Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 09, 1912, EXTRA, Page 3, Image 3

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FEAGHTREE HOME BUILDERS DEF? BUSINESS TIDE Encroachment of Steers ancL Auto Shops Fails to Halt Fine Residences. to whom the name of I .. p ,tree" still bears a chaun have I , , permitted the encroachment of gas md rubber to keep them from ~in ti homes on the famous avenue ~changing so rapidly from a j , jdenee boulevard to a business street. , r>Mu, litree is almost an unbroken sue- i ce <_.i„ n <>f stores and automobile shops f ,. , . viaduct to Ponce DeLeon now. , i.-al estate men predict that not a .... .net will be left t..is side of i'our- , street within five years, but this | . ot deterred the well-to-do from ; ill!r nov. and handsome homes just , that reported ’‘danger line." E, A. Bancker Building. -■ owners as Dr. Floyd \V. Mcßae, j ■. P. Howard. John H. Meeaslin. | .1 Eilgai Hunnicutt. Meli R. Wil- ; , ..',n. William L. Porter. Samuel Car- ; E. p. Mcßurney, Frank inman, ; ls . j Army. Mis. Fannie B. I tf.orge A. Nicolson, Miss Sally! i own, Mrs. Caro Uußignon, D. N.I f .ilmigh and Wt.l'ac-e M. Kirkpat-| ... declare they will be dislodged like' fortunate neighbors closer in , i a Bancker. Jr. assistant cashier] ~f : .. l.owry National bank, is building! in t i - ...'lion of palatial homes. Hi.\j , ~jii ;-e a two-story brick affair,] v;: . -i til. i.of. and its number will be j . I',- . htrec. Gtide & Co. are tael , , iisa'crable bulldin;, on va- ! ~ -idi - i ist outside tin path of | ... . .n-;’ garages. Dr. J. Creston King | about completed a hou.se on the, of West Peachtree street 80 | . > north of Tewlfth street. ;■, ■ aer State Senator .1. W. Mayson ■ , ..veil away from Decatur after 21 ‘ ~ , .. of i - sidem , and will hereafter I liis omc at 257 Prado, Ansley I-,. . Tais place is just west of the) horns "I' Wbliam Hurd Hill-| ..>.<• within two miles of where Dr. , iv.ri’s mot ;• was born and lived 78 : ■ .... T ■ iieuse is of brick Vetiiir] . ,i,, , a til, roof. it is on a lot Gentry o Build For Son. tv. T. Gentry has bought two lots. | 41 ", In Park lane. Ansley Park, and v, i build a house for his son. Tom Ft. B. mry. ami for his daughter. Mrs. yi Carlin. These lots cost $2,000 .>d '■ m arly '43 a front fyot. Hardy Padgett height the remaining^third of a 1 ln-foot parcel, and it, is said he will I held this? for investment. .loan I'. Glenn is building a handsome! i’lr.a. ui -tii '..Vest min st er drive, Ansley l’n ■. This is nearly finished and ready for occupancy. Hr. V. Norcross is building at the i-0:11. r of Springdale and Fairview mails. I a thd Hills. S< :< what farther out there is con- ■ bb activity in building. Mrs. S. Llii.gle recently completed a hand- J ; . in- residence on the east side of !’ .. irec road near the country estate " t'.ilyinel Walter P. Andrews and ad joining her place to the south Is the iiiarh finished place of D. E. Giffen. P"ii :h, ?. places are of brick and are il dm-ito in design. E. R. Kirk is build- ■ s2’>.i>im> home on Andrews avenue ' "I From Peachtree road, and J. '• I'.'sb s -s noving to Atlanta from St. u.austine ami will erect a handsome . "ti Wesley avenue. lliib.-i sham road has just been fin itt macadam and with water, sew - 'i' and lights; and modern improve c,m., ■, plated along Telalee lane, Musing,,-, avenue and other thorough k'l’i-- in this section are expected to | open up many opportunities for home- i sii'lwrs. I lock girls in mad CELL AT AN INITIATION s PRING Fl ELD. Gl-110, Dee. 9.