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? S£* I | Worms,.Convulsions.Feverish
i J ness and Loss of Sleep.
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"Father, »
i’m Giad
You Smoke
Duke’s Mixture” S
n
Before we tell you about the boy and his air rifle, we k<B
v.ant you to hear about Liggett Myers Duke's Mixture W
the tobacco that thousands of men find just right” for
a pipe—the tobacco that makes “rolling” popular.
i I
$ ■•Ur/CZf nfejtvTTKff Q
| g
This favorite tobacco is fine old Virginia and North
Carolina bright leaf that has been thoroughly aged,
r 'mined —and then granulated. It has the true tobacco ufl
’lisle, for the very simple reason that it ispurc tobacco.
Pay what you will—it is impossible to get a purer or more
'keable smoke than Duke’s Mixture. It is now n Liggett %As yers
Lader, and is unsurpassed in quality.
In every 5e sack there is one and a half ounces of splendid .
•fjj Libacco—and with each sack you get a book of cigarette papers |W
x’REE. SI
How the Boy Got His Air Rifle
£fj In every sack of the Liggett f Duke’s Mixture we now |M
pack a Free Present Coupon. These Coupons are good for all
kinds of useful articles —something to please every member of JUa*.
the family. There are skates, sleds, balls and bats, cameras, um
brcllas, watches, fountain pens, pipes, Rd
epera glasses, etc., etc.
As a special offer during No-
Ty, member and December only,we
f ; '4 tcill send you our new Ulus- ft / -Th’ 1
trated catalogue of presents, f. '
W, FREE. Just send us your name
"'A and address on a postal.
Cow/owj front Duke's Mixture may be g y
er sorted with tags from HORSE SHOE, aXw
£'» J. T„ TINSLEY’S NATURAL LEAF. MWtRK, oXr £5
GRANGER TWIST, coupons front O'JU—
A, FOUR ROSES (ZOc-Z/n <fouA?« ffiWr's’wSgr > fevr
M PICK PLUG CUT, PIEDMONT
fej> CIGARETTES. CLIX CIGARETTES,
/j ’ nnd other tags or coupons txued by us. /
&"? Address— Premium Dept.
St.Louis,'lo.
fegtSSll IhSSsb il.
I DR. E. C. GRIFFIN’S DENTAL ROOMS I
Our Scientific Care Gives
.aU&lrtfc’ SK Ysy^M* l . Medern Dental Health
M Teeth Only S5 M
••••*••••<• Dsy Ordered
22k. Gold Crowns $3.00
PoHoot Bridge Work $4.00
Phone 1706 Lady Attendant
L Cnr Brown a Alhn't Drug tore 24; Whitehall Street
in—i—ai m-» ——i—iiTinT''i~~~~~~~~~~‘~~
1 ead for Profit. Use for Results
GEORGIAN WANT ADS
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have
. Always Bought
Bears the 7L \
Signature /Am
of ZVT
a Jtv In
(V Use
v For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
THE CKNTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.
HTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEAVS.TTTI’BSDAY, NOVEMBER 14. 1912.
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
It Is riot likely that the Georgia del
egation in congress will be affected par
ticularly in the committee make-up
of the next hous*
Hr ■ del
uxu » Nrvrw
of representatives,
notwithstanding
the fact that thy
administration is
to change from
Republican to
Democraticon
March 4.
Georgia's two
senators will ben
efit by the change,
of course, for the
senate now’ is
dominated by the
Republicans, and
Democratic mem
bers thereof have
not had that same
committee prefer
ence members of
the house have had.—the house at pres
ent being, as every one knows, Demo
cratic by a comfortable majority.
Under the rearrangement of commit
tees in the present house, effected not
by appointment of tile speaker, but by
the house committee on ways and
means—M r. Und erw ood. chai rma n—
sitting as a definitely designated com
mittee on committees. the Georgia
membership is distributed as follows:
Mr. Edwards, No/. 7 on rivers and har
bors, No. 2 on elections and No. 4 on
alcoholic liquors; Mr. Roddenbery, No.
5 on public buildings and grounds, No.
3 on expenditures and No. G on ac
counts: Mi-. Adamson, chairman on in
terstate and foreign commerce: Mr.
Howard. No. 13 on labor and* No. G on
insular affairs; Mr. Bartlett, No. 4 on
appropriations; Mr. Lee. No. 5 on agri
culture and No. 3 on war claims; Mr.
Tribble, No. 7 on election of president
and vice president and No. 9 on naval
affairs: Mr. Bell. No. 3 on census. No.
