Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 25, 1913, Image 2

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rmirBi 'i' n—n TITE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.FRIDAY. APRIL 25. 1913. I MIND A blank; widow appelbaum SOBS IN PLEA 10 JURY FOR HER ACOUIITAL Secretary Daniels 'Mail Abuse Suit Won Hurries to Raleigh By Appeal to Reason Says She Remembers Nothing I After Husband Told Her She Had Five Minutes to Live. Continued from Paqe One. j ■d.'iv ; > iii * * fain < 1 J j* liked . wards * nervous i for my : v '• "At nd said: ’If 1 don't get bark 1 all you up over the long-dis and tell you where 1 ain.’ That he did not come home, and 1 3 the floor all night. I after- found out I was extremely is from drugs he had given me •ate condition, clock next day he called me up from Atlanta, and told me to rome over there and Join him. 1 asked him what he was*doing in At lanta, clean out of his territory. He told me not to ask foolish Questions, * but to come on over. 1 told him 1 l did not have any money to pay the ; hotel bill, and he told me to give *• them a check and he would make it * good when 1 got to Atlanta. . Told Wife to Ride in Cab. * "He also told ms to be very care- j faj to go to the depot in u closed cab * HXrtd hot to get out of the main wait- J ing room until my train was ready * “to leave. He met me at the train in * Atlanta. He had a porter with him. ! He was nervous, pale and looking all * around. I asked him what was the v*-matter. He said: ‘Those parties are 1 lit the depot and they have me afraid ! of-my life.’ * "Then we got in the cab and went * to the hotel, and there he came up the room with me. I put my * -virms around his neck and said: " ‘Jere, dear, don’t you know you t can’t stand up under this nervous ,’’^ftfrair. ? Tell me what’s the matter J ;«md maybe I can help you.’ He said * he must have $700 or go to the peni- * tentiary. I offered to get a position J and go to work to help him. 1 ; finally persuaded him that this was ■ the best plan. Glad of Chance to Help. ; * "I was sincerely glad of an oppor- « tunity jto do something for him. Wo 2 were going to get a little room, fur- * wish it and he was to come in from l his run every Friday night. On Sun- ; room at the Dakota Hotel and some J daty morning the phone rang in our * one asked for Mrs. Appelbaum. I e said. This is Mrs. Appelbaum.’ 1 J thought it was some one of our ; friends trying to he pleasant, and * when they asked rne again, ‘Are you i sure this is Mrs. Appelbaum?’ I said ( again. ‘Yes, what can 1 do for you?’ ; ‘ • TJ;< \ cut mu l told Mi’ Appel- i Jmurp and he got awfully nervous. * He said he could go no place with- * out being hahuthd in a few minutes l tjii* fchone rang again and the siune * r<tieC asked again for Mrs. Appel- 4 Q»aum. He turned deathly pale and I told Jiie to tell the inquirer he wasft’t \ in, and wouldn’t be back any more. 4 f '-About 4 o’clock Sunday afternoon « -id wanted rne to go to walk with him. f ( Svas so sick and nervous that 1 f couldn’t go. He told me if l felt like * it later to meet him around by the I Candler Building, and I finally de- ; l cided to go Describes Her Illness. ! "He was so glad to see me and j gave me a box of candy. We started * to walk toward Whitehall Street, hut * 1 was so weak I couldn’t walk far, LG FLOWERS and FLORAL DESIGNS ATLANTA FLORAL CO. Both Phones Number 4. 41 Peachtree ? 4TI ANTA ALL TH,S week j 1 theater Miss BILLY LONG Saturday Matinee And Company In “WILDFIRE” i. i ’ Nights lOc to 50c NEXT WEEK 4 BUTTERFLY ON THE WHEEL SEATS NOW and dropped into a drug store, got me some medicine and we went back to the room He told me he was going to l>af»range Monday and for me to be sure and get bis mail, as there was a letter from Kansas City, to open it and read it. He said. ‘If my wife is still sick in a hotel there, get a money order for $10 and send it to her. I told him. ‘Sure, I would.’ Monday I went to the postoffice, got the mail ami came back to the room. I felt so bad I didn’t look at it. That afternoon I went to look at some rooms on Buckie Street and also Mi. Baker On Baker Street I fainted and a lady gave me some medicine. • 1 don’t know what it was. 1 came back by a drug store and took a big dose of capudine. When I got. to the hotel I was too sick to get the money order. At 4 o’clock Dr. Kiebrnan came and gave me some varlnol. He left two 5-grain tablets for me to take if I was not relieved. I met Mr. Ap pelbaum that evening in the. room. Gave Her Letters to Keep. "I waited for him a long time in the lobby, but I was so weak I had to go upstairs and wait. When he came in he was drinking and very despondent. I gave him his mail anci told him that I had not oi»ened any of it. He said: ‘What’s the matter, dearie. You are my little private secretary.’ "1 said 1 understood, but there are some letters that looked suspi cious and 1 asked him to read them to me. He said that he wouldn’t, as they were old letters that the former Mrs. Appelbaum used in getting her divorce. He said they were bad let ters and he didn’t want me to read them. H»* said If 1 would promise not to lie would let me keep them "I told him I would put them in my hat ajiU he said that was no place for them. He then wrote a letter to his firm and went out to mall it and get the mail. "When he came hack he demanded money. I told him: 'Jerry, darling, you know 1 haven’t got any money. If I did I would give it to you.’ H said If I would give him my earrings he could get $500 on them. I told him 1 had decided to save them until, Claude finished school. Tells of Suicide Threat. "He was so despondent then nnrt broken up that I told him that if I lived until morning I would dispose of the earrings and get rid of the’ cause of trouble, lie broke down and said if he didn’t get money he would kill himself. I tried to pacify him like I would a child. I give you my word of honor 1 didn’t know he was short, or he could have had the earrings to get money on. It »vas after his death I learned he was short and threats had been made to prosecute him. "The night before his death he did everything in his power to make me give up the earrings. He was un kind. awfully unkind, and aaid ba couldn’t sleep. 1 stayed awake until 112 o’elo k trying to got him to go to sleep. He threatened to kill both of us unless 1 gave him the earrings. I was very sick and I told him; Jerry, if I don’t go to sleep I believe I wll4 die/ and 1 was honest in ,it. 1 never felt so strangel.Y before or since. Put Her Outside Door. "Finally he put me outside of the door with nothing but my nightgown on apd told me to stay out there. It was cold, but he made me stay out a long time. I did not want to do him an injury, so I did not report him to the hotel. I just waited. Finally he came to the door and let me in. He said he hoped 1 had decided to quk my stubbornness. "I told him, ‘No, Jerry, I will keep my promise and give the earrings to Claude.’ "Then he got very mad and poured a pitcher of ice water on me, and I, told him to stop and told him that in my condition that It would kill me. He grabbl'd up a quart of whisky and began drinking it. I begged him not to and tried to get him to give me the bottle. I persuaded him to let me have it and tried to throw it out of the window. * "You Have Five Minutes to Live.” "He gral»bed it away from me and said to let him drink it, that he I wouldn’t live much longer. I felt I was going to die. 1 just had to go | to bed. When 1 got In bed he got bis pistol and his watch, came over J to the bed and laid down by me. He said: You have got just flv minutes to live. I am going to kill you and then kill myself.’ lie asked me to feel that, and shoved the steel of the revolver against my face. 1 covered my face and told him to shoot-—that death would be a relief. "And from that minute I give you Reveals Her Attempted Suicide and Sickness anad Victim’s Fear of Death, LYRIC Next Week Mats. Tues., Thurs., Sat. BILLY THE KID A DRAMA OF THE WEST. With the Young American Star, BERKELY HASWELL. k ere. . Epicure) CMtimGM/D 4 WALTOM ST - JUST OFF PEACHTRtt my word of honor I don’t know an other thing until I awakened in an other room the next morning—the housekeeper’s room—and a lady was bathing my face in iced water. I never had such pain in my life. "Homo one asked me if I would not make a statement and I told them that