—With I 1: '-oners in the tiers shrieking and "aning, six society girls of this city initiated into the "Entre Nous” ' 111,1 by being blindfolded and led to the '"my jail and incarcerated in the pud ell, where maniacs and violent "tieis arc eonfin. J, Sheriff Law ' who pci "litted the initiation at' I iil. secured the assistance of the isiinei's, making the ■n< as weird Possible. The girls removed the ''"''Holds and found themselves in ■. They tried to escape, but only 1,1 ■ "il into the padded w ills and m >n hi the do,M When released they] ■ fright. BURY BAIT’S MOTHER WHERi; MOB KILLED j " 'RKVH.Ijr MISS.. Dec. '.). Iwwi 'ha Bui rm,; ... aged mother of Rube '"'Tows, notorious train robb-r. win- 1 the South f„r v a ls , II in a 1 lain pine box ac.o s th.J ■ 'bimia lii," bosid - the grave of her oli.i riddh o be a mob's' '■ '."t- st,,. , . ‘ ; >, , M . h | j (1 shroud ; os. sie pain f () r th.' funeral ten] I ' C epitaph ove. Ihe dou "Mot >. i' Im- gone to Rube In Heav. i." m ls . Burrow - ■<s Bti yeats old. COURT DECLARES rich man is LEGALLY DEAD B I '.'li,\ \\ is,. Dee. Joint’ ■ ~ ' s " n " f Um lai, William L.vm'h. I ''A Pioneer of l. no<ti a. v ho di - K 1 'Went.; yeats ago. h;U been I ■ ■ ■ "> ' • l»u mj ■ I, "med up ad tilnt-trafu, for] ■ I 'Actress Given Verdict in Sensational Trials iERLANGER LOSES SUITj ■ ’St *Tt i * <• •• '.: - U "If y■' G . jfIHHMh. . i Am I f BsHsSMBHMHhL ( / - i H JbmMWIS 1 V Mi'.s K'iiiit Si. I itiir, tietress, who won her law suit for $22.- 1 •‘Jin ; '/.liiist Ivitiw v\ Erlanger for breach of contract. I Awarded $22,500 for Broken Contract—Defense Al leged Blackmail. NEW YORK. Dec. 9.—Edith St. Clait [the actress, won her $22,500 suit gainst Klaw & Erlanger last week, when a I jury declared her contract for that amount with the theatrical firm valid. The verdict came after a sensational trial, during which Abraham L. Erlang er charged a lav. yer with blackmail an'd declared the contract was made under duress to save annoyance to his wife, who was ill at the time and who later divorced him. Miss St. Clair, under the agreement, was to have received $2,500 a year for ten years. Tin contra*. ' was lived up to for one year oply. the testimony showed. SHOWS PHOTOS OF MEN OF 15.000.000 YEARS AGO ST. I.iiUIS. Dee. 9. — !>■. Samuel * Wendell Williston, professor of paleon ihology of the University of Chicago, startled an audience that packed the assembly room of the Second Baptist I church by displaying photographs pur porting to show our pre-historic an cestors of 15,000,000 years ago. Dr. Williston not only exhibited pic tines of actual skeletons, but also showed representations of tiie animals in life. {“BLIND TIGER” LIQUOR FOR ZOO INEBRIATES RICHMOND. IND., Dee. 9.—Park Su perintendent Hnllarn has asked the po lice to turn over to the zoo whisky ob tained in •'blind tiger” raids to be given to the monkeys which are accustomed to a “nip" every other day during the winter. SI AYS FATHER-IN-LAW AND SELF: SON WOUNDED lit >l.l AND TEXAS, Dec. 9 MU | Armstrong formeily auditor of the Tex:.- ITcifie railway at Dallas, today I shot and killed Sc r> P. A illiams. ft s i father-in-law . mortally wounded his I ■m. Hex Williams and then ended his torn life. li'ttmily troubles were the I cause. _ -JOY TRAIN” ON ROAD. w.\ Y<'R< >SS <4-A.. D ‘ 11. Running L, , .| V late, beeatlsi the regular Way • |< ros- yay day was yesterday, the At- J’lPtie Uoa' t Line’s "joy train" reache I ii city today with Sl3o.non for the i.-iloptnen of this city. The Hain wili be in south H< orgia for several day s. ——.—— - I 30 INDICTMENTS IN WEEK WAYCRoSH lit Do. 11. With a ■' ri ord of Hu indict m<n*“ for the Hist i wcAk’f session till u mil Jill H < bt. Irethil today foi n s, . olid v . el. of bil.-f --. I Two of Ihe 'la ■no let merits t jt 11 iieii t naige inutdet. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ANT) NEWS. MONDAY. DECEMBER 9, 1912. KILBURN SEEKS FEDERAIJFFIGE Former State Legislator Out for Appointment as Govern ment Printer. Lew Kilburn, of Macon, twice a mem ber of the Georgia legislature, and one of the best known and most genuine ly popular labor leaders in the South, will be a candidate for appointment bv President Woodrow Wilson to the po sition of public printer in Washington. Mr. Kilburn already has made known his ambition to numerous friends in At lanta and elsewhere, and these have rallied to him solidly and aggressively, as was to have been expected. He will have the indorsement of both