Newspaper Page Text
hlui league
JiiKN: GREECE
CONTINUESWAR
Other Allies Sign Armistice and
Peace Negotiations Will
Begin Soon.
vtrXN-X Dec. 4.—That the conclu-
1 ' ' ,eneral armistice without
f ° n n ;',rke the end of the Balkan
at ion. was one be
j expressed in official circles here
Another opinion, however, was
Roumania would take Greece’s
” i the league would be contin-
P develops that strong external
. S u'.'"c>>> brought upon Bulgaria by
’ .. md England to compel
i on of an armistice and be
aee negotiations with Greece ex
!ude(i vhen it was seen that the Greek
tovn nment would not subscribe to the
conditions.
H ontinues the war, the
,,j;pi-ations will thus probably
. ( i 2 ,( ato Epirus. Turkey has al-
T „ ..h set tier military machinery in
continue hostilities with
a Constantinople dispatch to
x Frei Pnsse states that a Turkish
’ , , v jV irr- ch to the relief of Janina,
i. Cji if under siege by the Greeks, in
B few days.
Cities to Remain
Under Siege
ipXSTANTINOrLE, Dec. 4. —Peace ne
„ •iatl. ns between Turkey and the Bal
! n allies will be opened in London
probably >n December 12.
unmuri ement to this effect was made
beie today. At the final hour, Turkey
p,j important concession to the
eff, <■ in.i; Turkish garrisons now under
'liouhl not be revictualed. This
i»s that Turkey believes that peace
f.ndily will be concluded.
... feeling of intense relief swept
through government circles here when
jiei-.s of rhe armistice was promulgated.
'i he Turkish government regards the final
outcome of the negotiations as a vic
tor) for the ottoman envoys.
1 Turkey retains her national honor, and
we believe that our empire has been
Sheng >.eno ra’her than weakened,” said
Vizier wiamil Pacha, at the con
clusion > : meeting of the ministerial
eotlt.e"
Greece May Make Peace.
Altinuyl Greece is not a signatory to
the^rw h-rice, there is a possibility that
f r ma take part in the peace nego
tiations. During the interim until the
peace negotiations are opened, one of the
great > wers, possibly France, will prob
;ti; nu-.lime in an effort to reunite the
entente of the Balkan league.
In spite of this possibility, Turkey is
■Ding io <pa rations to carry on war
v.ith Greece. At the war office it was
r io tiuit a Turkish army would probably
le sen the relief of .Janina, whijh is
intier siege by Greeks, within a few
Cays.
War Minister Nazim Pacha and his
fellow plenipotentiaries were thanked to
i’ay by Sultan Mohammed V for the suc
cessful manner in which they bad con
-1 ucted rhe parley for an armistice pro
tocol at Baghtche.
Hostilities to Stop.
Word was sent by the porte to all the
Turkish tone.- in Europe, save those fac
ing Greek troops, to cease hostilities at
once. Tiiis is not necessary at Chatalja,
where a restricted armistice has been in
effect since the negotiations were bgun at
Baghtche.
Among the foreign diplomats here there
is an undercurrent of opinion that the
running hand of the Turks might be seen
in the growing split of the Balkan league.
from time to time it was reported that
Turltey had made representations to
Greece for a separate treaty, but these
lid never received credence.
TEXAS YOUTH, STUDENT
AT TECH. TYPHOID VICTIM
Hundreds of miles from home and
Sa >! Taylor. Jr., of Fort
Worth. Texas, died at a private sanita
rium yesterday afternoon, after an ill
ness of several weeks. He was a mem
l>er of the junior class at the Georgia
School of Technology, where he was a
leader.
Mr. Taylor suffered a severe attack
‘ ,f typhoid fever last year while at-
Dnding the school, and had not entirely
'■ vhen he returned this fall to
'■stime his studies. He was stricken
weeks ago, and his mother was
summoned, arriving several days be
died. The body will be taken
I urt \\ oi th for funeral and inter
ment.
human cushion saves
MAN IN 40-FOOT FALL
• ••<.». Dec. 4. a human cushion
' ,l v 'i ' u the life of John Pien
"hen he fell 40 feet clown -a
~ nen bridge being con-
"ve the South Branch of the
t , !V « r at West Thirty-fifth
. _ ■ John Galligher, working in the
p H ' ,f ' “ ‘'aisson. was the cushion.
