaged in the business of I . . v tj„ • j con nnn
clothing and furnishing's in the city of I Think legman Buried $20,000
Athens, Clarke county, state of Geor
gia, said firm composed of Robert i
Davis, J. C. Mathis and Fred O. Da- •
vis is this day dissolved by mutual j
consent, Robert Davis and J. C. Mathis j
retiring: therefrom. The business will
be conducted at the same place by
Fred G. Davis, who will settb all
the firm’s liabilities and receipt for
all debts due the firm.
This lfitfc day of February, 1914.
ROBERT DAVIS,
J. C. MATHIS,
FRED L. DAVIS.
Somewhere in Savannah—Po
lice Searching For It.
ELECTION NOTICE
For Tax Collector Clarke County.
Subject to the democratic primary,
I respectfully announce for re-elec
tion to the office of tax collector of
Gaiko county. H. H. LINTON.
For Tax Collector Clarke Connty.
1 I hereby announce my candidacy
, for the office of Tax Collector of
OUric. county, subject to the action
i of the Democratic party.
W. A. MALLORY.
For sheria.
. I ■■ hereby announce for re-election
: aa Sheriff of Clarke county, subject
to the democratic primary. If elected
Mr. J, H. Hancock -will continue to
ba deputy.
Reapectfally,
WALTER E. JACKSON.
For Clerk Superior Court.
I respectfully announce my candi
dacy for reflection to the office of
Clerk of the Superior Court of Clarke
county, subject to the action of the
Democratic party.
ELMER J. CRAWFORD.
For Treasurer.
I hereby announce that I am a
candidate to succeed myself as Trees-
urer of Clarke oounty. I shall abide
the action of the Democratic pri
mary.
Respectfully,
^ r t E. I. SMITH.
For Tax ReceiTer.
I respectfully announce that I am a
candidate for reflection to the of
fice of Tax Receiver of Clarke county,
my candidacy being made subject to
the action of the party. ,
, J. H. DORSEY.
For Coroner.
i announce respectfully that I am a
candidate for re-election ax Coroner,
subject to tha primary’s results.
C. N. WEATHERLY.
For Coroner Clarke County.
I hereby announce my candidacy
for Coroner of Clarke county, sub
ject to the action of the primary. If
elected I will perform the duties of
the office faithfully.
J. W. MTNTYRE.
For Surveyor.
I am a candidate to succeed myself
aa County Surveyor, subject to tha
Democratic primary.
Respectfully,
Sen h. barrow,
FW Justice of the Peace.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for the office of Justice of the
Peace ef the 216th District, G. M..
Clarke county, Georgia, to fill the ua-
expired tens of- Hob. Jamas F, Foe-
ter. deceased.' .
■ ; v CARLISLE COBB.
For Jostles oflhe Peace.
I hereby announce.my candidacy
for the unexpired term of the late
Judge J. F. Foster, justice of the
peace for the 216th militia district of
Clarke county. Respectfully,
CHAS. T. YOUNG.
Fer Justice of the Peace,
I hereby announce my candidacy
for the office of justice of the peace
of Ate 216th district, G. M-. Clarke
county, Georgia, to fill the unexpired
term of Hon. James F. Foiter, de-
P. J. SMITH.
Fer Justice of the Peace.
I hereby announce my candidacy
tor the position of Justice of the
Peace for the 216th District, Georgia
Militia, for the unexpired term of
the late Judge Jaa. F. Foster. I will
appreciate the support of my friends
and pledge my best efforts to perform
the duties of the office impartially
and justly Respectfully,
YOUNG DAVIS.
>' ;>or Senator 36th District.
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for senator fer the 30th Senato
rial "District of Georgia,and respec
tively solicit the support of the peo
ple in the Democratic primary.
A. S. J. STOVALL,
Elberton, Ga., Feb. 18,1914.
avannah, Ga., March 3.—The po-
yesterduy began a search for $20,-
iOOO supposed to have been buried in
I and near Savannah by C. C. Craven,
I a yeggman, who was recently killed
I in a fight with a railroad special agent
! at Wildwood, Fla. Craven, whose cor-
! rect name is said to have been Charles
I’rator, left a widow in Savannah and
j she wrote to another alleged yeggman
that the money
asked that he come and help her re-
j cover it. The. police intercepted the
letter. Mrs. (.'raven is now ill in a lo
cal hospital. Mrs. Craven's mother
lives in Syracuse, Ohio.