Georgia senators and the entire delega tion in the national house of represen tatives. besides hundreds of former as sociates in the Georgia legislature and public men generally throughout, the state. Mr. Kilburn stands very high in the world of labor. He is a printer by; trade, and has been a leading and con structive force for years among the progressives of the Typographical union. In every way. so his friends and associates believe, he is qualified for the po-ition of public printer—an office that would make him the head and directing force in the great gov ernment printing establishment in Washington. Under his direction, in the event of his appointment, the va rious government publications, includ ing The Congressional Record, would be issued. Kilburn's friends in Atlanta and ■hroughout Georgia say that he will go to Washington with the heaviest and most convincing indorsement that any applicant for office from this section ever carried, and they are most san guine of success in bi-- behalf. AVERAGE WEEKLY WAGE OF INDIANA MINERS $11.85 INDIANAPOLIS, Dec. 9. -Eleven dol lars and eighty-five cents was the av erage weekly wage of the 21,230 coal Illinois m Indiana last year, according to the annual report of Prank I. Pearce, state mine inspector. Thirty-■‘even miners were killed dur ing the yen. an unusually small num ber compared with othei years DIES SAYING PRAYER IN THANKS FOR LONG LIFE LoNDoN, Dei 9. Kneeling in |> t, ■ to give thank, lor lis long life It . le o Sall-lmi'. is died of paic.ly sb in Lehigh I iptlM church, j MN CHIEFS OF 12 STATES SET Southeastern Labor Congress to Open Sessions at Capitol This Afternoon. • Delegate- fr m a dozen states gath ered in Atlanta early todav for the opening' of the Southeastern Labor con gress. the firs' ctional ((invention of ; organized !: bi,.' f rce.-. Tile t-ersions are to be held n the state capitol this after noon and tomorr.i'v with an address to night by Judson King, secretary of the National Initiative Referendum and Re call society. A pielirninary meeting was held yes terday afternoon by the committee on arrangeniints. C'lmposcd of represen tative.- from every union in the Atlant i ■federation." Reports showed that sev | eral hundred delegates would be hen* : in time fm this afternoon's meeting. James O'Connell, vice president of ! the American Federation or Labor, ar | rived early today and opened headQUar l ters in the Kimb ill house. President ! Samuel Gompers had intended coming. I but was prevented by illness, j At the first session this afternoon the i visitors will be welcomed by Jerome ' Jones, editor of The Journal of Labor; | James L. Mayson. city attorney, and j S. B. Marks, president of the state fed i oration.’ A 7 ice President O'ConntU will I respond on behalf of the delegates. I : WEALTHY VICTIMS OF BOOK FRAUDS TO TELL OF SWINDLE IN COURT i BOSTON, Dec. 9.-—Rich victims of I de luxe book and art works frauds, ; which are being investigated by the ! New England and Federal authorities, i will have to appear before a Federal ' Judge and tell how easily they were .'swindled. Further investigation today’ ' revealed that the art shapers secured I $806,000 from 21 known victims. Os 'these, thirteen were women, who lost I $400,000. and the other eight were men . who were mulcted of $406.0<)0, the in- '■ i igation shoving apparently that iten were more gullible than the LOLO NAVY YARD MEN UNDER CIVIL SERVICE ' '.'.\S H IN’IT'IN. Dee. 7.—P esident Tift has signed a proclamation plae : ing 20,000 skilled employees in the ' t’nited States navy yards under civil I service. J Employees will not be entitled to j classification unless they wove their efficiency or have been i x tminefi by ■the navy yard labor boi.i 1 and have been recommended for < lassifieati6n by the commanding officer. Existing eligi- I bility lists will not h used after June I 30, 1913. New regulat' jns w ill go into effect at that time. The request for civil service regulations came from the employees themselves. ASKS U. S. TO PURCHASE BIRTHPLACE OF LINCOLN WASHINGTON, Dec. 9. —Rrepresen- tative Johnson, of Kentucky, has in troduced a biil in the house for the ac quisition by the government of the farm and the log cabin in Kentucky in which Abraham Lincoln was born. Johnson pioposes the homestead be kept as a national park. PAST FIFTY? 