Ras! had just given a signal for
f ooi , li<lllr " hoist when he was
‘ caisson by a steam
lit tll ' bottom he struck Gal-
I'roken rpn<ler ßast escaped with a
knur, ' ' Galn Kher had the wind
Ked out of him.
brea ks into a house
and rescues couple
w'b, ' Dec ' 4 —John Flynn and
«-tu , illgai, ' t ' were overcome bv
I„ | . " ‘heir home and were res-
'D Sto, v' l nan Wil,iai » Clifford, of
• . ' ds Station, who detected
h ok, , grl ' , ! ‘* he was passing and
''"or. He dragged Flynn
unrti ai ■ u hen
I on the
■we • <
Church Fairs Forerunners of Merry Christmastide
BAZAR SEASON IN FULL SWING
Women Begin Annual Culinary
Campaign For Funds For
Holiday Festivities.
By Evelyn Wren
The Christmas spirit is in town and
the bazaar season is open.
That's why the stores along Peach
tree street left temporarily vacant are
being filled with women as busy as
bees, draping counters with linen cov
ers and spreading out cakes and dough
nuts and fudge. The women are pre
paring to earn money for theii
Mr
r _ --. ff warn,.
>1
rwGMgL MTU If
//UH ■ ~ I H&V
Mi OtafcF i ■ ix. w M
W - IJw
churches, the Sunday school Christmas
trees and the stockings for the little
folk who might otherwise And no gifts
on Christmas morning.
The men have a thousand ways of
making money. Ask a mere man to
give to a Christmas fund and he either
says he hasn't the money or digs down
in his pocket and pays it over. But the
women must earn theirs.
Find Fun in Running Bazaars.
No, it's not because they haven’t an
allowance or because their husbands
are stingy. But every woman likes to
feel that she is giving something of her
own. something actually earned, not
merely distributing a part of the money
her husband gives her. That is the
reason for church festivals and bazaars.
And they’re fun. too. They give Mrs.
Adams a chance to see Mrs. Brown and
meet Mrs. Copp and observe what Mrs.
Dobbs and Mrs. Evans are wearing.
They give Mrs. French an opportunity
to talk over Mrs. Grant's party with
Mrs. Higgs. They furnish a chance to
learn the recipe of Mrs. Ingle’s famous
sponge cake, and Mrs. Jackson's raisin
pudding, and so on through the whole
alphabet and back.
And what if the materials and the
gas and the cooking do cost as much as
the price the cuke brings, what differ
ence does that make? They are
charged in the regular grocery bill any
way and nobody feels the difference.
Several Bazaars Opened.
Several of the Christmas bazaars
opened today. The Ladies Aid society
of the West End Presbyterian church
is holding its sale at 64 Peachtree
street. The Sacred Heart church is
holding its bazaar and restaurant at 168
Peachtree street, and the women of St.
Philips opened theirs at the cathedral,
with a midday luncheon as a drawing
card for busy business men.
The Ponce DeLeon Baptist commit
tee opened its bazaar at the home of
Mrs. Rutherford Lipscomb. Park Street
church will have its sale today and to
morrow, and Westminster Presbyterian
will begin its annual bazaar next Fri
day. Others are being announced every
day and they will continue until a day
or two before Christmas.
So the pre-holiday season isn't all a
round of bridge and dances and shop
ping in the fashionable set.
Rounding Up the Men, To°.
The girl you danced with last night
is wearing a white apron today and
teady to sell you a pound cake, a Dutch
collar, a jabot or a rag doll with a face
made of a much-abused golf ball. The
matron tinder whose mahogany you
slipped your patent leathers at yester
day's dinner 1s ready to charge you a
cash price for a luncheon today. wa: -
•anted jus: as good, though in fewer
courses.
