Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 12, 1912, EXTRA 1, Page 7, Image 7

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BOY says street car CUT OFF EAR; ASKS $5,000 Theodore Passmore, a minor, who says his | e ft ear was cut off when he was | struck by a street car at Magnolia and Walnut streets recently, has sued for $5.- non The youth asserts no warning of the approach of the car u*as given. MMER GOLOS COME FROM J TORPID LIVER Active Liver Keeps the Head Clear and the Smile Cheerful When the Liver Gets Lazy the Blood Thickens and the System Becomes Easily Susceptible to Cold and Disease. The summer cold is directly traceable to an inactive liver. You get overheat p.-1 and cool off too suddenly, the pores ,the skin become closed, the blood re edes from the surface of the body and a congestion Is produced. The same condition follows when you sit in a draft, or get wet. The liver finds its Effort's overcome by pressure of the blood and food remains in the stomach ~r bowels. The head gets hot, the feet old and the bowels constipated. Right then and there is the danger point. The bowels must be kept open. The system must be relieved of congestion. JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is the great est known relief. It is better than calo mel. It will rejuvenate the liver, send the blood racing through the veins, dis pel the congestion and make you’feel as if us e is worth living. JACOBS' LIVER SALT acts quickly and mildly, and never gripes or nause ates Don't take an inferior substitute. Some stores may offer other prepara tions upon which they make larger profits, often similar name, but very different in action. JACOBS’ LIVER SALT, large jar 25c at druggists or sent by mail (postage 16c additional). For sale by all Jacobs’ Pharmacy Stores and druggists generally. Jacobs’ Second Floor A Store Worth Knowing Hospital Supplies, Sickroom Goods, Rubber Goods, Trusses, Supporters, Crutches,Thermometers, Infants’ Goods, Dolls, Paints, Stains, Polishes, Floor and Paint Brushes, Bathroom Supplies, etc., etc. No Other House Shows as FINE Stocks Nor as LOW Prices IF you are not acquainted with the Second Floor of our Main Store, a visit will repay you. It is a handsomely equipped, complete store with many departments, occupying almost the en tire second floor of our building. In Rubber Goods alone, we have here the finest stock in the Southern states. There are secluded, private fitting rooms for buyers of trusses and similar goods, with both men and women attendants and every convenience for your comfort. We list a few items from the various departments. Remember, you have not only the largest stock to select from, but the LOWEST PRICES THAT CAN BE OBTAINED ANY WHERE upon the same grade of goods. Call and get acquainted, whether you are buying now or not. It will pay. Our branch stores carry representative lines of Jacobs’ Rubber Goods, Sickroom Supplies, etc., far superior to ordinary lines shown, elsewh ere Jacobs’7sc Fountain Syringe, seamless red rubber, ex- Irrigators, half-round, handled; quart cellent grade, two hard rubber pipes, /IQr> ® Oc ' 2-quart SI.OO. two-quart capacity. Special at Trt/C 11 Bed Pans, white enamel, lid, $1.75. 11 Jacobs' No. 9 Fountain Syringe, heavy red rubber, dur- || jflra able, three pipes, two-quart; value $1.25, Isl A E| ectrlc Batteries, $4.00, $5.00 up. |k If m s P ecial *pX.VVF Sputum Cups, white enamel, hinged lid, 50c. Jacobs’ No. 10 Water Bottle, he.avy Robinson’s Thermal Bath Cabinets, for ribbed white rubber, slate trim; two- jFUfI t ’ □gggk quart *7E taking Turkish baths at home. Rec- Very Special, at /OC Y ommended by all ±'*7 Mu 1 physicians. Used ■ G/Vi ered. pretty patterns; two-quart by many famous ♦ 1 $1.25, As * ‘ SHI 1 ilWil actresses and so (V 'i . - . , X jw-si clety beauties. Ask I ,;W.. A'- Jacobs' Shield Brand Fountain Yg? . j/ ' Syringe, heavy corrugated chocolate T WT JHwi attendan o dem- (_/l Is? rubber, three pipes, two-quart. onstrate it. Sev- Value $1.75, at $1.25. ™ —, eral styles of Cab- // L.JP I Palmer’s Favorite Combination inets, ranging in Fountain Syringe and Water Bottle, • A—- 'X J / price from $5.00 I w |)egt gr^de w hit e rubber, slate XS-J to $12.50. tiimrw_d. thiee screw pipes, two stork p an t B , to he worn over regular diaper; wash quart, . able, sanitary; all sizes, 50c. Omo, lace trimmed Weather Thermometers, copper frame, black enamel 50c. Nursery Choice, gathered legs, lace trimmed, face, white figures, very easy to read. 50c. Value 75c; Special OUC K|einerVß Trap Bibs, 35c; Coverall, 50c. Wearever Ice Caps, cloth lined, best grade rubber; Rubber Sheeting for nursery or sickroom. Stork, four straps; $1.25. several weights, yard wide, SI.OO yard; Omo, yard Seamless Ice Caps, maroon rubber, 75c. wide, SI.OO. „ , „ Klelnert's Cut Sheeting, 3-4 yard square, 35c; 4-4 yard Clinical Thermometers, all standard makes, 75c up. c . - yard, SI.OO. Douche Pans, white enamel, $1.50; zinc, 75c. Diaper Bags, pretty plaids, 65c. ———.. Our Truss Customers Talk Jacobs’ Pharmacy Co., Atlanta, Ga., September 8, 1912. Atlanta, Ga. , . , T Gentlemen Several months ago I was fitted with a truss by }ou, and I want vou to know how delightful and gratified I am for the perfect comfort I now enjoy for the first lime in eight years I have worn four or five different trasses; none of them held the rup- ture. and all hurt me so terribly that my life was a continual misery. Since being fitted by vou the rupture has never come out. and I am perfect!