1~ NEED “CASCARETS” What glasses are to weak eyes— Cascarets are to weak bowels. Most old people must give to th? bowels some regular help, else they suffer from constipation. The condition is perfectly natural. It is just as nat ', ural as it is for old people to walk slowly. For age is never so active as youth. Tile muscles are less elastic. And the bowels are mus< les. So all old people need Cast arets. One might as well refuse to aid weak eyes with glasses as to neglect this gentle aid to v. ak bowels. The bowels must ibe kept active. This is Important at all ages, but nevei so much as at fifty. ■Age is not a time for harsh physics. Youth may occasionally whip the bow els into activity. But a l i-h can’t be used every day. What th- bowels of the old need is a gentle and natural tonic. One that can be constantly used without harm. The only such tonic is Cascarets, and they cost only 10 cents pel- box at any drug store. They work while you sleep. (Advt.) Violent Cathartic# Injure Health Side step purgatives —then harsh action il liable to injure the bowels. Why not use CARTER S LITTLE LIVER PILLS ■ purely vegetable remedy that has been used by millions for Jrk.tt'Sf * \ half a century. Act, gently but surely jfMyJ and not only Hi warn quickly relieves K MIU. but forever ends \X uKHsfl the misery of®*' sins—s constipation. Use them tor dizriness, indigea* taou. sick headache ai d ail liver troubles. PH, Small Doir, Small Price, The GENUINE must bear signature SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS I ON GEORGIA POLITICS By JAMES B . NEVIN. Jacksonville, the very wettest oasis in the prohibit ion South, has aecumu- 1 lated a large and rampant g.ouch on V > < . ... Savannah. Jacksonville i likewise mighty solicitous for Sa vannah's moral welfare, not to mention its lam vant anxiety that ■Savannah shall be a la w-aaiding mu nicipality and ut terly free from guile. The Florida city, which boasts four times as many in habitants in win ter as it admits in summer, has heard that Savannah pays powet tle attention to the prohibition laws of Georgia, afid that shipments of "booze" from to other points in crea tion ai'e not infrequent, and arounc and about Christmas times some ship ments, at that'. The effect of this revelation on Jack sonville has been marked- in two di rections. It rages that Savannah is utting into Jacksonville's business in that fashion, and it grieves that Savan nah is not a law-abiding town'. Wherefore divers and sundry citizens of Jacksonville have petitioned thr Federal authorities —or say they are going to petition them—to make Sa vannah behave herself, both in her loose methods of competition in the "booze” business and in her morals. The Savannah News, legarciing Jack sonville's attitude more or less face tiously. says: If rhe petition of the Jackson ville dealers to stop shipments of liquor from points in Georgia should be granted perhaps tiiis in turn might be followed by Federal legislation prohibiting shipments of intoxicating liquor into Georgia. Then if the legislature should re peal the neat-beef law this good old state would be squarely on the water wagon. And the sea.