And they're rounding up the men.
too.
"Don't you dare to take luncheon at
the restaurant or the club today,” said
Mrs. Atlanta to her husband as he
kissed tier * good-bye this morning.
“Come to our bazaar at 12 o'clock and
bring two or three friends. Make
everybody in the office come. too. Ano
be sure and buy one of Mrs. Roberts'
fruit cakes. I’ve heard her bragging on
them for three years and I want to see
whether they are as good as mine.”
Atlanta husbands must be well
trained, to judge from the way the
tables are filled in those bazaars which
serve luncheon. And even where the
offering Is composed only of pillow cov
ers. dolls and divinity fudge you may
see the meh lined up. talking foolishly
with the pretty -aleswonmn and lug
ging horn- unarm; •' of packages which ■
will serve as I'mistmu- gifts a few'
weeks hence
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1912.
/ 1
*s"
*<sL*w-
— / > w£l i «Hra«W
Miss Rosetta Wrigley at the doll booth at Sacred Heart ba
NORTHERN HOUSEHOLDS
AND CUSTOMS LAUDED
BY MRS. JACK SLATON
“There is more ceremony to the hos
pitality of the North than of the South.
It is colder and less homelike, but equal
ly as delightful, because everything is
done exquisitely. The promptness with
which a Northern hostess serves a din
ner and the punctuality of her guests
amazed me after our easier ways of en
tertaining. The Northern women en
tertain on schedule in away that is al
most uncanny to me.”
In this way Mrs. John M. Slaton, wife*
of the governor-elect, who has just re
turned from a. visit to New York, where
with her mother. Mrs. W. D. Grant, and
her husband she was entertained by
prominent residents of the metropolis,
including William Sulzer, governor
elect of New York, and his wife, sums
up the dinner difference of the two sec
tions.
Impressed by Punctuality.
Mrs. Slaton explained that she hardly
had time to probe the mysteries of the
Northern household, its inner working
and the real secrets of the prompt serv
ice which so impressed her. She said
she hastily concluded that its machine
like working was due to the trained
servants of the North
“Os course,” said Mrs. Slaton, “hospi
tality is very much alike the country
over. If you are liked and invited be
cause you are liked, it is always de
lightful. I found little difference in the
spirit of the thing in the North. It is
the manner in which it is done in which
the two sections display their Individu
ality.
"In the big homes in New York things
are turned over to the servants entirely,
even the keys which the Southern wom
an prizes so highly. I am sure that
many a Northern hostess doesn't know
the menu of her luncheon until she sits
down to the table with her guests. She
has turned the whole thing over to the
servants and everything runs as smooth
ly as if she had given the minutest de
tail her personal supervision."
Atlantans Often Late.
But it was the promptness with
which dinneis were served and even
more the punctuality of the guests that
most impressed Mrs. Slaton and was
evidence of the rnbst marked contrast
between the North and the South in
their social comings and goings.
“I don’t mean to say," she continued,
"tnat people who go out in Atlanta are
chronically late, but there’s a tendency
to be late, and I am frank to admit that
I have, on several occasions, found my
self arriving after the set time.
"I remember but one guest who was
late during my visit, and he was an ex
ceptionally busy man. Really he acted
as if he had committed an unpardonable
crime. His embarrassment was so gen
nine that everybody was sorry for him.
White Service Praised.
"Perhaps they are more ceremonial in
the North, less homelike, hut this again
I think can be traced to tiie service, of
course, no one questions tin superiority
of the trained white servant over the
negro. Not that I would ilk ■ to dis
pense with the negro in th< South, but
personal supervision of the household is
essential here. The Northern woman
can ignore it if she finds it a care or as
sume, it if it gives her pleasure.. I found
that some do and some don't, but the
service is so efficient that it seems to
make little difference.”
During her stay in New York the
newspapers “played up" Mrs. Slaton as
a spectator at the trial of the gunmen,
but she did not attend. Mr. Slaton, with
Forrest Adair and John Grant, spent an
afternoon at the trial qt the Invitation
of District Attorney Whitman. One of
the women in the party was taken by
the New York reporters for Mrs. Slaton
and The Herald's artist sketched her as
such.