I would not; that I was going to protect Mr. Appelbaum. “I Could Not Have Hurt Him.” "Don’t you know,” she continued, turning to the Jury, "I could not have hurt him with a heart in my body like that? I asked what the trouble was, and they told me that he was hurt; that he had a little scratch on hi** arm. "Then they took me to the room and let me dress. I went downstairs, for I thought that Mr. Appelbaum was in the office. He wasn't there, and I started for the street. A policeman stopped me and told me not to go out, for they would get my picture. I asked him what they wanted that for, and he said it was just a curious cus tom they had in Atlanta. “Finally the patroi wagon came and I told them not to take me down there, but they told me that it was the only way to have my picture taken. "About those letters*, I never doubt ed him about those letters, and I do not believe that even under the influ ence of drugs, loving Mr. Appelbaum as much as I did, that T could have committed an act of that kind and forget It. "1 am as innocent of doing him harm as an angel in heaven." Innocent if Drugged. If the jury believes that Mrs. Ap pelbaum killed her husband while un der the Influence of hypnotic drug and not In her normal state of mind, then she must be declared Innocent of the Charge Of murder. This will be the one exception to a formal charge to be rendered by Judge Roan when the trial of Mrs. Appelbaum goes to the jury this afternoon, according to a statement by the court to-day. The cas«* !.«•• expected to go to the jury by 4 o’clock this afternoon. At torney Moore, at the afternoon ses sion. began making the last argument for the defense. Solicitor Dorsey, for the State, will conclude. J Lawrence Jones, of Charlotte. N. C., made the opening argument for the defense. He spoke for ten min utes and did not attempt to outline the case. Calls Her a Sainted Mother. "1 believe Mrs. Appelbaum to be a sainted mother." said he. "Appel- jaum played the human roulette and lovt. On one side tlie sorrows of his wife, on the other the horrors of his financial condition drove him to ruin. And when he realized himself at the edge of the precipice he shot himself rather than go over. L was undecided as to coming to Atlanta to participate in this case," he concluded, “but my sister pleaded with me to come, saying T might be of some assistance to a good woman.” Attorney Branch followed Jones, speaking for twenty minutes, leaving the principal argument to Attorney Moore. Attorney Thomas B. Brown, who has assisted Solicitor Dorsey, opened the argument at 10:45 o’clock. State Makes Rebuttal. After the defense concluded Its tes timony, the State Introduced a num ber of witnesses in rebuttal. Eugene Hazard, a negro bellboy at the Dakota Hotel, told of accompanying Mr. and Mrs. Appelbaum to their room one night. 4 He said that Apeplbaum was laugh ing and Mrs. Appelbaum sdid: “You may think it is funny now, but just wait until we get In the room." The boy could not place the date, though, beyond the fact that it was a few nights before the day of the shooting. T. B. Hopkins, foreman of the grand Jury which indicted Mrs. Ap pelbaum, testified as to the evidence of (1. Cohen before the grand jury. He said Cohen testified that he had heard a muffled sound after the first two shots, but that he had covered his head after the second, and was not sure whether the third sound was that of a shot or not. Witness Under Attack. Rev. J. E. Daniels, pustor of the Bakewood Heights Church, who also was a member of the grand Jury, cor roborated Mr. Hopkins’ testimony. Joe B. Jacobs, a pawnbroker, was introduced as a character witness and said Cohen’s character was bad. John Black, city detective, was placed on the stand and said he would not believe Cohen under oath. Newport Hanford, chief of City de tectives. told of his conversationWith Mrs. Appelbaum the morning of the shooting “She talked freely of the case and said she did not know whether she had done the shooting or not. but that if she had. U was Cod’s work and not hers," was his testi mony. , : $50,000 Fire in Mill District of Augusta Flames. Starting In Big Lumber Plant, Threaten Wide Area—Heat Overcomes Three Men. Representative Moore, Pennsyl vania Republican, Answers the Questions He Framed. WASHINGTON, April —Con gressman J. Hampton Moore, a Penn sylvania Republican, found a new way to deliver a tariff speech in the House to-day. Mr. Moore conducted a tariff "catechism” by having the House clerk read questions tlie mem ber bad prepared and tfhich Moore answered from the floor. The catechism began when the clerk asked; "When was the first tar iff act passed?’’ Questions and an HAPPY IN CELL Mrs, Jack Mashburn Rejoices as Husband No. 2 Is Freed by Atlanta Police. swers then took tariff legislation step by step up to the Ur./erwood bill, which was "roasted" by Ml Moore. Moore called his speech a "tariff primer," and the spectacle was with out precedent in the House. Con gressman Moore explained lie took this unusual method of speechmaking following the "Stop, Look. Listen." example of President Wilson, who, a few days ago, addressed the House on the tariff issue- Why the Payne Bill Passed. "Why was the Payne bill passed?" Moore was asked. "Becaues the Democrats were con tinuously misrepresenting the tariff question," said "Pupil'’ Moore. "Did the Payne bill revise the tariff downward ?’’ "It did. and equalized many duties." “If the people enjoyed such won derful progress under the Payne lavO, why did they complain?" "They listened to ambitious politi cians, agitators without consciences, Journalistic organs with axes to grind, magazines seeking pap, essayists who found it more profitable to write fic tion than to work, theoretical college professors, non-pr6ducers and a few sincere reformers usually misinformed and frequently misled," answered Moore. The clerk then asked Moore what was meant by the Wilson-Underwood bill. Takes Slap at President. "The bill introduced by Chairman Underwood, exponent in the House of the theories of President Wilson;,’’ was Moore’s reply. Congressman Moore also got' in a shot at the “distressing consequences" of Democratic power in the nineties, which were followed by a return to Republicanism and the enactment of the Dingley law. The industries of the country, he answered, thrived both under the Dingley and Payne laws, but many of them would be wrecked under the Underwood bill. Mr,. Moore declared that President Wilson favored the breaking up "of industrial establishments if they can not operate on equal terms with these abroad. "In what respect has the gentleman from Alabama indorsed the views uf President Wilson?" he was asked. * Attacks Income Tax, To0. “In shaping his tariff bill Sp as to discourage American enterprise and industry and encourage foreign com petition to the end that cheaper goods shall be supplied, though their'wages be lowered and their employment taken away. "The Underwood bill threatens the destruction of the sugar industry, me naces the cotton and wool industries, and, while admittedly destroying $100,000,000 worth of revenue collected at the customs houses from importers of foreign commodities, attempts to make up that deficiency by an income tax levied directly upon some o£ Ijhfe people and only some of the people whose offense i« that they have been more industrious and thrifty." AUDITORIUM Tales of Hoffmann Curtain at 8 P. M. Sharp Grand Opera TO-NIGHT r ■ ■ — METROPOLITAN OPERA COMPANY Giulio Gatti-Casazza. Qp YORK John Brown Gen. Mgr. Business Compt. Full Orchestra, Corps de Ballet, Original Scenario. Bori, Hempel, Former, Maubourg, G-iliy, Jorn, Reiss, , Ruysdael. Etc. HARDMAN PIANO USED EXCLUSIVELY Despite the fact that she was or dered held by Justice Ridley In bond of $700 for bigamy, Mrs. Jack Mash burn, the 17-year-old LaGrange girl who openly scorned C. W. Smith, a LaGrange farmer, Husband No. 1, when they met in court, to-day de clared that she i9 supremely happy. Smilingly coyly, she said: "Vou know, l‘m happy for two great reasons. The first is that Jack, my darling Jack, was turned loose and didn't have to go to jail. The second reason is that I know that true love will triumph. “My first marriage with that coun tryman, Smith, doesn't count at all. she continued, with a merry laugh. "The trouble with him is that he was trying to interfere with true love, and