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3
ALCOHOL 3^PER CENT.
AVegf table Preparation for As
similating die FoodanilRpguto
ting tiie Stomadis antiiiwels ii
Infants YChiidren
Promotes DigestionOiferfl
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opiuni.Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
Jteapr 0/Old DtSAMULHimA
htvpiiO Std~
JU-Stma*
JMdleUls-
AustSfd *
_ kaJrS* +
hirm Scjtd-
CMMStfBV
f&rqnon FUmr.
Aperferl Remedy for Cons tips
tton, Soui- Strnnach.Diarrtm
Worms jConvulsions .Feverish'
ness and Lo ss of Sleep.
Tic Simile Signature of
new YORK.
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
[SanteeSunSrL
Exact Copy of Wrapper
TMf. CKNTkUR CO*'’*'' ', vcw YOM C ITT
Miss Quern, the eldest daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Nero, of Grant Park,
who is recuperating at the home of
her parents after having her broken
leg X-rayed and reset by Dr. Good
win Gheesling at Grady Hospital last
week, is recovering rapidly from tht
accident, but faces the danger of a
calamity even greater than a broken
leg.
She Is rapidly developing a case of
exaggerated ego, commonly known
as the “swelled head.”
Miss Queen was a shy, timid young
thing two weeks ago. She had no in
timate friends, but spent most of her
time playing with her younger broth -
er. She never quarreled with the
butcher when the bone he left for her
had a trifle too little meat on it.
Then she broke her leg and was
taken to Grady Hospital. The afct
that she was not only the first of Mr.
Nero’s immediate family, but the first
of her race, to try to bite a leg off an
operating table in an Atlanta hos
pital; that she was th^ first of her
r ace to be punched, prodded and
X-rayed by a real, honest-to-good-
ness surgeon; that she now wears a
plaster of paris east while her brother
and papa and mamma wear nothing
but a roar and a ferocious expression
—all this has gone to her head.
She acts like a chorus girl!
Yearns for Publicity.
Miss Queen yearns for publicity
now, since she came home from the
hospital, with a great and unsatisfied
yearning. She pines for attention,
and if anybody looks hi her brother
• >r any of her relations in the big
house at Grant Park, she cries in
much tfhe same manner as does a cho
rus girl when she learns there is a
prettier girl in the cast than she.
"Miss Queen is mighty conceited
since she came home from th** hos
pital,” said Edward T. Boyd, who
lakes care of Mr. and Mrs. Nero an'*
their children. “She used to run
away when anyone went into her
room. Now it is all changed. She is
always showing her bandaged leg. an 1
gets mad if you don’t pay any atten
tion to it. I’ve se<m her run up to
♦ he bars of her cage, w here a crowd
of people weie standing, and stick h i
leg. with its plasier cast through th»
bars as much a : u\ Book a*
ne: I’m tht of. ^ .llinx around h ** r "
$10,000 Brooch Lost
By Mrs. John Astor
NEWPORT, R. I.. Aug. 28.—It has
just been learned that Mrs. John
Astor lost a $10,000 diamond brooch
at the ball given in a tent last week
by Mrs. ames B. Haggin at Arleigh
Villa.
When the loss was discovered every
one was cautioned to say nothing
about it. A hunt party was or
ganized to search every inch of the
tent floor, as well as the short grass
around the tent.
For this purpose all sorts of lights,
—lamps, lanterns, Japanese lanters,
oil lams and candles—were brought
Into requisition.
Negro Lives With
Bullet in Brain
COLUMBUS, Aug 28 —Jim Payne, a
negro, living in Girard, Ala., who was
shot last Sunday by another negro,
named George Williams, the bullet pen
etrating the brain, is still alive.
His physicans say he will recover.
GRACE REVIVAL SUCCESS.
The revival at Grace Church is
proving the most successful in the
history of the church. There have
been many conversions. Evangelist
Bass and Singer Stapleton are lead
ing the services.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN \ND NEWS.
lit
Pathfinder Ferguson Speeds
Through Mississippi on Sec
ond Lap of Long Run.