-on for cane and persimmon beer will soon be over. Jacksonville's deep solicitude for Sa vannah is touching enough, th be sure even if Savannah does effect to “Simile, and smile, and be a villain still.” It is doubtful, however, whether the Georgia legislature will accept Savan nah's half whimsical, half bantering, hint, contained in next to the last sen tence of The News' paragraph quoted. Robert M Hitch, of the Second con gressional district, has let it be known to numerous friends that he will bo an applicant for the position of t’nited States district attorney for south Geor gia before President Woodrow Wilson. Mr. Hitch was chairman of the state Democratic executive committee for two years, presidential elector four .tears ago. and is now chairman of the Second district executive committee. He will have strong and influential backing for the job, which is now held by Walter Akerman, of Macon. Some statesmen in Georgia are be ginning to think that instead of creat ing new counties in this strife here after. the legislature might better com bine some of the smaller ones, and thus reduefe the total number, rather than enlarge it, as has been the custom ol late years. MELHAKE "5W W IF HEAD®, BILIOOS. CONSTIPATED Sweetens your stomach, clears your head and thorough ly cleanses your liver and 30 feet of bowel of sour bile, foul gases and clogged-up waste. AU those days when you feel miser able, headachy, bilious and dull are due to torpid liver and sluggish bowels. The days when your stomach is sour and full of gas, when»you have indigestion; tile rights when your nerves twitch and you are restless and can’t sleep could be avoided with a teaspoonful of delicious Syrup of Figs. Isn't, it foolish to be distressed wjten there is such a pleasant way to overcome it? Give ymur inactive liver and ten yards of waste-clogged bowels a thorougli cleansing this time. Put an end to con stipation. Take a teaspoonful of Syrup of Figs tonight, .sure, and just see for yourselt, by morning, how gently but thoroughly ill the sour bile, undigi.sted fermenting GROWS BEIOTIfUL, miß FilE PROVE IT-25 GENT OANDEDINE Destroys dandruff—Stops falling hair—Cleans and in vigorates your scalp—Delightful dressing. To be possessed of a head of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, fluffy, wavy and fre'- from dandruff, is mere ly a matter of using a little Itandeilne. It Is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get a 25-i'ent bott'e of Knowlton's Dande rlne now all drug stores recommend it apply a little as directed and within ten minutes there will lie an appear ance of abundance; freshness, tluffinese and in jiii'ompiirafile gloss and hi'ten and, tr\ as you will, you ip not 11ml a trace of dalidrulT ot tailing hair, but >uur itul surprise will by after about There aie in Georgia fifteen counties of less than 200 square miles in area. Four of these actually are under 150 square miles. Glascock, the smallest county in the state, is less than 100. Alabama limits the size of its coun ties—and there, no matter how few counties the state may contain, it car never run over a fixed maximum. A great many citizens think a small er, and not a lai ger. legislature would work to this state’s very material bene fit. Judge W. M. Henry, of Rome, former representative in the legislature and judge of the superior court, is an At lanta visitor. “Twenty-six- yea.s ago last Friday,” said the judge. "Georgia saw the big gest snow storm anybody now living can remember. I was in Atlanta when the snow came, and I tiied to get to my home, which then was in Summerville, in Chattooga county. The snow was so heavy on the W. & A. tracks that soon after reaching Kennesaw —then known as Big Shanty—we bad to get another engine. And when we got to Kingston and I tried to change cars for Rome I found the old Rome rail'ioad completely out of business —it actually was burii d beneath twenty inches of snow! "That seems incredible, but it is ab solutely true. There never was such a snow storm in this country. I had to come ’back to AManta, after proceeding to Kingston at a snail's puce—and 1 was pretty sore, and mad. and cold, and I guess 1 used some rather obstreperous language. For a week following than 'white Friday' in December, 1886, this section was buried beneath two feet of snow, and some of it remained on the .ground, in partially protected drifts, until well up into April." Judge Henry is practicing law now adays. and has i etired from politics. Colonel O. B. Stevens, former com missioner of agriculture, who