Eats Freely But
Has No Dyspesia
i Little Pepsin in a Mild Laxative
Promptly Corrected a Bad Indiges
tion.
Fortunate is the one who can eat
“anything:” without suffering- the tor
tures of dyspepsia, but as few are so
fortunate, care should be taken in the
matter of diet. Eating slowly, masti
cating the food thorouRhly and taking
a short walk after the heavy meal of
the day will do much towards assisting
di. estion. Any grown-up person ought
to know the peculiar foods that do not
agree, and these should be avoided.
When these common-sense aids fail,
, the next thing to do is to take a mild
buried here and j rli^restive tonic with laxative proper
ties, and there is none better than Dr.
^Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin*. It contains
the greatest of all aids to digestion,
A SINISTER RECORD.
Price-cutting drove out of business
1,252 cigar manufacturers in 1912;
price-cutting closed the doors of 716
cigar manufacturers in 1913; price-
cutting by the United Cigar Stores
Company in New York alone has re
duced 10.000 cigar dealers to a mini
mum, the most of them ruined and
many of them having committed sui
cide; price-cutting has ruined the Sle-
gel-Cooper Stores Company, which at
cam; »jme ruined IS fiftfl small de
positor s.—From testimony of Nicho
las Ehrlich, president, Independent Re
tail Tobacconists Association of Amer-
before House Judiciary Commit
tee.
Special “Health Warning” for March
March is a trying month for the
very young and for elderly people.
Croup, bronchial colds, lagrippe and
pneumonia are to be feared and avoid
ed. Foley’s Honey and Tar is a great
family medicine that will quickly stop
a cough, check the progress of a cold,
and relieve inflamed and congested
air passages. It is aafe, pure, and al
ways reliable.
For sale by All Druggists Every
where. (Adv.)
J. W. GOUCHER.
toms of chronic dyspepsia. Since tak
ing Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin these
good pepsin.* It has other ingredients ! have all gone, and although Mr. Gou-
that act mildly on the bowels, which kher says he is 64, he does not look
together form a combination for the , more than 40.
relief of dygpepria or indigestion l hat | Syrup Pepsin is sure in its results,
is unsurpassed. j and a vast improvement over chewing
rts action is to tone and strengthen | or swallowing tablets and mints, or
the stomach and bowel muscles so that j feeing cathartics, salts, etc., all of
they cap again do their work natur- j ^hich are harsh and nauseous and at
ally without outside aid, and when j best do but temporary good. You can
that happy moment comes all medicine ; obtain Syrup Pepsin at any drug store
can be dispensed with. It is the best j for fifty cents or one dollar a bottle,
remedy obtainable for any disorder of |Results are always guaranteed or
the stomach, liver and bowels, for dys- j money will be refunded,
pepsia, constipation, biliousness, head- Families wishing to try a free sam
aches, drowsiness after eating, gas on pie bottle can obtain it postpaid by
tli© atvinnch, Thousands users ! addressing Dr. \V. E. Caldwell, 119
will testify to this, among them Mr. j Washington St., Monticello, III. A
J. W. Goucher, Stites, Idaho, who for j postal card with your name and ad-
several years had all the worst symp- i dress on it will do. (Adv.)
HOME GARDENING DIRECTED BY THE SCHOOL
Don't Aak for Alms if Yon Keep a Dog
Farm and Fireside says: “New
laws are not always good, but what ia
wrong with the law recently passed
in a Kansas county under which no
family owning a d«g can receive re
lief from the Poor Fund ? A dog i, a
luxury, but poor people ought not to
be deprived of their simple luxuries
because they are poor. But a badly
fed and badly kept dog is a peat to
the neighborhood.”
An ad in Tlie Herald la worth
two on the billboard.
