Newspaper Page Text
4
WHITEN ON FA3..S--
TiO, ACHING FEET
A TIZ Foot Bath Is One of the
Joys of Living.
A Free Trial Package Proves It.
No comfort anywher.. Swollen foot rob
the day of all its sunlght But it’s a
TIZ foot bath tonight Tomorrow is all
smiles an,l fleet-footedness TIZ a won
der to draw out all those acid poisons that
TIZ Stope All
This Foot 7
Mi,ery - Try
Bath Tonight.
sag down Into the leg- and feet. TIZ
shrivels a bard corn into nothing, drives
away bunions, reduces your feet to fit
your shoes and enables you to run like a
deer or stand and drill like a soldier
Get a box of TIZ. 25 cents at any drug
gist, department or general store, or send
to Walter Luther Dodge <v <’ ■. 1223 S
Wabash AVe., Chicago, 11l . for a free
trial ]>ackage. Not to try TIZ is to invite
misery. Don’t waste time with substi
tutes.
individual' /**> i
TURKISH W
H
osmtimm £ X AJ
“Quality blend”—
More money is paid
over the counter for
Fatimas than for any
other cigarette. A
quality that suits the
great majority of
smokers.
You’ll4ike it!
In an inexpensive
I package.
I 20 for 15c
RELIABLE- ES TABLISHED 23 YEARS
-E.G.GRIFFIN’S
GATE CITY DENTAL ROOMS
BEL VOg HONE 24% WHITEHALL ST. ATTE L N A D D A Y NT
SET OF TEETH PLATES MADE AND DELIVERED SAME DAY
GUARANTEED
$4.00
.. .si-oo up
silver RGr 11P
\ It killings ww ur
J J ▼ \ 1 Hours. 8a.m.t07 p. m.
a.l i Sundays. 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.
I am doing the Best Dental Work, using the Best Materials, working
Graduates of long Experience, men of Ability—a Specialist In each branch.
Consequently you are bound to get the best. I guarantee that. I am doing
one of the Largest Dental Practices in the South; It's because I give the Best
for the 'east money. I can afford it because lam doing the volume of business. ■
Herring-H a I -Marvit Safesand
Security Fireproof Cabinets
| Several store-worn samples and odd sizes at very low price
for immediate sale. We need room. YOUR OPPORTUNITY
I Gookin Bank an j Office Equipment Company
113-115 N. Pryor St., Atlanta
ZZI’ WOOLLEY’S SftNITfRIUM
4 Ou «m aril Whisky «
> 'T’KWSj ~ years experien-e shows
■HntM’■ ‘ • ar-• ar., curable Patients also treated at their
“ ■' * t ' -n.- :t;atl..,r. • ■■nil. •rt al. ,\1 ~k , , the S ub-
WMfrW-t|. M ■* 1 ' ' !’■ " ' lY Ct SUN . No. a-X vi
w w tor oauiiartum. Atlanta. Ga.
MID AUTO RUNS
INTO RESIDENCE
Woman Near Death as Big
Truck Wrecks Veranda of
Orme Street Home.
Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Harris. <>f 17 Orme
street, sadly arc surveying the wreck
of their front veranda today and won
dering whether it can ever look the
same since a three-ton motor truck
loaded with iee crashed into it and tried
to enter by the front door.
Mrs. Harris has real cause lor the
Thanksgiving spirit, because she wasn’t
killed, though she ivas close to death.
Winder Davis, the negro driver, and
11. T. Maddox, a white man with him
on the truck, are being held by the po
lio- to explain to Recorder Broyles this
; afternoon why they didn't keep the big
automobile in the street.
The mat him- was delivering ice and
turned from Carnegie way into Orme
i street to leaeh a customer. The wheels
*truck a rough place in the pavement
i and the steering apparatus was jerked
from tlie driver’s hands. The impact
jarred open the gasoline feed and the
engine put on a few thousand extra
revolutions. The truck shot down the
street, barely missing telephone poles
and trees, climbed the sidewalk and
crashed Into the Harris home. It tore
the brick supports from the veranda
and smashed the columns, leaving a
complete wreck behind it.
SON WEDS SOON AFTER
FATHER TAKES A BRIDE
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 29.—1 n less than two
months after the marriage of his wealthy
father. Robert W. Fullerton, of 4569 West
Pine boulevard, has taken a bride.
Cards announcing the marriage of Ful
lerton and Miss Stella Novia Buren were
received by their friends from Detroit.
Fullerton is the son of Samuel H. Ful
lerton. The elder Fullerton was mar
ried October 3 to Miss Adelaide V. Hede
gaariie, daughter of a former Danish
consul. In this city.
Clergyman Praises
Eckman’s Alterative
A Valuable Remedy for Throat and
Lungs.