E. L. Ferguson, official pathfinder
for the all-Southern transcontinental
highway, is speeding through Missis
sippi Thursday en route to New Or
leans, the end of the second lap of
the coast-to-coast hike. The tourists
left Mobile Wednesday afternoon, ac
cording to a special dispatch to The
Georgian, from Ocean Springs. Miss.
Mr. Ferguson pulled out of Mobile
with regret as the reception in the
Gulf C4ty was roost cordial through
out his brief stay. Although there
was some doubt as to whether Mobile
would be included in the route be
cause of the bad roads between the
Alabama city and New Orleans, it is
believed now that Mr. Fergusjn will
route the highway through the Gulf
City as a result of the marvelous en
thusiasm manifested there over good
roads and highways.
Leaving Mobile the pathfinders
drove toward Mississippi, crossing
the State line at a rate of 35 miles
an hour. In Alabama the tourists
again saw numerous gangs of work
men putting gravel and surfacing ma
terial on portions of the road which
has been in bad condition.
Near Pascagoula, the party was
met by an escort of fourteen auto
mobiles which piloted them through
the city and to the ferry at the Pas
cagoula River. The run into Ocean
Springs was made late in the even
ing. but the roads were good and no
difficulty was experienced.
Mr. Ferguson expects to pass
through Biloxi, Miss.. Eioz. Gulfport.
Pass Christian and Bay St. Louis
Thursday, stopping at either Popar-
ville or Bogalusa Thursday night.
He will reach New Orleans Saturday
morning, according to the schedule.
Italians Offer Free
Counsel to Charlton
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
GENOA, Auk. 30.—With Porter
Charlton, the younK self-confessed
wife murderer, on board, the steamer
Re D’ltalta reached here to-day. A
number of Italian lawyers have vol
unteered Jo defend Charlton, some of
them offering their services free.
Charlton stood the voyage well and
looked healthy and cheerful.
The young American will be placed
on trial next month. It is expected, for
killing his wife at Lake Como by
beating her over the head with a
hammer.
Aged Woman to Drive
On Auto Honeymoon
ST. LOUIS, Aug. 28.—Mrs. Marga
ret Haller, farmer, ousiness woman
and politician, 68 years old, will drive
her son, Walter, 22 years old, and
his bride on an automobile honey
moon to Chicago, and after a short
stop there will cross Michigan.
She declares she will drive ten
hours a day and average 25 miles an
hour. They expect to travel about
1,400 miles.
Mrs. Haller, running against the
Standard Oil candidate for district
trustee of the Wood River schools,
received all but two votes in her dis
trict.
Canadian Tramples
U. S. Flag; Is Upheld
OTTAWA, ONT.. Aug. 28.—Dis
missed from the militia for trampling
under foot the American flag on July
31, Bugler Hill, of- the Saskatoon
Fusiliers. is being upheld by Colonel
the Hon. Sam Hughes. Minister of
Militia, and Hill, in all likelihood,
will be reinstated. #
While stating that Bugler Hill was
indiscreet, the Minister concludes that
the evidence submitted did not war
rant his dismissal.
LION’S LEG PUT IN CAST
BY SURGEON AT GRADY
"Miss Queen,”
baby lioness
of Grant Park
Zoo, exhibiting
her fractured
leg in plaster
cast as she sits
complacently in
lap of
Edward Boyd,
the lion keeper.
Mrs, Marshall Leaves
1,600th Calling Card
WASHINGTON, Aug. 28. — Mrs.
Thomas R. Marshall, wife of the Vice
President, still holds the lead in the
calling-card handicap being run in
Washington society.
She left the 1600th curd she ha-
distributed personally since March 4.
and has now called on everybody who
called on her since her arrival in
Washington. Mrs. Marshall has de
termined to take a rest from calling
'Don’t Worry,' Says
Woman 103 Years Old
WHITTIER, CAL.. Aug. 28.—Mrs.
Lydia Heald Sharpless has just cele
brated her 103d anniversary.
Mrs. Sharpless, who was the first
woman In Whittier to register after
the enfranchisement of women, said
her longevity was due to her living up
to her motto, “don’t worry.”
X-ray photo-
graph showing
compound
fracture in' leg
of lioness.