This time day after tomorrow all
the Havanabelles will be asking one
another who ia the extremely good-
looking young stranger that came in
On the last boat.
And where In these Japanese graft
scandals Is our old friend, Baron Ta-
kah-Cashi?
HERALD TORS
Address Pattern Dept.,
The Athens Herald
If jaa miss your copy of rial for a 6-year size.
Hie. Herald shone 1216
oar speciafdeUvSrybi? will
brine one to xen.
9866.—A Neat and Simple Tap Gar*
ment.
Girl's Coat with ar without
Cuffs and Belt.
Brown velvet was used for this de
sign, with trimmings of fancy silk.
The design is auitabla for linen, lln-
ene, corduroy, broad cloth, cheviot and
other cloakings. The. fronts are
crossed at the closing. The collar
forma a neat neck finish. The sleeve
is a two-piece model. The deep patch
pocketa and low belt are attractive
style features. The pattern is cot
in 4 sizes: 4, 6, 8 and 10 years. It
requires 3 1-8 yards of 44-Inch mate-
A pattern of this illustration mailed
to any address on receint o f «nc in
silver ar stamp.
Home gardening directed by the
school Is offered by Dr. P. P. Claxton,
United States Commissioner of Ed
ucation, as a solution for some of thr
most pressing educational and eco
nomic problems iff city and suburban
life. Dr. Claxton would have every
vacant town lot transformed into a
garden, where boys and girls would
raise vegetables, berries, find fruit for
pleasure and for profit. He would
have ohe teacher in th, community
employed 12 months in The year to
teach elementary science in school and
diract the home-garden work after
school, on Saturdays, and during the
summer vacation.
“Of the 13,000,000 children between
the ages of 6 and 20 in the cities,
towns, manufacturing. villages, atid
suburban communities of the United
Stales,” says Dr. Claxton, “not more
than 15 per cent are away from home
during the summer vacation or en
gaged in regular employment. The
remaining 85 per cent remain at home
without any useful, healthful, produc
tive occupation requiring any larg»'
part of their time. On the other hand,
there ia much valuable land in back
yards and vacant lota that is serving
no useful purpose. The problem is to
bring this land and these children to
gether.
“In every school and immunity
there should be at least one teacher
who knowe gardening, both theoreti
cally and practically. Thia teacher
should teach the elementary sciences
in the schools during the school hours
and should, out of school hours, direct
the borne gardening ef the children be
tween the ages of 7 or 8 and 14 or 15.
If possible the teacher should have the
assistance of an expert gardener, so
that the work may be done in the most
practical and profitable way. The
teacher and the gardener should help
the children find the plots of ground
in back yarde, front yards, and vacant
lots near their homei best suited for
gardening work, aid them by seme co
operative method to have the lots pro
perly plowed and prepared for culti
vation, hel pthem select seeds, show
them haw to plant, cultivate and har
vest, so as to obtain the best
suits.
“Vegetables, berries, and fruits
grown should be used first as food for
the children and their families; then
the surplus should be marketed to the
best advantage. Through the help of
the teacher this can be done in a co
operative way. Ten or fifteen cents
worth' of vegetables each day from
the gardens of each of 200 children
would amount to $20 or $30. In the
summer and fall when the surplus is
large and can net be marketed to ad
vantage, the teacher should direct and
help the children in canning and pre
serving for winter use or for sale. The
canning and tomato clubs of the
Southern states have already shown
what can be done in this way.
It 1a difficult to estimate the re
sult! of thia plan when it ahall ba in
full operation throughout the country.
For the children it will mean health,
strength, joy in work, habits of indus
try, an understanding of the value of
money, as measured in terms of labor,
and such knowledge of the phenomena
nnd fore** of nature as must be had
for an nnderatanding of most of their
school lessons. They will also leant
something at leaat of the fundamental
principle ef morality; that each indi
vidual muat make his or her own liv
ing; must, by some kind of labor of
head, hand, or heart, contribute to the
common wealth aa much aj U takes
from it; must pay for what he gets in
some kind of coin.