G on immigration and No. 4 on post
offices and postroads; Mi. Hardwick,
No. 3 on rules and chairman on coin
age, weights and measures; Mr. Brant
ley, No. 4 on ways and means, and Mr.
Hughes, No. 5 on education. No. 6 on
irrigation and No. 7 on military af
fairs. Mr. Crisp, file new member, is
yet to be assigned.
It is piactically certain that Senator
Bacon will be made chairman of the
senate committee on foreign relations,
and Senatoi Smith likely will be ma le
chairman of the committee on agricul
ture.
In the forthcoming committee as
signments the Georgia delegation hard
ly can hope for better berths than they
now have —ind those they now have
are choir., anyway—because of the
greatly increased Democratic member
ship of the new house,
- 1 ■■
A few weeks ago Sidelights ventured
the modest prediction that inasmuch as
former Representative Alexander A.
Lawrence, of Chatham, had assumed
the leadership of the anti-commission
government hosts in Savannah, the
anti-commissionites likely would win
out on election day.
Byway of veiifying the prediction
merely, it may be stated that th
“antis" did win out down in Savannah
Tuesday—by a vote of about three to
oti'e.
Wherefore. one may opine in perfect
safety, perhaps, that it still is impossi
ble to lose Mr. Lawrence in Chatham
politics. •
The honorable justices of the su
preme court of Georgia cruelly choked
off a lot of Atlanta legal eloquence
Tuesday, when, without warning to the
Atlanta bar. thej hit the Atlanta cal’
amidships and disposed of some 72
eases in about twenty minutes.
When the honorable court quit work
: seently to adjourn over for a day or
so. it was some 60-odd cases ahead of
the Atlanta call. In ordinary circum
stances, the court would have reached
the Atlanta call about Friday of this
week. But a lot of Atlanta lawyers
were napping when the court met on
Tuesday rtiorning and the court pro
ceeded to pass those 60-odd cases, foi
good and sufficient reasons, and take up
the Atlanta call.
Nea:lv all lawyers In the state sub
mit their arguments by brief, and not
oral effort, before the supreme court —
that is, all but the Atlanta outfit. The
court is right here at’ their mercy, and,
as a rule, the Atlanta lawyer scorns
merely to “submit” his case. So the
helpless court has had to listen, time
and again, to very much more Atlanta
vocalization than it wished to.
Therefore, when it hit that Atlanta
i all unexpectedly Wednesday and there
was no Atlanta eloquence on tap. the
honorable court saw its opportunity. It
called and marked those Atlanta cases
"submitted" just as fast as they could
be knocked off.
When the Atlanta bar found out what
nad happened it was very much dis
concerted. But the court was happy—it
had put over a good one that time!
Atlanta eloquence is all right--but
the supreme court of Georgia knows
when it has had enough.
If ever this writer gets forgiveness '
for butting in on that Rome postmas- ■
tership row. he never again will rush in
where angels fear to tread!
Comes now a Rome correspondent,
and writes:
Sir—Tour efforts to confine the
Rome postmastership fight to two
measly antagonists is not appre
ciated In this city. Nor is your
further effort to confine it to four
looked upon with any marked de
gree of favor.
As a matter of fact, there are
nine candidates -and more to come.
Anyway, Rome already lias a fine
and efficient postmaster--if he is a
Republican. There isn’t a better
postmaster in Georgia than John
Harelav, of Rome -a Rome box,
orthj and will quallth-ii
A lot us folks think it would In
i. tight tu let John alone. Hut If
he must lose out. will lie more
than two. or even four, patriots
after his job. Respectfully.
' CATALINE.
Rome, Ga„ Nov. 13. 1912.
The Lord knows, Sidelights thinks
the more the merrier. Let the war go
on in Rome, and may the best man win,
no matter how many run!
And John Barclay IS a fine fellow,
moreover—and has made Rome a most
acceptable and efficient postmaster.
Muscogee county, made famous by
Ed Wohlwe-ndei and senate bill 88. re
mains the banner Socialist county of
Georgia, as is shown b.v the presiden
tial returns this year.
Muscogee east 158 votes for Debs—
leading Richmond in the count by about
50 votes.
Muscogee long has enjoyed the dis
tinction of being the Socialist strong
hold in Georgia. Every election it piles
up the biggest vote for that party—
never a real big vote, of course, but
sufficient to classify Muscogee as So
cialist Exhibit A in Georgia. anyway.
Editor T. S. Shope, of The Dalton
Citizen, is an Atlanta visitor.
Mr. Shope is more or less indignant
I that Whitfield county should have been
put in the Bull Moose columns in th«
earlier returns of the presidential elec
i tion, and expressed himself accord
ingly.