} comfortable all the time. I do any kind of heavy work, and can run, jump or lift with absolute ‘ W. O. SKINN, R. F. D. No. 3, Atlanta. Ga. Jacobs’ Pharmacy Main Store and Laboratory, 6 and 8 Marietta Street 23 Whitehall Street 102 Whitehall Street 70 W. Mitchell Street 266 Peters Street 245 Houston Street 152 Decatur Street 423 Marietta Street ,544 Peachtree St. CANAL IT MAKE ■SEMI RICH J. P. Morgan Opposes Par doned Financier in Steam ship Line Project. NEW YORK, Sept. 11.-—lt would be a strange turn of Fortune’s wheel if Charles W. Morse, who was deprived of his liberty by the operation of a Federal statute, should regain control of his former marine interests by the operation of another Federal law—the Panama canal act. Mr. Morse, an able, daring financier, made $30,000,000 out of Ice, steamships and other enterprises. He lost almost every cent, he declared at one time. But when congress passed the Panama canal bill Mr. Morse opened an office in Wall street. President Taft signed the bill. This means that, like other railroads own ing boats, the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad must cease to be amphibious; must sell all its steamship lines in two years’ time. And the New York. New Haven and Hartford has vast interests in steamship lines which Morse controlled formerly. May Buy New Haven's Boats, It is said that Morse is trying to establish a steamship line between New York and Boston. But financiers, who know Morse’s ability as a steam ship man, are asking: "Is Morse seeking, or has he ob tained, backing to make the New York, New Haven and Hartford an offer for any or all of its steamship lines?’’ The financial collapse of Mr. Morse enabled the New Haven road practi cally to get control of Boston’s steam coasting trade. Some financiers doubt if the New Haven interests will sell steamship lines to Mr. Morse if they can find an other purchaser. His enterprise has made him many enemies, and among them are said to be the J. P. Morgan interests. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWR. WIDOW OF SOUTHERN VETERAN SEEKS MEN HERE WHO KNEW HIM Sheriff C. W. Mangum has received a plea from the widow of a Confederate veteran, asking that he aid her in an ef fort to locate Civil war companions of Henry Wilson, one time of Atlanta, who fought under General Robert E. Lee. The appeal came in the form of a letter from Brady. Texas. The widow, Mrs. Josie Wilson, wrote Sheriff Mangum that she was endeavor ing to get information concerning Mr. Wilson's service, and requested that he have an inquiry made among Atlanta vet erans who may have known him. She is trying to obtain a pension. "Just before the war I knew’ a Henry Wilson. He lived in Atlanta in 1858 and when the war began he was among the first to enlist,” said Sheriff Mangum. "When I came back in 1865 he was not here. I learned that he had moved to Texas, where he died several years ago.” MACON CHIEF CLOSING ALL RESORTS IN CITY MACON, GA., Sept. 11.—Chief of Po lice W. B. Chapman told city council in person last night that within a week all disorderly houses in Macon, which now’ number about 30, will be closed and their proprietors forced to leave town. He stated that he had closed five this week, and within a half hour after council adjourned he raided an other and arrested eighteen white men and women. J. A. WATERS NEW GAME WARDEN OF CHATHAM SAVANNAH, GA., Sept. 11.—John A. Waters is the new Chatham county game warden, succeeding G. A. Rossignol, re signed. The announcement comes direct from Jesse A. Mercer, state game war den. Waters was ill In bed when told of his appointment. There were two can didates for the position, both of whom were strongly Indorsed. Mercer says he was guided largely by the preponderance of Indorseemnts after satisfying himself that both men were capable IE OF com ISLOYALTOHINI: Beautiful Young Bride Stands by Former Atlantan Who Killed for Slur. With Dr. A. Lee Curtis, of Atlanta, by his side, W. H. Curtis, of Jackson, Miss., is preparing his defense against the charge of murder hanging over him there, and his young wife, the cause of the fatality, is sticking loyally to her husband in