People who have Consumption are often
filled with bright hopes of recovery, only
to realize that improvement Is but tem
porary. Consumption is dreaded by ev
ery one. Those who had it and used
Eckman’s Alterative can testify to its
beneficial effects. No one need doubt it—
there is plenty of evidence from live wit
nesses. Investigate the following:
Amenia. N. Y.
"Gentlemen: Prior to Feb., 1908. I was
located in Rochester, N. Y., suffering with
LaGrippe, which developed into Tubercu
losis. My physician gave me one month
to live. I was having terrible night
sweats and mid-day chills and losing flesh
rapidly, having gone from 155 to 135
pounds. I coughed and raised continually
ami became so weak that walking a few
feet exhausted me. On my return home,
my regular physician gave me little en
couragement. My father, who is a clergy
man. heard of Eckman's Alterative and
induced me to take it. The night sweats
and chills disappeared, my cough became
easier and gradually diminished and in
a few days 1 developed an appetite, the
first in months. 1 am now in perfect
health, back to 155 pounds. 1 feel certain
that 1 owe my life to Eckman's Altera
tive."
(Signed) E. H. COWLES.
"Gentlemen: I can not find words to ex
press my appreciation of what your rem
edy has done for my son. It changed de
spair into hope within two weeks after he
began taking it, and without any doubt
in my mind, it saved his life. I wish to
add my endorsement to every word of his
testimonial.”
(Signed) REV. .1. .1. COWLES.
Pastor Presbyterian Church.
Eckman’s Altera live is effective in Bron
chitis, Asthma, Hay Fever; Throat and
Lung Troubles and in upbuilding the sys
tem. Does not contain poisons, opiates
or habit-forming drugs. For sale by all
of .laeobs’ drug stores and other leading
druggists. Ask for booklet telling of re
coveries, anti write to Eckman Laboratory,
Philadelphia, Pa., for additional evidence.
THE ATI .ANT A GEORGIAN AND NEWS. F RIDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1912
“Frost-Bit Heel Forecast This Early Cold Snap
UNCLE HI "TOLD YUH SO”
"Told you so,” remarked Uncle Hi
Suggs early today, unfurling a red
bandanna from his neck and scattering
melting snow ov< the office carpet in
the city hall. "Didn't you see in the
paper a Week or so ago how 1 predicted
a hard winter would set in? Well, ain’t
this It? Wouldn't scarcely want no
harder, 'pears to me.”
Uncle HI, it may be remembered, is
the leading amateur meteorologist of
Battle Hill, and what he doesn't know
.about the weather isn't worth printing.
He remembers back to the year the
stars fell, and his grandfather left him
an unwritten < idyssey of the weather
for 60 years before that.
It was Uncle Hi who tried to gain
admittance to the convention of weath
er forecasters In Atlanta a week or two
ago and Was denied entrance, princi
pally, he believes, because Willis Moore,
Mr. VonHerrmann and the rest were
jealous of his reputation.
His Heel Itched.
"Everybody says this was the fust
Thrtnksgivlng day they ever seen with
snow on it," continued Mr. Suggs. "I
could a-told you it would snow-, if you'd
asked me. That frost-bit heel I got
with Gordon in '63 was sure itchin’ me
all yestiddy and my rheumatiz caught
me in the back so smart 1 had to make
PROBATION OFFICER’S
POCKET IS PICKED ON
CROWDED TROLLEY
As Police Probation Officer .1. M. Gloer
stood at the corner of South Forsyth and
Mitchell streets last night dead broke,
congratulating himself that he had mar
keted so well for the Detention Home
Thanksgiving day dinner, he gave little
heed to a burly Individual who contin
ually brushed against him.
"Thanksgiving eve cheer," thought
Gloer to himself. “It is a cold night.”
As he boarded a Stewart avenue car
with a bunch of bundles in his arms he
noticed that his friend of the street
climbed on after him. During the short
trip through the Terminal district the
man brushed against him, growing so
obstreperous at Garnett street that Gloer
remonstrated.
Shortly after the man left the ear,
Gloer, remembering the recent fate of
Deputy Sheriff Bob Devers, felt for his
pocketbook, which fortunately contained
only receipts for the Thanksgiving day
dinner. The pocketbook was gone.
COLDER WEATHER
FORECAST; AIR NOW
FREE OF MOISTURE
Cold weather for the next few days is
the prediction of the weather man, and
the mercury may go even lower than It
did this morning, when it registered 26,
the lowest mark of the season.
The snow prevented today from being
a day of rain and gloom, and It has so
cleared the skies that no rain is expected
for some time. Instead, zero weather will
come down upon Atlanta tonight, and.
though it will be tempered by Gulf
winds, this city will see some cold
weather.