has been reported a candidate against Commis sioner J. J. Conner for director of the Georgia, experiment station in Griffin, which highly desirable job is to be va cated by Hon. Martin V. Calvin next summer, does not say tiiat he would hot take the office if it were tendered him, but he does say that he is not a candidate for the place, and has not authorized the use of his name in that connection. “I am of the opinion,” says Colotfel Stevens, “that the board of directors of the experiment station is competent to select a successor to Mi. Calvin, with out advice or suggestion from me. And. so far as I am concerned, this shall be permitted to do so. It is peculiarly not a place that should be juggled for. or that any man should be log-rolled into." The scintillating highbrow who pre sides over this department of uplift in The Georgian has been watching anti ■waiting, more or less in vain, these many days, for somebody to say some thing pleasant about his new picture, the which adorns— or something—the getaway of this column daily, but* for the most part disappointment has been his bitter portion. However, from out numerous frate - nal suggestions, anent the likeness aforesaid, he has selected the following from The Dalton Citizen, as the nearest approach to approval and compliment the divers and sundry exhibits afford: His profile picture now appealing in his “Searching Sidelights” makes him look like Champ Clark. One might look (and perform) very much worse than Mr. Champ Clark! food and clogged up waste matter is ■ •moved on and out of your system—no ■ nausea—no griping—-no weakness. You simply can’t have your liver in active and your thirty feet of bowel' i constipated with sour, decaying waste > matter and feel well. The need of a ! laxative is a natural need, but with de i licious.Syrup of Figs you are not drug ging yourself. Being composed entirely of luscious figs, senna and aromatics, it ; can not injure. Ask your druggist for the full" name. "Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna.” Refuse with scorn any of the so-called Fig Syrup imitations. They are meant , to deceive y >u. Look on the label. The genuine, old reliable bears the name, California Fig Syrup Comp'any. (Advtj two weeks' use, when you will see new hair fine and downy at first—yes—-but really new hair--sprouting out all over your scalp Damlcrlne is, we believe, tin- only sure hair grower; destroyer of dandruff and cure for itchy scalp, and It never falls to atop falling hair at once. If you want to prove now pretty and soft vour hair really Is, moisten a cloth wpli i Utile Danderlne and carefully draw It through your hair taking one ' small strand at a tinii. Your h.iir will b< -oft gloss, ind beautiful in Just a 1< w ii'ciiu nt • .1 delightful surprise . awaits every one w fi u lt | Vß (.Advt.) PLAN PEiANEKI BDARO ON CANA| Trade Committee Would Corfl serve Common Interests offi South and Latin Republics. Mg Ae.ording to plans outlined II"- Panama (’anal con f"i ence which to un i t here tomorrow and of this week, under the auspices of < 'hamber of Commerce, will establishSSf' permanent executive committee <»iS board to waich and conserve the intewfflf* ests of Southern trade with SouwHw Atm rii an and Central American repujflS lies and other foreign nations, followßS p ing tile completion of tlje canal. Extensile preparations will be e.ssenja®!| tial to get ready for the upbuilding ot?| Southern commerce. Ft will be a VoM which the conference, in Its brief sions, scarcely can undertake. But a ( tpable executive committee t'l "H* det ise w ays and means and plan t®sii meet future growth when the time rives for it may be appointed. To Be Notable Gathering. Bi inging to Atlanta, as it will. ministers plenipotentiary from < 'enfraMM and South American republics. fifteerilJl rail) o id and <teatnship piesidelits. th® leading manufacturers from all partjH of the South, including about twentyi';!| prominent cotton mill men, and amonanHi others Admiral <'. M. Chester and C«mJM mander \ ictor Blue, of the United IU States navi.