“This plan in full operation would
probably do more toward keeping
young children out of the factories and
mills than ail of the child-labor laws
on the statute books. A boy 10 or
12 years of age, with a quarter of an
acre of land, working under careful
direction, can produce more for the
support of the family than could be
purchased With the child’s wages from
the mill. Children should not be
ground in the mills nor sweated in the
factories; their strength should not be
sapped and their nerves racked by
working in the heat and dust of in
doors, yet pll children should learn to
werk; it Is good for them and they
joy in it. To work with its feet in the
soil, its head in the sunshine, and its
lungs filled with good fresh air is
not a bad thing for any healthy child.
“This play will also do much to
solve the problem of the idle negro.
A large part of the negroes of the
.Southern states live pn the outskirts
of cities and small towns. Their cabin
homes are frequently on large lots and
surrounded with vacant lots covered
with weeds and rubbish. During the
vacation months the negro children
roam idly on the streets, falling into
mischief and vice. Under proper di
rection they might make, on these
back yards and vacant lots, enough to
support themselves and more; at the
same time they would be kept from
vice and would gain habits of indus
try. Incidentally negro quarters would
be changed from places of ugliness to
places of beauty.
“robably one of tha most valuable
results of this plan would be to make
It easy for most children to attend
school three or four years longer than
they now do, a thing more and more
desirable, since education for life and
citizenship in our industrial, civic, and
social democracy can not be obtained
before the age of adolescence. If a
child can contribute to its support
While in school, it may remain in
school much longer than if it must be
carried as a dead weight until it quits
school to go to work.
“Compared with the results, the
cost will be inconsiderable. No addi
tion to the number of teachers will be
required. It will only be necessary
to require different preparation for
one teacher in each school.”
In the estimates submitted to con
gress by the commissioner of educa
tion for the support of the bureau in
the next fiscal year an item of $5,700
isjncluded to enable the bureau to be
gin th# introduction of this kind of
work in the schools of the United
States. The commissioner believes
that it will only be necessary to work
out details of plans and to present
them to school officers, together with
full information in regard to results
of somewhat similar work already
done at various places.
AVOID STUFFY WHEEZY
BREATHING
Take Foley's Honey and Tar Com
pound for an inflamed and congested
condition of the air passages and
bronchial tubes. A cold develops quick
ly if not checked and bronchitis, la-
grippe and pneumonia are dangerous
possibilities. Harsh racking coughs
wesken the system, but Foley’s Hon
ey and Tar is safe, pure and certain
in results. Contains no opiates.
For sale by All Druggists Every
where. (Adv.)
Trade in Atkem,
CULL MEETING
Movement Has Grown Wonder
fully in Southern State—Con
vention in Huntsville.
The call for the second annual con-
vention of the Alabama Equal Suf
frage Association has been issued,
says The Woman’s Journal.
The leading suffragists of Alabama
will assemble in Huntsville on Febru
ary 4 and 5. Dclebates will come from
the local suffrage ‘organizations in
Montgomery, Mobile, Selma, Tusca
loosa, Greensboro, Vinemont, Cullman,
Pell City and Coal City. Many other
towns and counties will be represent
ed by individuals.
The movement has grown wonder
fully within the year in Alabama. The
Birmingham Association alone counts (
nearly a thousand members.
It is estimated at the present rate)
of progress throughout the state,” savsi
Ethel Armes, press chairman of the;
Alabama E. S. A., “that by this time !
next year, the State Association will
be several thousand strong, and that
practically every club woman, every,
educator and every progressive and
modern-spirited home-maker in Ala- j
bama will be enlisted in the suffrage
ranks.”
WHY NOT?
Railways are compelled by law to
fix Jtheir prices. Yet other big busi
nesses are not allowed to fix prices,
or to make agreements such as those
upon which the railway business de
pends.—The New York Times.
Disordered Kidneys Cause Mach Mis
ery.
With pain and misery by day, sleep-
disturbing bladder weakness at night,
tired, nervous run-down men and wo
men everywhere are glad to know
that Foley Kidney Pills restore health
and strength, and the regular action
of kidney- and bladder.
For sale by All Druggists Every
where. (Adv.)