Horses and mules felt the - cold this
morning and several suffered broken legs
because of the ice formed by the melting
snow. Traffic was blocked for a short
time at Five Points this morning while
a horse with a broken foreleg was
dragged away. The only animals that
escaped slipping were those so fortunate
as to have owners who tied up their feet
in sacks.
SON GIVES PINT OF HIS
BLOOD TO SAVE FATHER
MILWAUKEE, WIS., Nov. 29.—Harry
G. McGill, of Chicago, is on the road to
recovery today, following a blood trans
fusion operation, in which his son, Wil
liam McGill, gave a pint of blood. The
elder McGill is superintendent of the sec
ond division of the Postal Telegraph Com
pany, with headquarters in Chicago.
FOR 39 YEARS MAN GIVES
$1 A DAY TO HiS CHURCH
CHICAGO, Nov. 29.—Unknown to other
members of the Englewood Baptist
church, C. H. Knights has contributed a
dollar a day to the church for the past
thirty-nine years. A chance remark by
the pastor revealed the fact that Knights
had made this contribution, commencing
the day he joined the church in 1873.
Mflltons of housekeepers and exper
chefs use SAUER'S PURE FLAVOR
ING EXTRACTS Vanilla. Lemon
Indorsed bv Pure Food Chemists. (Advt.)
NOTICE, CHANGE OF
SCHEDULE ATLANTA
& WEST POINT R. R.
COMPANY.
Effective Sunday, December 1, 1912,
changes of schedule will be made as
follows:
No. 18, from Columbus, will arrive
Atlanta 10:20 a. m. instead of 10:30
a. m.
No. 41. for West Point, will leave At
lanta 5:45 p. m. instead of 5:40 p. in.
J. P. BILLUPS,
General Passenger Agent.
IMPORTANT NOTICE
CHANGE IN SCHEDULE
Effective Sunday, December Ist, the
Louisville & Nashville Railroad will
discontinue the Murphy accommoda
tion between Blue Ridge and Murphy
This train will leave and arrive at At
lanta on the present schedule.
LOW ROUND-TRIP RATES TO
WASHINGTON.
From Atlanta. $19.35: Athens, $18.15;
Cedartown. $20.05: Elberton, $17.15
Rates from other points will be named
on application. Tickets to be sold De
cember 1, 2 and 3. limit 15th. Seaboard.
FLOWERS and FLORAL DESIGNS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Beth Phones Number 4. 41 Peachtree.
‘Advertisement.*
Local Sleeping Car At
lanta to Chattanooga, via
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Leaves Atlanta Terminal
"tation 8:20 P. M.. Occupy
at Chattanooga until 7 A. M.
my wife split the kindlin’ and bring in
the coal.
"But my grandad uster say it wasn't
like Thanksgiving day without four or
five inches of snow He 'lowed it was
just the national tendency toward lux
uries and high livin' that was ruinin'
the country, and he put down this warm
weather we've been havin’ so many
years as flist and fo’most.
"My grandad said he never uster
think a Thanksgivin’ turkey was any
good loss'll it was buried in the snow to
cool and he never let a Thanksgivin’
mornin' go by without trailin’ rabbits
by their tracks.
Broke Ice to Get His Nip.
"He said he uster always have to
break the ice off'n the top of the jug be
fore he could pour bis mornin’ dram
on Thanksgivin' day. He never touch
ed a drop 'ceptln' on holidays, special
occasions and when he felt like he
needed it.”
"It must h#ve been cold In those days,
Uncle Hi," asked one of the old man’s
audience. "By the way. where did your
grandfather live?”
"My grandad? Why. he lived up at
the far end of Vermont,” returned Un
cle Hi, in evident surprise. "But what’s
that got to do with the weather ques-
Important News for
Saturday Shoppers
Tomorrow will be a very busy day, and may we be permitted to suggest shopping before noon, if
possible to do so. There are several reasons for our assurance of unusual Saturday activity. First, thou
sands have not vet bought the new coat, suit, furs, shoes, warm underwear, gloves. They’ll be here to
morrow. Second, thousands will buy Christmas gifts tomorrow, having learned the decided advantage of be
ing early.
So unquestionably it is better to shop Saturday morning,
Dainti/y Feminine Children School
Hats at Little Prices
A iVVrtlVvVll Just the serviceable, ready-to-wear kinds that
most mothers find it good economy to buy for
Here for Saturday hard ’ everyday wear -
Soft felts in the wanted colors, trimmed with
Every woman knows the value of a becoming piece of libbon bands 01 rosettes. Hats priced, regulail}
Neckwear. A pretty soft ruche, collar or ruff, adds to the up to $3.00 at 98c.
appearance of the attire, and gives that air of refinement so
much desired by all.