he got bumped. He know s I don t love him and never loved him, and why doesn’t he let me alone in my joy?" Swears Loyalty to Mashburn. She insisted she would stick to Mashburn, no matter what the out come of her case. "They may send me to the pent- tentiary, but T would claim my love when I got out," she said. "If these judges and officers only knew Just how my heart is bulging out with'love for my .dear Jack they d have human feeling and sympathy- enough to-turn me loose. “But then they've turned Jack loose, anyway, and this makes me happy. Oh, 1 wouldn't have him to suffer for anything. They can do whatever they may w-ith me, but I don’t want thefn tp harm Jack. “You know this is the way I reel about it—16ve is the whole thing with a girl, and I think she should have full swing when it comes to love. Every girl should marry the man {she loves, no matter what obstacles are placed in her path. She should let no one persuade her to do otherwise. I listened to persuasion and allowed mvself to be forced into a loveless marriage. You see the consequences. It has brought down on me all of this trouble. Her Love Philosophy. "If a girl wishes to be happy in matrimony site should choose for her- self—follow the dictates of her own heart and conscience. There may be certain traits in a man's character that will cause a certain girl to fairly adoro him,.while they might not at tract the attention of other persons. Hence, when a girl feels real, true love, she should cherish it and put it above the likes and dislikes and whigis of others. "By listening to others instead of to the prnm'ptings of my own heart, you see, I’m stamped as a bigamist But 1 don't feel that I'm a bigamist, because I don’t consider that I was ever married to Charlie Smith.” Mrs. Mashburn was put under $700 bond by Justice Ridley, when her counsel, Colonel E. A. Jones, of La- Grange, waived preliminary hearing. Tlie case of Mashburn was dismissed, as the prosecution had no evidence to show that he had any knowledge that the girl had another husband at the time ho married her. Sheriff O. H. Florence and Deputy Sheriff Gus Reed, who came here to take Mrs. Mashburn back to La- Grange in the event she was not held ,.by the Atlanta court, have returned to LaGrange. Fire Wrecks Newspaper Property of Navy Department Head, Caus ing $60,000 Loss. RALEIGH, N. C., April 25.—Bare, black walls, with parts of machinery protruding from the windows, to-day mark the- site where yesterday stood the handsome building of The Raleigh News and Observer, tile newspaper property of Secretary of the Navy Jo sephus Daniels. The loss from last night's fire to-day. is estimated at $60,000, # the press and stereotyping equipment not suffering as much as was at first believed. Secretary Daniels will arrive this afternoon and to-night will make plans for rehabilitating tlie plant. Tnc paper will be published for the pres ent from the office of The Raleigh Times. Lack of water was largely respon sible fur the heavy loss. Bites Tongue; Stitches Taken. WAYOROSS. Several stitches had to be taken in the tongue of George Thorpe, seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. .1. B. Thorpe, when he hit him self as he stumbled and fell yester day. Federal Judge Practically Ends Case Against Socialist Paper for Prison Expose. GIRARD. KANS., April 2 5.-.Fed eral Judge Pollock lias sustained the demurrer in the famous Leavenworth case of The Appeal to Reason, which practically puts an end to the prose cution. Fred D. Warren, J. A. Wayland ar.d C. L. Phifer, of The Appeal editorial staff, had been indicted for sending obscene matter through the mails, in making an expose of the conditions in the Federal Penitentiary at Leaven worth, Runs. Deputy Warden Lemon was dismissed on the strength of the expose and a congressional investiga tion sustained the charges made by The Appeal. K. of P. Grand Lodge May 21-22. WAY CROWS. The Grand Lodge of Georgia Knights .of Pythias meets in Way cross May 21 and 22 for tire forty-fourth annual convention. May or Reed, on behalf pf the city, and J. I.. Crawley, on behalf of the local Pythians, will welcome the Grand Lodge to Waycross. MAN, SUDDENLY INSANE, JUMPS INTO