‘■THANK YOU” PEEVES
JUDGE: STIFFENS FINE
NEW YORK. Dec. 4.—When August
Miller, chauffeur, said "Thank you” to
Magistrate Krotel for lining him $lO
for permitting his automobile to smoke,
the judge grew peeved and fined him
another $5.
$30,000 SABLE OVERCOAT
FOR CONGRESSMAN LEVY
M ASHINGTON, Dec, 4.—Congress
man Jefferson M. Levy, of New York,
is here with a $30,000 sable overcoat,
said to be the most expensive in. the
world.
Benefited Many Who
Had Lung Trouble
Those who suffer from Consumption
are generally troubled with night sweats
fever, loss of strength and little or no
appetite. Fresh air. good food and the
proper care of the body are essential to
a. recovery, hut in mane cases some
thing more is needed. Eckman's Alteia
tive is a medicine which has been most
successful in stopping night sweats, re
ducing fever and promoting aupe.ite and
many who have used it declare it saved
their lives. Investigate what it did in
ibis case:
•‘Gentlemen: For for.- years I was
troubled wuh i-ough, which graduallv be
came wo.se. 1 had night sweats ami
pains ’ii my chest. I was losing mv ap
petite and had become 50 thin and Weak
1 could not attend to my household du
ties. \ physician pronounced my case
Consumption Not being satisfied. ’ I was
examined by the physicians of the Poly
clinic Hospital. They .also pronounced
the disease Consumption, which was
proven later by an examination of spu
tum. as Tuberculosis Bacilli were found.
1 was order'd to a Consumptive Hospital
My nephew would not allow me to go
until 1 bad tried Eckman's Alterative.
Before I had taken the medicine three
weeks. I bad marked relief, night sweats
ceased, pain in the breast relieved, cough
became loose and easy, fever left me and I
commenced getting well. My health be
came normal I am in excellent health
now and have been completely cured for
ten years. I stronglv recommend it."
(MRS > MARY WASSON.
Care Ed. Green, 1722 S. 17th St.. Phila..
Pa.
Eckman's Alterative is effective In
Bronchitis. Asthma. Hay Fever: Throat
and Lung Troubles and in upbuilding the
system. Does not contain poisons, opi
ates or habit-forming drugs. For sale I>\
all of Jacobs drug stores ami other lead
ing druggists Ask for b-.oljet tolling of
recoveries m. write to I ’knan I mora
tory, Philadelphia. I’.i for Ju litional evi
dence ’ (Advt.)
U. S, BALLOONIST
RECITES THRILLS
GF RIG RACE .
Watts and Aid Traveled 300
Miles Over Baltic Sea. and
Landed in Russia.
NEW YORK, Dec. 4.—A thrilling sto
ry of two days flirting with death while
more than two miles above the earth's
surface was told today by John Watts,
balloonist, of Kansas City, Mo., when
he returned from Europe on the liner
Kaiserine Victoria.
Air. Watts, with A. T. Atheholt, of
Philadelphia, participated in the inter
national balloon race, which started
from Stuttgart, Germany, on October
27. Their own balloon was in a leaky
condition, so they borrowed tlie Dussel
dorf II and their record of 1.150 miles
most likely will give them third place,
a trophy and $1,500 in cash.
"We were not very familiar with the
workings of the new balloon and had
some trouble early in the flight." said
-Mr. Watts. "Time and again we were
saved from a precarious condition by
quick action. A strong wind came
along and curried us over the Baltic
sea for a distance of about 300 miles.
Bag Crushed With Ice.
“The air currents carried us into Rus
sia and it grew intensely cold. We
thought several times that we would
have to descend because of the biting
cold. We had gone about 1.100 utiles
when we noticed that our balloon was
slowly but surely sinking. We threw
out ballast, but it did not seem tu keep
us up.