[
CALLED HOT
Speaker at Hygiene Congress
Says Mind Is More Impor
tant Than Muscle.
BUFFALO, Aug 28.—Air and ex
orcise for children should not alone
be considered by teachers, said Dr
Joseph Lee, of the Boston Schoo*
Committee and president of the Play-
Ground and Recreation Association of
America, In addressing the Fourth
International Congre-8 on School Hy
giene here to-day. Dr. Lee asserted
that the use of a child's muscles is
Imixirtant, but added that the mind |
life is even more important. "Better
a stuffy school house with zealous
work than fresh air and mental flab
biness,” said Dr. Lee. “We make too
much of a fetish of air and exercise." i
Continuing, he said:
“Smaller classes are essential to
the preservation of the teacher and
to her really reading the child. When
we learn to take our childen's health
and education seriously, we shall
halve the size of classes in our ele- j
mentar.v schools. It will Increase the
cost 80 per cent, but the children’s
lives and health are worth it.
"To further free the teacher’s time
for the normal pupil, we must have
special schools or classes not only
for the blind, the deaf, the tubercu
lous, but for all requiring peculiar
treatment, including the bright pupils
to whom the regular grades are as
Intellectual hobble skirt, spoiling
their natural gait.
“I believe that pupils In the lowest
grade, probably in the last three
grades, should have the afternoon
outdoors or In the kindergarten room,
not wholly because of the benefits of
the play and fre.sh air, but chiefly
to avoid the demoralization of half
hearted work. Half-heartedness is a
serious mental disease, worse than
hulf-ltingedness.”
DROWNED MAN BURIED.
GREENVILLE. S. C., Aug. 28.—Th»>
body of William D. Watts, who was I
drowned in Colorado, reached Lau
rens Wednesday, where the funeral
took place. He was of a prominent j
family.
|
HURT IN AUTO SMASH.
GREENVILLE. S. (\. Aug. 28.
In an automobile accident at Mount |
Vernon. Ohio, Mrs. T. C. Gower, of
Greenville, sustained a broken rib. Mr. !
Gower was uninjured, though oth'»r
members of the party were seriously
hurt.
HARD SCALY
that there’s anything unusual about.
I’m the real attraction here!’”
Miss Queen was as unique a patient
as ever invaded the operating room
of Grady Hospital. When Mr. Boyd
brought her to the hospital in a cab
one day, the learned surgeons argued
for an hour trying to determine-
whether she had broken her ulna and
radius, or had merely "busted some
thing.” They agreed that if she ha1
been a human being she would hav?
had a complete fracture of the ulna
and radius—since she was not a hu
man being, but a lion* they declare
firmly that she "busted something,'
and let it go at that.
X-Ray Picture Taken.
An X-Ray picture was taken of the
broken leg, which showed that both
bones of the right foreleg were
broken a few inches below’ the kne^.
It was what the doctors call a “com
plete fracture.” The pictures are prob
ably the only X-Rav photographs of
a lion ever taken in the South, an 1
are walued highly by the hospital sur
geons.
Miss Queen ’made three trips ro
Grady with ( her guardian, Mr. Boyd,
and each of them was a strenuous
affair, especially the first one. when
Dr. Goodwin Gheesling performed the
operation. The young lioness is lit
tle and had^a broken leg. but her
other three feetVere In good working
order and her teeth were v 7 ery sharp.
It took .\Jr. Boyd almost half an hour
to get her to the operating table, an<.
when shejgot there it took three men
to hold her while Dr. Gheesling set
the leg.
Queen fought all during the opera
tion. developing an aversion to Dr.
Gheesling’s hands. Once when the
doctor was putting the finishing
touches to a bandage, and when Mr.
Boyd had both his hands fully occu
pied with holding the lion, Queen
lunged forward and snapped vicious
ly at the surgeon’s hands. Mr. Boyd
quickly threw u ls head against that of
the* lion, and Queen gleefully bit a
piece out of his cheek.