-; United States SenatoM'jg Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida; Direc J a tor John Barrett, of the Bureau off a American Rc|mblies, and other men prominence, the conference will be of the most notable commei cial gath I’E; erings held in the South in years. A The assembly hall in the Piedmont! .hotel and tile banquet hull at the Pied-® mom Driving club both w ill ho deco- jmWl rated in Hags of all nations, two sets which have been sent b( express General R. K. Evans, of the Department® of the Gulf. There will be approximately 100 visi-| | tors, e .-e. y one of them distinguished I ' in some particular line, and provision|M has been made for 200 guests at thel banquet Tuesday evening. Head of Southern to Preside. The foreign trade committee of the II Chamber of Commerce, in charge of 11 t'haiiman St. Elmo Massengale, haslH made splendid headway with the ar l - I ; rangements for the meeting, and the ■ program now virtually is complete. President W. W. Finley, of the I Southern railway, will preside at Wed- 'i® nesday's sessions of the conference, S when the railroad and steamship dele- ‘wM gap's, especially, will participate. Pres. I idem Finley, while here, also will de liver an address at the Tech. All the manufacturers, wholesale tner- 1 eli infs, bankers and others pf Atlanta I and Georgia interested in the exten- M siop ;>f the South's foreign'trade are in- a vited to attend the sessions of this ■ conference Tuesday and Wednesday. TWO AND A HALF ~ DOLLAR GOLD PIECE FOR AN XMAS GIFT Atlanta's Oldest Savings Bank Will Supply You. Nothing fits in fora Christmas pres- 9 ent exactly like gold—nothing could be more appreciated. Il saves giving a useless gift, and best of all. it puts an ■ end to tlie annual worrying, vexatious ■ question of what you shall gjve. . . t ! Tm- Georgia Savings Bank and Trust I Company, following its annual custom, will furnish you with brand new $2.50 1 gold pieces fm its equivalent in any I otin denomination. We ran short last year, but have a larger supply this | year, and as long a.- the supply lasts we ? j are yours to count on. We pat 4 pei cent interest and will accept thes . little gold pieces on deposit tin- same as any other good money. George M. Brown. President; John W. Grant. Vice President: Joseph E. Boston. Secretary and Treasurer. (Advt.) STOMACH MM i JUSTVANISHES No Indigestion, Gas or Sour ness after taking “Pape’s Diapepsin.” If what you just ate is sourlrtg on your <tomach or lies like a lump ot Lead, refusing to digest, or you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food, or have a feeling of dizziness, heart burn. fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach headache —this is indigestion. A full case of Pape’s Diapepsin costs only fifty cents and will thoroughly cure your out-of-order stomach, and leave sufficient about the house In case some«one else In the family may suf fer from stomach trouble or Indigestion. Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula plainly printed on these fifty-cent cases, then you will under stand why dyspeptic trouble of all kinds must go. and why they usually re lieve sour, out-of-order stomachs or indigestion in five minutes. Diapepsin is harmless and tastes like candy, though each dose contains power suffi cient to digest and prepare for assim ilation into the blood all the food you eat; besides, it makes you go to tile table with a healthy appetite; but what will please you most is that you will feel that your stomach and In testines are clean and fresh, and you will not need to resort to laxatives or liver pills for biliousness or constipa tion. This city will have many Diapepsin cranks, as some people will call them, but you will be cranky about this splendid stomach preparation, too, if you ever try a little for Indigestion or gastritis or any other stomach misery. Get some now. tills mlmite. and for "(•'r rid ymuself stomach trouble •nd indigestion tAdvt.i • 3