"Then we noticed that our gas bag
was crusted with ice and the coating
grew thicker each hour. We threw out
all our ballast, but to no avail, and the
big ship went hurtling through space
from an altitude of about 1,000 feet, and
it seemed we covered the distance to
the earth in just a few seconds.
“We seemed to slow up just a trifle
when we were within about 200 feet of
the earth and the big bag seemed to
regain its buoyancy, but it was only for
a few minutes, and then, despite every
thing we did, tlie balloon shot to the
ground.
“We landed with a terrific crash that
almost jolted both of us out of the
basket, which was badly smashed. We
clung to the ropes and threw out the
anchor. But the. balloon began to skip
along the ground. The crash hud
shaken off hundreds of pounds of ice
and the balloon regained enough buoy
ancy to sail along with the basket drag
ging over the frozen uneven ground.
Lost For a Week.
“Luckily, we came to a clump of trees
and the seemingly mlle-a-minute clip
of our balloon was checked long enough
for us to jump out and tie it. It was a
thriller, that experience, and one -which
came mighty near being our last.”
For nearly a week after they ascend
ed not a word was heard from either
Watts or Atherholt, and it was thought
they were lost, until word of their safe
ty was telegraphed from Poskov, a
small Russian town near Moscow, Rus
sia, where they descended. They land
ed on October 29, but it was not until
November 3 that the telegram reached
the telegraph office nearly 100 miles
away.
The distance W atts and Atherholt
traveled entitled them to third place in
the lace, ’hut the judges disqfialitied
them because they ascended after sun
set. However, the men have made a
protest against this ruling, claiming
they ascended at that time with the full
sanction of the officials and when Watts
left Germany he -vas given assurance
that the disqualification would not
stand.
JUST RECEIVED.
We are prepared to supply you with
every style, or pen point in the world's
standard fountain pen from our com
plete stock. AVaterman's Ideal Foun
tain Pens are absolutely guaranteed to
give conjplete satisfaction. 42 N. Broad
St. John L. Moore & Sons. (Advt.)
WHAT YOU EAT SHOULD
BE PURE AND SWEET;
YOU FIND IT AT ZAKAS’
The greatest caution is necessary in
selecting what you eat. as your health
depends on this more than any other
one thing. The bread, <ake and pastry
sold at D. Zakas’ store, 30 Peachtree
street —Five Points —is guarantee.',
pure and fresh. If you will stop on
your way home and make a purchase,
you will appreciate the purity and de
licious taste of l> eail, buns, rolls, cook
ies, cake or pastry, t'ali today ami b"
convinced. (Advt.)
- ■ -ll—' ll I .1.
Don’t fail to read the opening
instalment of ‘’The Case of Oscar
Slater,” by Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle, which appears on the l
magazine pa ge of The Georgian j
tomorrow. It’s the story of Sher-1
lock Holmes in real life.
I
NEW TREATMENT
FOR COLD TROUBLES
Is plenty of fresh air in the bed room
and a good application of
VICKS SALVE
over the throat and eheM. covered with
a warm flannel cloth; soothing antiseptic
vapors are released by the hotly warmth
and inhaled directly to the affected parts.
No need c.f disturbing the stomach with
medicines. The w« rs; relieved in
night; rr<»un »n niin’it*’*, , I
50c and si. \t <b uggisi>. Sample un I
quest. VicL < ’hr mi -til <’on»pan.'. i : ’»i
T’lne strf*p •;i . x. < <\\ » I
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
Colonel Thomas Eason—only he is
Judge Eason now, of course, being the
presiding magistrate of the city court
<x . ' '
F
IL «
Ever since he was 21 years of age
almost - which was long enough ago to
make the courtting backward more or
less tedious —Judgt Eason has been an
officeholder under the state of Georgia.
In all that period of time there were
but three short years—the longest of
Judge Eason's life, however —in which
he was loose from the seats of the
mighty entirely.
In the smashup of three years ago.
Colonel Eason got left off the prison
commission, where for years he had
played a creditable part—and it made
him very sad.