his trouble, according to dispatches from Jackson today. The former Atlantan will enter a plea of self-defense, and it is probable that he will show that J. H. Helton, the man slain by Curtis' bullets, had made re marks reflecting on the character of Mrs. Curtis. The wife, who w ; as only 17 when, she married Curtis a year ago, is describ ed as one of the most beautiful young women In Mississippi. Her position in the tragedy and her loyalty to her hus band have made the case one of the most notable In the history of the Mis sissippi capital. Curtis, who was well known In At lanta until he left this city to travel for a St. Louis chemical company, with headquarters in Jackson, is a fine spec, imen of young manhood. He is a broth er of A. L. Curtis, of Atlanta, the for mer a councilman several years ago. Curtis married the daughter of V. L. Skates, who lived near Jackson, about a year ago. It developed today that the shooting was the direct outcome of a suit for 1 SIO,OOO filed by Helton against Curtis and his father-in-law, as the result of a severe beating given Helton by the two men last March. Helton was the pro prietor of a small news stand in Jack son. News reached Curtis that Hel ton had made defamatoty remarks about Mrs. Curtis, and, with his father in-law and brother-in-law, he went to the news stand, called Helton out and beat him terribly. Helton sued for damages. Curtis, it is said, went to him afterward and asked that the suit be withdrawn, but Helton refused. On Sunday morning, while Helton was seated in a physician's office. Curtis entered and opened Are on him, send ing seven bullets from an automatic pistol into his body and killing him instantly. When Helton was found dead his left hand clasped a revolver which had not been fired. Curtis as serted that he fired after seeing Helton draw his weapon and before the news dealer could pull the trigger. Mr. W. S. Gunsalus, a farmer living near Fleming, Pa., says he has used Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy In hfs family for four teen years, and that he has found it to be an excellent remedy, and takes pleasure In recommending it. For sale by all dealers. MEETING NOTICE. All duly qualified Master Masons are Invited to attend the Lodge of Instruction to tX be held in Baptist Taberna fXwt cle (Luckle street) on this (Wednesday) evening at 7:30 r sHMr o clock sharp ~ Lecture on "Symbolisms of the Master s Degree" will be delivered by Most Worshipful George M Napier, Grand Master of Masons tn Georgia The speak er will be Introduced by Brother James D. Kilpatrick Musical program under direction of Paul M. Hubbard. P. M. All Tylers and Instructors of Lodges are requested to be at the Tabernacle at 7 o'clock p. m. Banquet will be held at the close of the ceremonies. HENRY M WOOD, Master of Ceremonies W. S. RICHARDSON, Genera! Secretary. WE WILL MAIL YOU »1 for each set of old False Teeth sent us Highest price pafd for old Gold, Silver, old Watches. Broken Jewelry and Precious Stones Money Sent By Return Mall. Phlla. Smelting and Refining Co., Established 20 Years. 863 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. TO DENTISTS We will buy your Gold Filings, Gold Scrap and Platinum. Highest prices paid. FIVE FOOT LIBRARY HAS NOTABLE RIVAL Solid, Compact, Readily Used Reference Knowledge Now Offered. "Consolidation” and "elimination” are the watchwords of the present. Not only In business, but in the literary and book building world is the cry for the concrete expression in as brief a space as possible and with the elimi nation of all word waste. One learned man complied a five-foot library which has been much advertised and Is deserving of praise in the field which it attempts to cover; but other learned men, aided by all the ingenui ty which has revolutionized modern business methods under the direction of system and efficiency engineers, are generally believed to have eclipsed all other efforts in book consolidation by covering the field with a smaller work. The Standard Atlas and Chronologi cal History of the World gives you the ever ready key to the knowledge that you hourly need: It could not be more up to date, as It contains the last im portant event up to the present time, with all the latest maps of states and territories, and charts of the history of the world. k If you can afford to be without it, you can afford to be without a con stant counsellor and adviser always at your elbow If you don’t know a thing, you don't I have to admit It; the Standard Atlas will "put you wise in a minute." Get busy with tbo«e shears of yours and clip six headings, then come tn The Georgian with a small expense fee and this book of the world is yours. SUES WIFE, DECLARING I SHETAKES DELIGHT IN ! TEARING HIS CLOTHES Joseph Satterwhite, 495 West Mitchell street, says his wife, Mrs. Etta Satter