Queen has been placed in a cage
by herself since she broke her leg
and is getting along nicely. The plas
ter of paris cast prohab 1 - will be re
moved within a w«ek or two, and she
w ill again be allow ed to . ssociat*
with the other nu mbers of her fam
ily. It was while playing with her
brother that she foil uno bloke tile
Buzzards Doomed, As
Hookworm Carriers
NEW ORLEANS, Aug. 28 —Despite
th protest of F'Yank M. Miller, former
head of the old Conservation Com
mission, against the action of the
new’ commission in Issuing a state
wide permit for the destruction of
turkey buzzards, there seems to be
no immediate prospects of the slaugh
ter stopping, and the Conservation
Commission, backed by an opinion
of the Attorney General and the sup-
port of sanitarians, is standing ex
tremely pat in the matter.
Dr. Sidney F. Porter, head of the
Hookworm Commission, is a strong
advocate of the destruction of the
turkey buzzard. He says It is a car
rier of hookworms.
Spread and Itched. Hair Fell Out.
Could Not Sleep, Used Cuticura
Soap and Ointment, Now Well.
R F D. No. 2. Catoosa. Okla. — "M;
trouble began with a hard sraly plar© about
the else of a dollar on the aide of my head,
and a.- It continued to spread It caused my
hair t# fall out gradually a« 1 would comb
It. At first it looked like a patch of dandruff
It Itched and jrhen I scratched it, it would
make an inflamed sore. It gave mo such
fever I could not sleep at night. In two
weeks the place was bald and It began to
get packed and scaly When I would wash
It, it would bleed and afterward would form
a yellow greenish looking eruption and it
looked like it was beginning to eat Into the
flesh It really gave iue such a fever It
made me sick.
"I used and everything I could
te check its growth but they seemed to
make it worse Two friends recommended
Cuticura Moap and Ointment and I sent to
the drug store and got some and used them
<nd in a week there was a deal of improve
ment and in a month's time this place was
well and a new growth of hair had formed."
(Signed) Willie Johns, Mar. 8, 1913.
Not only are Cuticura Soap and Ointment
most valuable in the treatment of eczemas
and other distressing eruptions of skin and
scalp, but no other emollients do so much
for pimples, blackheads, red. rough skins,
itching, scaly scalps, dandruff, dry, thin and
falling hair, chapped hands and shapeless
nails, nor do it so economically. A single
cake of Cuticura Soap and box of Cuticura
Ointment are often sufficient. Sold through
out the world. Liberal sample of each
mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address
po«<-card "Cuticura. Dept. T. Boston "
4UTMen who shave and shampoo withCu-
Licura Soap will find It best for skin and scaly.
STRENGTH
SECURITY
and 4%
’ I'HERE are three things to think
about in selecting a bank in which
to deposit your savings—the Strength
of the institution, the Security afforded
and the Interest rate it pays.
Atlanta’s Oldest Savings Bank offers
you absolute security for your money
at all times and offers you 4 Per Cent
interest—compounded semi-annually.
One Dollar will open a Savings Ac
count here.
We are United States Depository for
Postal Saving Funds.
Georgia Savings
Bank & Trust Co.
GRANT BUILDING
The Plot For /
the Pennant
Hatched by the celebrated arch-schemer
of baseball fiction, Hugh S. Fullerton, is un
der way in the
SUNDAY
AMERICAN
The second Installment of this enthrall
ing tale will appear next Sunday with a syn
opsis of what has gone before, so it is not too
late to become a fiction fan. Incidentally
one may read in the same issue of
Lily Elsie’s
Shattered
Romance
It’s a story of how this noted beauty/de
fied all superstitions which surround newly
weds only to find that she just could not give
up her old stage friends to please a. mere
husband. There will be another tale which
proves that songbirds are
Not Above the
Law After All
For it reveals the agitation of emotional
ly unrestrained tenors and prima donnas
who are cruelly worried by the sentencing
of Carl Burrian to a month’s imprisonment
for stealing another man’s wife. These are
but a few of the things which go to make
The Sunday American worth
Ten Times
The Price
For it regularly contains all the news of
every line—Sports, Finance, Local, Tele
graph and Cable, to say nothing of a hun
dred other features. If you are the one per
son in ten who is not a regular reader, you
had better order at once and become one.
From your dealer or by phone, Main 100.