He immediately began reaching for
something else; and a few weeks ago
l e landed it, in tlie shape of the Mcßae
judgeship. ,
Before Judge Eason was prison com
missioner he was solicitor general of
one of the biggest judicial circuits in
the state, and, therefore, he is amply
qualified for his new position.
Judge Eason expects to hold on to
his present job all the rest of his life,
unless he sees something better, and
the chance of getting looks good.
He is immensely popular throughout
Georgia, and every time he goes after
something he "most generally gets it.”
R. D. Bullard, a new member-elect
of tlie house of representatives, is an
Atlanta visitor today.
Mr. Bullard hails from Campbell
county, and will he one of the younger
members of the next legislature. He is
modest and says he is not coming to
the house witli an intent to “cut any
unusual capers."
Unless his reputation belies him,
however, Bullard, of Campbell, likely
will be one of the most influential men
in the house to be assembled next June.
In connection with the mote or less
pending row as to who shall be tlie
successor of <'olonel Martin V. Calvin
as superintendent of the Georgia exper
iment station in Griffin, the suggestion
again has been advanced that the sta
tion be moved from Griffin and located
at Athens, where it might he made an
immediate part of tbe State College of
Agriculture.
While there is much in the suggestion
to commend it. perhaps, it is not likely
that It ever will be moved—or that it
might be moved, in perfect fairness to
Griffin.
If it were proposed to move the pres
ent station to Athens, which is in
northeast Georgia, and establish a sim
ilar station somewhere in southwest
Georgia, the legislature doubtless would
give the double suggestion great con
sideration, and it might go through. As
it stands, however, the station likely
will remain in Griffin.
As to the succession to Mr. Calvin
however that is accomplished, and who-
Indorsea by more Pure Food authori
ties. expert chemists, chefs and house
keepers than mv other EXTRACT in
the U. S. A. “SAUER'S" (Advt.)
1 1 jM j ‘ n l
WEAK WHMEMI
■TTTMm——■! 11111 Tl ——III M—UMMM !
Le get new life and vigor by
s taking Scoff’s Emulsion
I after every meal.
It revitalizes the watery 1 i
3 blood and furnishes Nature !
1 with new nourishment to make
B red, active, healthy blood and feeds
■ the nerve centers. Scott*
Emulsion strengthens the 6
j bones and clothes them with H
I healthy flesh. s
Scott’s Emulsion assimi- ■ :
lates so quicklv it conserves I
energy and compels health. |
Scott & Bownt.. 81-K in field, N. J. |
■
Clogged-Up Liver i
Causes Headache
It's a foolish proceeding to suffer from coc-
Itipation, sick headache, biliousness, duzincr-,
indigestion and kindred ail
meats when CARTER’S XroTOrx.
LITTLE LIVER .
PILLS will end all
vegetable. ®IT TLE
Act gently 3 IV ER
•n liver S PILLS,
and \ jww-Zjl
bowels. Las: t. !»
Small Pill. Small Dose, Small Price
The GENUINE must bear signature
By JAMES B
ever lands the plum, it should be made
without log-rolling or undue inside po
litical pull. If any one office in the
state should seek the man, it is the
office Martin < 'alvin now holds, and
which he so soon will vacate.
Whether the selection will be made
along ideal lines, however, remains to
be seen. Already there are rumors of
"log-rolling” abroad.
G. R. Duke, justice of the peace of
the Ousley district in Lowndes .county,
has decided to retire from office, and
test for the remainder of his life upon
his well earned and highly honorable
laurels.
Squire Duke is known to tame in his
end of the state as "the marrying jus
tice of the peace." He proudly claims
to have married more couples than anj
other justice of the peace in the state;
and he admits, unblushingly, that had
it not been for the very great pleasure
and satisfaction he derived from mak
ing two hearts beat as one—or words
to that effect —he long ago would have
given up the justice of the peace busi
ness.
His produest boast is that he suc
ceeded in marrying, once upon a time,
a quartet of sisters to a quartet of
brothers—and that, indeed, is some
record'.
If any justice of the peace in the
United States has a record like that,
Square Duke never heard of him.