“There never was a chance t'Ji
i Roosevelt to beat Wilson in my county
. —and that even if my county some-
■ times does fly the coop. We went out
■ to redeem Whitfield from the Taft vic
tory of 1908, and we put the job over in
• great shape. 1 hope nobody who read
1 those earlier returns failed subse
-1 quently to get the figure.- right. We
■ want it understood that Wilson got a
• big majority vote in Whitfield—not a
1 plurality—a majority!”
1 “Please put it down tha. way, too!”
• concluded Shope.
It’s down—in black and white—to
, stay put!
: No Excuse
For Pimples
Skin Cleared in a Short Time by
Stuart’s Calcium Wafers, the
Famous Blood Pvrifier.
1 ’T* //W \
\
Pimplps. bloiclies. skin eruptions el
ail kinds ar<- simply th • impurities ii;
the blood coming io the surface. Ail
, the external treatment in the work!
won’t do a particle of good unless you
purify the blood. And there’s nothin?,
so humiliating as a face that's all “bro
. ken oul" and spotted.
, Stuart's Calcium M if. rs will clear
the most obstinate complexion, because
they go right into the blood and re
move the cause of the trouble. The
blood is cleansed of all impurities and
foreign substances and these are quick
ly eliminated from the system. You’ll
notice a wonderful change in a few
days—you will hardly know yourself
in a week.
And Stuart’s Calcium Wafers are ab
solutely harmless to any one. Their
ingredients are just what a physician
prescribes in most cases of skin erup
tions and poor blood. These wafers
are put up in concentrated form, which
makes them act quickly and thorough
ly.
Begin taking Stuart's Calcium Wafers
today and then look at yourself in the
mirror in a few days, and find all those
awful pimples, blackheads, acne, boils,
liver spots, rash, eczema and that mud
dy complexion rapidly dlsap]>'aring and
your face cleared like the petal of a
flower.
You can easily test Stuart's Calcium
Wafers for yout ’if. r ou call ge t th G
regular sized package for 50c in any
drug store.
PECTORANT
IRES iN A OAY
is, Colds. Consumption, ■
ping Cough, Croup, Trickling ■
i Nose. Watery Eyes, Prop- I
in the Throat, Bronchitis, ■
ill Throat and hung Trou- ■
Cheney's Expectorant re- K
at once. Thoroughly tested ■
ty years. S
(JGGISTSaSC AND SOC
OPEN ALL NIGHT
BOTH PHONES 461
FORSYTH AND LUCKIE I
KEELY'S
Friday Sale of Suits
no relaxation of interest
no cessation of activity
W omens Sui ts
“ $10.75
I / $35.00
this picture, drawn from the suit
/7>\ itself, fitted on a living model.
/ every day s sales show the suit
I 1 V. supremacy claimed by us. and war
fl I rant us in making contracts of such
/II / magnitude as justify the offering
/J | / here announced, tomorrow we s hall
\ Ii \ \ I offer at nineteen-seventy-five. suits
\ j \ \ u « the like of which you would expect
I \ ' to be price-ticketed at thirty-rive
\» dollars. you will like the model;
M VZ-Mw' 3 has been adopted by all good
• v'Mm-' i r i •
• W© s dressers, tor street and service wear.
i ! fl you will like the materials. you
| will like the linings. you will like
I I Z ' ' tke color assortment, above all, you
Ir U WI JI the price—
; i Nineteen-
J Seventy-five
Details Follow:
thil is the suit drawn materials are twilled serges
to,n hard - finish worsteds, two- toned
cheviots, english, scotch and Irish,
and french serges.
the colors are navy, black, eopen
hagen. marine, dome, smoke, brown,
gray and mixtures, in colors we show f
enough navy blues and plenty of
blacks. f// \ i" \
fortunately you can be fitted* as ( V V
the size scale is complete—ladies \\/ ■ i \
sizes, 34 to 46; misses sizes, 16, 18 K\ l\ \
and 20.
coats are exactly as model—new I 7 V /
modified cutaway, built upon artis- /
tic lines; linings of guaranteed twi Hed / . V
satins of self-color; mannish coat / / \
collars; long sleeves. each garment j/k » 1
finis bed with perspiration - proof !/ J
shields.
the skirts are panel front and back,
inlaid flaps, matching flaps on coat
button trimmed: high girdle belt
effects; fitted inner belts, all seams \
are bound seams—nothing raw or I
unfinished, every detail as perfectly | ‘
done as on a $50.00 suit.
sale at 8 o'clock tomorrow
KEELY'S
KEELY'S
KEELY'S