Modeling clay, saturated with pur>
gelatine, makes a neater and more
durable hektograph pad than the us
ual gelatine-glycerine combination.
A one-term plank at least finds a
friend in Charles Becker.
Editor Tells How ~
D. D. D. Prescription
Cured His Eczema
Clergyman and Banker Also Write How
Secured Keilei, Thanks to D. D. D.
H. O. netehktaa Mllor Echo. Proph-
ettstowa, Ill.: Remember, ml no was
oesam& of fifteen yoaro otandlnr Now
I am completely healed, after 4 bot
tles of D. t>. D. I hovo oeen a can® of
26 year* atandtnv cured. 1 have aeon
my own doctor cured of barber's itch*
wnlrh ho could not euro h»mself.
F. R. Teoar. Banker, Hopklnton. Ia.:
I treated with three doctor* for mix
months. They did mo no aoodr my
face and scalp wore full of th® dls-
JSH I applied D. V. D. Result—my
face to as smooth as a baby a
Rev. L. I. Downing. Pastor 6th Ay®.
Presbyterian Chsrch. Rtwiok* Va.: For
three years I suffered. Intensely so. 1
have at last found reUsf InD. D. D.
soothe
am no lenfer tortnrrd-
cured. I have no heeiu
knowlodging the gr<at vir
specific.
Th® cures cf r>. p. r> n
lief. All druggists know ;
t® recommend this
liquid.
Como to us and ws
more about this rei.i.u
and th# efficient D. I>
W® offer the first full
the guarantee that
H. R. Palmer & Sons, (
They
upletely
tki
D.D.D. Soap Keeps Your Skin
Grandma Talks
flfcoul Babies
Ha« a large Circle of Listeners Who
Profit by Her Wisdom and Experience.
Ia most any community there’s a grand-
ia who knows Mother's Friend. It was
her experience and
recommendation that
led so many expectant
mothers to derive tha
comfort and blessing
of thia famous rem
edy.
It la applied exter-
tcrnally to the abdo-
- men, stomach and
breasts, allays all pain, avoids all nausea,,
and prevents caking of the breasts.
It Is quickly and wonderfully penetrat
ing so that the muacles expand without
strain, and prepare the system so thor
oughly that tha crisis Is passed almost with
out the slightest distress.
No better advice can be given the expect
ant mother than to suggest the use of
Mother’s Friend. 8he takes courage from
tha start The daya will ba cheerful, the
nights restful.
You can obtain hfother*s Friend of any I
druggist «t $1.00 a bottle. Do uot forget
to ba anpplied with thia great help to moth
erhood. Write Bradfield Regulator Co..
233 Lamar Bldg.. Atlanta, Ga., for theii
instructive hook for expectant mothers.
ATHENS PAPER COMPANY
WHOLESALE ONLY
Flour, Meal, Shorts, Lard,Chewing Tobac co,
Brooms, Paper Bags, Twines, Wrapping
Papers, Wizard Floor Clean, Stationery, Etc.
ATHENS PAPER COMPANY
1 bomas Street Athens, Georgia
Launciereri
ar.d
Dry Oeaneri
Phone
217
Service
AMERICAN STATE
ATHENS, GA.
Depositors in this bank are given careful and
efficient service, and accounts, whether large or
small, are handled in a satisfactory manner. Our
resources are ample to care for the legitimate needs
of our patrons.
Athens is the market place for the products of
the farms of the surrounding territory. Make THE
AMERICAN STATE BANK your bank. Accounts
of farmers given especial attention.
4% Interest Paid on Savings
Accounts
JNO. J. WILKINS, Pres. HOWELL C. ERWIN, Vice Pres.
R. W. SIZER, Cashier. J. WARREN SMITH. Vice Prei.
NEW DRUG STORE
Has opened for business, carrying a complete line of
everything found in a modem Drug Store-
A new soda fountain has been installed, catering to
the ladies’ and children’s trade. We will call for and de
liver your prescription anywhere in the city. We will
appreciate your patronage.
I
REID
PHONE 1104
DRUG
COMPANY
255 LUMPKIN STREET