The veteran official is getting along
in years now. but as he rides around
his county and sees the scores of haptw
couples lie married, both of late years
and In the long ago, he feels that he
has played a fine part in the history
making of Lowndes and surrounding
counties.
The Griffin News, under the direc
tion ot Editor Gus Morrow, started
a campaign tor civic betterments in
the capital city of Spalding which
' likely will be a. winner.
Says The News, outlining the imiiw
diate work proposed;
It is to be hoped that every offi
cial of Griffin s municipal govern
ment, every member of a local civic
otganizatlon, and. in tact, everv
citizen, will do everything possible
to foster the spirit which is behind
the proposed raising of funds to
provide public parks and beautify
the school grounds hi the city.
Griffin Is one of the very prettiest 01
Georgias smaller cities, it is progres
sive and prosperous, and it is laid oft
in away that will make easy the mat
ter of parking.
I here is plenty of room in Griffin—
the city is not "bunched up,” as sc
many cities unfortunately are—and th«
expense of laying out parks, if the Jay
t ing out is undertaken now, will be muel
■ less, necessarily, than it would be ten
i or twelve year.- hence. And. of course
• the question of ample school grounds is
i not open to argument, one way or the.
other.
I I'll.- News is endeavoring to keep pol
i | itics out of the question of beautifying
Griffin, and seems likely to succeed. And
that will tend to make the work eas-
i ier, and much more satisfactory in re
' suits, too,
i Judge John \\. .Maddox, former con
gressman from the Seventh district,
and present judge of the superior court
of the Rome circuit, is an Atlanta vis
itor today.
ludgi Maddox is completely out ot
politics noveadays, save Ij, so far as his
judicial position keeps him in. Tli r
have been rumors that tlie judge ex
peris to resi-n soon, but he denies . i:
knnwledgi of such intention upon ■ ■
pail.
A 1.'.-s Moil' - man had an a tael. .
tnuseul ir ; m utmitlsm in his shouldi '.'
| A friend advised him to go to 11
I Springs. That imnnt a-.i expense "
$150.0" or more lie sought for a qub
' er and eh'-aper way to 'lire it inel
totin'! it in <'hamb'" In in's Lininu n'
Three days after the first applicate '
of this iiniment lie wa- a . 11. i'or s:i |.
by all dealers. (Advt.)
Don’t fail to read the openinc
instalment of ‘'The Cass of Oser .■
Slater,” by Sir Arthur Con
I Doyle, which appears on 1L ■
magazine page of The Georgian
tomorrow. It’s the story of Sher
lock Holmes in real life.
of Mcßae—visited
the state capitol
.oday, and had a
ook in. not only
on his old field of
endeavor in tlie
prison commission
headquarters, but
on the boys corn
show as well.
Judge Eason —
it will necessary
to cut that "Colo
nel” business
hereafter. how-'
ever much the old,
familiar title may
appeal —is most
happy to get back
in official harness
once more.
Babrfs
Every woman's heart responds to
the charm and sweetness of a baby's
voice, because nature intended her for
! motherhood. But even the loving
nature of a mother shrinks from the
ordeal because such a time is usually
a period of suffering and danger,
t Women who use Mother's Friend ate
! saved much discomfort and suffering.
I and their systems, being thoroughly
prepared by this great remedy, are
• In a healthy condition to meet the
I time with the least possible suffering
and danger. Mother's Friend is
recommended only for the relief and
comfort of expectant mothers; it is in
no sense a remedy for various ills,
but Its many years of success, and
the thousands of endorsements re
ceived from women who have used it
are a guarantee of the benefit to be
derived from its use. This remedy
does not accomplish wonders but sim
ply assists nature to perfect its work.
Mother's Friend allays nausea, pre
vents caking of ... .g *
the breasts, and IglrtTr®
in every way zVw-r ? <
SSTIX t'Fweni
motherhood. Mother’s Friend Is sold
at dr"g stores. Write for our free
book for expectant mothers.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Adult, Gu
. NEVIN.
3