Saturday is Neckwear Day—and there are certain new When Nights Grow Cold
and fascinating pieces here for your choosing tomorrow.
and Children Shiver
For as Little as 50c
There should be op hand a good supply of warm bath-
Jabots, soft, pretty lace cascades, collars, coat sets, robes and flannelette night clothes. These soft blanket or
Robespierre collars ot silk and lace combined, high or low ~ , , . . ~ . ... ..
stvles Numerous daintv conceits that appeal strongly to eiderdown Robes are just the thing to throw on if the room
feminine fancies. is chilly. They’re snug and cozy, prettily made. Solid col-
ors or figured effects.
Fashionable Neck Sizes Ito 3 years ’ p riced $ L5 ° to s 7 ' so -
Sizes 6 to 12 years, priced $3.50 to $7.50.
Ruffs at $1.50 to $5.50 Children’s Knitted Bed-Room Slippers in red and light
r * colors; sizes for children 2to 12 years—7sc and SI.OO pair.
A display of new ami beantiM Huffs, such as are so Children’s White Outing Flannel Gowns, with drawstring
much worn now ot inanne, chiffon or liberty silk; black, . . ... f . ... .. , . L x .
black-and-white effects, all popular colors or all white. to protect the feet ’ We U-made, good garments, at 50c each.
Many smart and becoming styles to select from, at any price Sateen Bloomers are practical for children. They are
between $1.50 and $5.50. cn
here in navy or black, at 50c pair.
Stylish Apparel for Misses and Children
Special Pricing for Saturday
Ap "arel, for Girls and Misses, with all the distinguishing marks of the highest
quality, m ide in styles appealing a.ike to the tastes oi mother and daughter.
Note these prices:
For Little Tots---2 to 6 Years Girls 9 $6 Serge Dresses at $5
$6 and $7.50 Coats at $5 Every girl who tries one of these Dresses on. wants it at
once. They are so pretty and so becoming. There are Peter
Brand new, and every one in perfect condition. Made of Thompson, Norfolk and sailor styles, made of all-wool serge,
fine, beautiful materials, in tans, red, brown, Copenhagen. T ke popular blues, reds and browns. The price for Saturday
cunning little coats, with fur collar and cuffs. Included at ’ s s>-09 —they are $6.00 Dresses.
this price are the smart little black plush coats, so fashiona-
Me now. All »t one price for Suturdav-JS.OO. Sweaters for Small BoyS Olid Girls
Misses’ $25 to S3O Suits at S2O Sturdy, knitted Sweaters that make a child unafraid of the
cold. White and colors, priced SI.OO to $5.00.
Sizes 11 to IS Years rp -- .
Smart and stylish Suits in all the new materials. Some are OCjUeS to Match
Norfolk style, others have sailor collar, with trimining touches Crocheted of wool, 50c, 75c, and SIOO
$-8 C 50 tr oi St s n 3o Sn?t r ‘ a t A So p t ? V™ “ s2 ?’ Warm ’ knitted knee red and white, 50c, 75c and
collection 1 f s2 ° f d ° ne t 0 de lght her in this sl ’ oo a P air -
Knitted Waist Leggins, white and red. $1.25 pair.
Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co.
DEMOLITION OF OLD
TRINITY CHURCH TO
BE BEGUN MONDAY
t i
Workmen early Monday morning will ■
begin tearing down the old Trinity •
church at the southwest corner of .
Whitehall street and Trinity avenue.
Persons in financial circles are won
dering what sort of structure the new
owners will erect. The property fronts
100 feet on Whitehall and runs back 150
feet on Trinity avenue, and was sold
by the Trinity church officials for $120,-
000 to the Whitehall Realty Company,
of which Eugene Black is president and
S. B. Turman is secretary and- treas
urer.
There are two plans for the use of
the Turman property, but the details of
neither have been given out. This sec- .
tion is building up rapidly* with busi
ness houses, the Benjamln-Ozburn
building on Trinity avenue near
Whitehall and the Mau-Hannemann
building on Garnett street, between
Whitehall and Pryor, having been built ■
recently.
■
DIES FROM STEPPING ON
RUSTY NAIL 2 YEARS AGO
CHICAGO. Nov. 29.—Miss Nora Gary
is dead today from blood poisoning,
which resulted from stepping on a rusty
nail two years ago.
TUBERCULAR 6ERMS
flourish in the most unexpected /
places and quickly attack a / j 1
body weakened from colds Z"l I E
or general debility, but if ' y 1
the lungs are fortified with
SCOTHS EMULSION *
their progress can be prevented and often over
come. SCOTTS EMULSION is used in tubercu
losis camps because its highly concentrated nourish
ment builds strength and resistive-power faster than
< disease destroys. It assimilates without
taxing digestion, and contains no alcohol.
Absolutely nothing equals SCOTT’S
EMULSION to strengthen the lungs and
drive out colds and coughs.
Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. IMS
USE GEORGIAN WANT ADS