RIVER; DEAD GADSDEN, ALA., April 25. -in a fit of insanity, to-day Vines Smith 34 years old, ran from a field where lie was working, Jumped into the Cooa-i River and was drowned. John Wag oner, a farmer, working near bv mad. an effort to save the insafle man bu- failed. Three times Smith plunge into 30 feet of water, only to cruv out and try it over. The fourth tint, he did not come up. At Fountains & Elsewhere Ask for “HORLICK’S" I he Original and Genuine MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages At restaurants, hotels, and fountains Delicious, invigorating and sustain ing. Keep it on your sideboard at home. , Don’t travel without it. A quick lunch prepared in a minute tlon? "jusTiiay “HORLICK’S” Not in Any Milk Trust These dealers sell Swift's Premium Hams and Bacon _ List of Swif’s Premium Hams and Bacon Dealers, Atlanta, Ga. 3\| Underwood Not to Allow‘‘Gag Rule.” WASHINGTON, April 25.—Demo cratic Leader Underwood to-day was ubjected to much pressure to hasten the passage of the tariff revision bill in tlie House. He refused, though, to allow any gag rule to be brought in until a reasonable amount of debate has been allowed. Representative Hardwick, of Geor gia, is trying to adopt a special rule whereby all debate under the flve- minute rule, or the greater part of it, would be eliminated and the bill brought to the stage of final passage next Tuesday. Minority Leader Mann said there was no disposition, qq- ttje part of the Republicans to filibuster. He insisted that the bill should have a fair amount of discussion. Secretly, Republicans would wel come the passing of a gag rule, as they claim it would give them cam paign matter. Alverson Bros. Atlanta Grocery Company. Clia.s. Austin. J. M. Bailey. .M. F. Boiselair. Barnett Bros. W. K. Bearden. J. T. Bell. M. W. Bradford. Bradford & Lanier. T. G. Brooks & Son. Barnes Cash Grocery. Brooks Grocery Co. J. F. Brown & Son. x H. A. Broyles (6 stores). C. M. Bryan. Buehanan-Shelton Grocery Co. Inman Park Grocery Company. L. M. Burel. W. H. Burroughs. W. A. Byers. B. F. Byfield. Cash Grocery Company. Camp Grocery Company. C. P. Cann. L. F. Chapman. Pink Cherry Market. W. W. Childers. It. H. Comer. J. M, Darden. J. M. Dodson. D. L. Echols (2 stores.) It. H. Ferguson. L. J. Frankel. M. Friedman. Dahlonega Bandits Get 20-Year Terms Four Who Attempted to Rob Bank Convicted in Lumpkin Superior Court. AUGUSTA, GA., April 25.—The Perkins Manufacturing Company’s l uge lumber plant was damaged $20,- 000 bv a fire at noon to-day. A favorable wind saved the main portion of the plant. A warehouse some distance away caught fire from burning embers and was destroyed. Several mill tenement houses, owned by the Enterprise Manufacturing Company’, were dam aged. The entire loss is estimated at $50,000. Two firemen and a policeman \yere overcome by the heat. MONGOLS ROUT CHINESE TROOPS IN NIGHT BATTLE PEKIN. CHINA, AprP 25.—Ac ceding to telegrams received here, I * ,'ommander Pang has been defeated by the Mongols near Dolonor. The I .Mongols made a sudden night attack jnnd routu! the Chinese, who suffered I 200 casualties. The victors captured 1 many mountain guns and much am munition. DAHLONEGA, GA.. April 25.—Set ting aside the Jury's request that four bandits who attempted to rob the Lumpkin County Bank at Dahlonega on February 14 be punished for mis demeanor, judge Jones, of-the Lump kin Superior Court, to-day sentenced William Flynn, Charles Miller. W. M. Thornton and J. M. Harris to twenty years each in the. State penitentiary. The four men were the ones yvho md- tinied in the Fulton County Tower a month ago at the suggestion of being Bertilloned. Entering a plea of not guilty, but making no effort to explain (their yvhereabouts on the night of the rob bery or to establish their identity, the men were convicted on circumstantial evidence alone. An appeal for a new trial will be made. Kirkland May Quit As Vanderbilt Head Chancellor John II. Kirkland, of Van derbilt University, who is in Atlanta to attend the Southern Sociological Congress,/ may become president of the University of Arkansas, at Fayetteville, on or about June 1, according to a press dispatch received in Atlanta