white. Is particularly fond of tearing his clothes to pieces and that she has re i fused to cook his meals. He has sued , for divorce, alleging cruelty. She takes a fiendish delight in tear i Ing my clothes to pieces, and has positive* ily refused to cook my meals,” he re cites. Resides a divorce, Mr. Satterwhite asks the custody of their two minor children, Geraldine, seven, and Mary, four. Attorney John Y. Smith filed the suit. WOMAN SUES TO REGAIN BULL, ‘OF THE COW KIND’ Mrs. M. E. Emlen. who lives near At lanta. has brought suit against Walker Allen, 508 Sunset avenue, to regain pos session ct a prize bull In his care, which, she says, belongs to her, Mrs. Emlen values the animal at S6O. She describes it like this: "One bull of the cattle or cow kind, or species, red color with horns medium length; four years old; named Buck.” MACON PAPERHANGERS WIN INCREASE BY STRIKE MACON, GA., Sept. 11.—After having held out for a week, the paperhangers of Macon have won their strike. Their em ployers consented to the demand for in creased wages and the men have re turned to work. The men will receive 40 cents Instead oC3a cents an hour. "I was cured of diarrhoea by one dose of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,” writes M. E Gebhardt, Oriole, Pa. ’ There Is noth ing better. For sale by ail dealers. SOUTHERN RAILWAY announces an additional selling date, September 12, with final limit September 13, on reduced rate tickets to ATLANTA from points within radius of one hun dred miles, account ODD FELLOWS CONVENTION Chamberlin=Johnson Dnßose Co. ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS Backed By a Splendid Stock of New Models This Corset=Service Department Is More Than a Mere Place “To Buy” a Corset We are rather positive about this business of selling cor sets, moreso perhaps, than we are about anything else in the store. We have certain ideas about it that, as conscientious mer chants, we must follow out. One of these is, that a woman does herself, her figure, per haps her health, an injustice when she buys “just a corset” as she would a pair of hose or a waist because it is the size and seems to be what she wants. So we are concerned in selling more than “just a corset.” We sell corsets plus, plus service, recognizing that the mate rial thing, the corset, for which you pay your good money, is of value to YOU only in so far as it is the model best suited to YOUR figure. The ramifications of this principle of CORSET-SERVICE selling all lead to the greater satisfaction and comfort, to the styl ish appearance and good health of our customers. To make, this CORSET-SERVICE real and active, posi tive, we have gathered this fall stocks of the best makes in that variety and abundance that preclude the necessity of substitut ing another model for the one you should have, that admit no compromise! These are: I he New Bon Tons at $3.00 to $25.00 The New La V idas at 4.00 to 15.00 The New Royal Worcesters at 1.00 to 2.50 Ihe New W. B.’s at 1.00 to 3.50 The New Warner’s at 1.00 to 3.50 All supplemented and made of real personal worth to YOU by the corset knowledge and experience of expert fitters, headed by our Miss Scott. So why take the risk of being improperly corseted this fall? It is unnecessary, useless. Come now while the season is still young, before you have your suits and dresses fitted—this COR SET-SERVICE DEPARTMENT can be of great service to you. • » Chamberlin =Johnson dhißose Co. Georgian Want Ads Bring Results TRAIN KILLS THREE. PROVIDENCE, R. 1., Sept. 11.—Three young men were killed by the Boston bound merchants' limited train on the New Haven railroad early today at Dike street. The bodies were scattered along the track, about 200 feet apart. FEEL FINE! LIVER RIGHT, STOMACH SWEET, HEIDICHEGONE-GMETS Cascarets make you feel bully; they immediately cleanse and sweeten the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste mat ter and poison from the bowels. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box from any druggist will keep your Stomach regulated, Head clear and Liver and Bowels in a splendid condition for months. Don't forget the children. Ihii; I 335 I GfeD . 1 10 Cents. Never gripe or sicken. “CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.” SUNSHINE IN YOUR HOME Will produce much cheerfulness, a few hours VELVOTONE Flat washable wall finish will make your home bright and cheerful continually. Put tin in four teen shades and tints. Color card upon request. Phones, Main 1115. Atlanta 329. SENATOR HEYBURN BETTER. WASHINGTON. Sept. 11. —Te condi tion of Senator Heyburn, of Idaho, who is under treatment here for heart trou ble. shows marked improvement today. The senator, who suffered a breakdown as the result of his hard work during the last session of congress. Is confined to his apartment in Stoneleigh court. 7