to-day. Chancellor Kirkland, when questioned concerning this report declared that he had made no arrangements to leave Vanderbilt and had received no offer from the trustees of the Arkansas insti tution at this time. He added that a year ago he was tendered the presi dency of. the. University of Arkansas and declined it. The office is still vacant. It is probable, therefore, that the Ar ansas college 'board contemplates re opening last year’s negotiations. BREWERY SUED BY U. S. FOR $13,000 BACK DUTIES CHATTANOOGA, TENN., April 25. The Chattanooga Brewing Company is defendant in a civil suit filed by the Government to collect $13,097.84 alleged to be due as back duties on importations of a soft drink syrup from Germany. The attorney for the brewery says the amount will be paid under pro test. pending the >*ettlement of a simi lar case in New York. j Every Bite May Poison—All Could Be Methuselahs If We j Did Not Shorten Life by Self-Poisoning. All food eaten leaves in the stom ach some waste unused particles. This waste ferments and gener ates uric acid, and when uric acid gets in the blood it poisons the system. This is termed Autotox- emia, or Self-Poisoning. Consti pation. indigestion, biliousness, dyspepsia, sick headache, languid ness and a weakened physical con dition result. Eliminate Autotox emia, and we could live to be hun dreds of rears old. JACOBS’ LIVER SALT flushes stomach and bow-els. dissolves the uric acid which has accumu lated and expels it with the fer menting w r aste. Take JACOBS' LIVER SALT in the morning before breakfast. You will do a better day’s work, and with the consciousness that your health Is safeguarded against any indiscretion in eating. JACOBS' LIVER SALT is better than calomel for constipation and biliousness. Acts quickly and more thoroughly, requiring no cleansing after-dose; causes no after-danger of salivation: never gripes or nauseates. No other liver medi cine is equal to it; don't take the £ inferior substitute that may be offered. AI1 druggists should have the genuine JACOBS’ LIVER SALT. 25c. If yours can not sup ply you, full size jar mailed upon receipt of price, postage free. Made and guaranteed hy Jacobs' Pharmacy Company. Atlanta. J. C. Fullz. C. 1>. Gamp Gann & Hawkins. Gardner & Myers. W. .1. Garner. IV. Goldberg. Goldberg & Klein. N. Golden. J. W. Green. Greenberg Grocery Company, F. I\ Harris. J. W. Hightower. L. Hillman. M. Hillman. D. Isenbetg. Jenkins & Company. S. 1). Jones, B. Karwisch. Kistner’s Market. O. H. Levetan. J. Levetan. A. Levetan. T. i. McAndrews. T. W. McCord. McCord Bros. C; G McDonald. G. M. Mann. J. H. Mere. loth. T. F. Moore. G. B. Morris. Morris & Thomas. I*. E. Newborn. L. O. Nichols. North Side Grocery Company. D. B. Patch. Peachtree Market. J. P. Phelps. J. J. I,. Poole. R. H. Poole. IV. M. Podle. !,. J. Price. 11. T. Prior. \V. A. Puckett. A. II. Header. Richards & Smith. IV. H. Roane. S. C. Roby. .1. R. Roseberry. Sewell Commission Cp. (2 stores. 1 Chas. Smith. .1. S. Smith. Sam Smith. T. M. Summers. Tappan & Company. Te Ban Bros. L. Thompson. Toland A Company. M. Wald. Ware & Rogers. Warren & Turner. H. Weinberg. H. Weinman. F. ('. Wilkerson Bros. Williams & Johnson. Wyatt’s ('. O. D. I. N. Willis. J. A. Word. Young & Wallace. Ask your dealer for Swift's Premium Hams and Bacon “Smoked in Atlanta ’ 30 SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS— SILK SOCKS—SILK SOCKS] SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS— SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS WE WANT 500 To visit the Hosiery Department in our annex on Satur day and Pick Up 20 Cents To every man who comes in and says he saw this ad vertisement we are going to give him a pair of Regular 50c “ONYX” ) PURE THREAD SILK SOCKS In Black FOR Or Colors (Limited three pairs to a customer) This ‘‘ONYX’-’ is trade-marked and retails the world over for 50 cents—they’re standard. It’s Just Like Giving Away Gold Dollars For Sixty Cents Come in and see how fast they’ll go. J. M. HIGH CO. Men’s Furnishing Department SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS— SiLK SOCKS-SILK SOCKS SIU SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS SILK SOCKS l - . .