Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 03, 1913, Image 6

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Till-; ATLANTA < '<EOHOIAN A NT) NEWS. TD0UIT SS HEAD OF J. O. Cochran. r»r**sld«nt i»f the t’l*y Park Board, announced TuemJay th* he wouiri reMgii a; nee or: ,ic.-..un? of having arr©pt*-<i :t position a« deput' to Internal JL*ver.m- <*ollert r Blalock. It is understood that the board w 1 delft)’ the election of a new president until after the first of the year In the meantime Vico President lYan H Ke>riold« will act as president. It was reported In Cits' Hall circle ■ tal Mayor Woodward would tnak the point that President t'oehra could rn»t hold a Federal powitlon an a city office at the sum© time, Mr Cochran said Jn* did not want an dlHpute with Mayor Woodward that he had Intended handing resignation to Council at the ] meeting. At the last regular monthly m Ing of the Park Board Tuesday <f- ternoon General ManaK ( r Dan f’ar*y submitted hla budget. It calls for about $75,000 more money than the Park Department vrns driven last year hut Carev risk that ♦vers - penny >f It - needed The total sum asked for parks ift an amount suffl cbrit to extend all functions of the park department. n 1 j d -1 Shipping and Receiving clerks have been buying the Split A Normal Burroughs to the tune of several thousand a year, simply be cause with tin maehine they ean have the gross, tare and net weight, all at one time—or they can put in the invoice number and freight prepaid -or give the pack age number, gross and tare weight all in one operation of the handle, and the machine adds only those columns that you want added. Of course, it means the saving of about do"' of the time in handling the figures in the Shipping or Bo reiving department. We would like to make a demonstration of what this machine can do in your ship ping or receiving department. Burroughs Adding Machine Co. M (iUKKNTT, Sales, Manager, 168 TVaMilroc Street ATLANTA. GA. THAT GREAT FREE FICTION MAGAZINE COMES WITH Next Sunday's American It alone is worth the price of the paper, contain ing as it does the continuation of Frederic Ar nold Rummer’s story, “A Song of Sixpence” There are other features to this issue in abun dance, including: What the Appendix Was Made For. Why We Should All Walk Like Farmers. Odd New Facts About Sleep. Why Dirty Cities Are Bad for the Eyes. A Way to Make the Deaf Hear. Buster will continue his humorous career, though he is on the last page of the .Magazine Section, so as to not crowd the comic doings of Their Only Child. Jimmy and His Father. Montmorency and Happy and Nemo in the Land of Dreams. It's surely a bargain—this Sunday American. Bettor order troiu your dealer or bv phone to Main 100. Busy Day Arranged by Chamber of Commerce for Young Farmers’ Entertainment. Tfiunj? Gftortfa fanner* came In by ' ^ and marched on the State <'apitol, and deployed among the yellow pyra mids of their great Harvest Home. •Six hundred—eight hundred—a thousand; they were hero In force at fi o’clock. The force was doubled , In the next hour, and by noon the first floor of the ('apitol w as packed with the young farmers and their elders and their frank admirers. It was a gieat spectacle, staged along the corridors made by pyra mids of corn, against a background of history, and touched with vivac ity and color by the gathering of the canning club girls, and tin* unique attractiveness of their .--pedal exhi bition. Chamber Aides Busy. Also, the representatives of the c'hamber of Commerce had their hands lull -very full. W. H. Leahy, the commercial secre tary, was there, and he was one busy man. Behind a long table, his as sistants tolled without ceasing. Is suing tlie buttons and cards to the farmer beys; telling them where they could find this or that department or person or place of interest ; and arranging for their entertainment in Atlanta homes and hotels. By noon the great crowd of visitors "as starting on its way to luncheon. Many went in motor cars, with which a number of the hosts called at the <'apitol to “pick up” their guests. All were planning and asking ques tions about the afternoon Jaunt in special street cars to Fort McPher son, beginning at 2:4:, o'clock, to watch the Seventeenth Regiment on dress parade an entertainment de viled by (’oloijel J. IV Van Orsdale, and a rpeetacle the boys were sure not to miss But in the meantime, they walked about through the serried acres of *rain, tied up in the neat pyramids, and each boy nought out his own e\- hloit among the 2,500. and if each bov dwelt lovingly on work of his own hands, and the product of his own acre, who could blame him 7 And, to Co him justice, he turned away soon to see what the other boys had done. Newton's Novel Display. In the rotunda was the great ex hibit of Newton County; a broad ta ble with a mimic field of sand, the tiny roads being crowded with little wagons loaded with the exhibits of the Newton Corn Club boys. I A lot of patient work and clever planning was shown in that exhibit. There was the farm house ami the Entertainment for Corn Show Visitors Wednesday— Drefin parade and exhibition drill. Fort McPherson 15:30 p. m., take ears at the Capitol j - 45 p. m. •Special moving pictures for boys and girls, Grand Opor t House, 7:30 p. m. Thursday— Exercises, including speaking and awarding of prizes, hall of House of Representatives, State Capitol, 10 a. m. Annual Corn Show parade, as sembles at Auditorium 2:30 p. m., moves at 3 p. m. iiree moving picture shows admit the boys free-on their buttons: The Vaudette from JO a, in. to 10 p. m.; the Sa voy and A bazar from 10 a. in. to l p. txj. arm buildings; there was the minia ture telephone exchange—and a big placard announcing that Newton County had the first rural telephone svHtem In the world; and another that Newton County had the first ru- YOUNG FARMERS OF GEORGIA ENTHUSIASTIC REDMOND LEAVES FOR GO. MILWAUKEE, WIS.. Dec. 3.—Jack Redmond, the veteran lightweight, left last night for Shebyvgan, Wis., wh^re | he is matched to box Young Schrank in a scheduled 10-round bout Friday. This will be Redmond 9 first scrap n j over six months. Two young corn growers dis playing samples of their work. They are Roscoe Richardson, of Hart County, above, and Leonard Clarke, of Hall. How to Overcome a Bad Constipation ^ HOHESrr > L POPULAR PRlffS We Enjoy the Confidence of Our Patrons Every time you get a prescrip tion filled, you place your health in tlie hands of another. A drop too much of a certain drug, the substitution of another or careless compounding may re tard you on the road to recovery. Scores or people know that every prescription they intrust to us is filled exact 1\ us their physician or dered. We have built our reputation on accuracy, honest? and economical prices, yet we do not stint on any thing. Relieve .vour mind of worry— tlic next time you get a prescription bring it here. TAX EQUALIZERS NAMED. DALTON. Dec. 3.—e. D. M, c ut( . rn, L. tV. Thomasson and (I w s wil constitute Whitfield County. ty Bourd of Tax Kqnaiizers, hav.nr been elected by the County Comn, sloners. There is a Mild Laxative That Will Bring Safe and Pleasant Relief Over Night. U ia only natural that the simplest of ailments should be the moat gen eral, and so w© have a whole nation suffering from constipation and indi gestion. for they am closely allied. But common as constipation Is many people do not seem to know they nave it They will complain of headache, drowsiness or biliousness, all unconscious of the cause of the trouble. You should have ;» full and free movement at least once u day. If you pass a day you are constipated, and the result will be that you will catch a cold easily or have a more serious ailment. To cure the consti pation and forestall still graver trou ble take a dose of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at night before retiring and by morning relief will come, without disturbance from sleep or any inconvenience. Legions of people use it regularly in such emergencies, some of them formerly chronic invalids who bad suffered from constipation all their lives. Mrs. X. Frantz, »>7 Eighth Sr.. Salem, Ohio, took physical for year*, and, worst of all, without much avail. Finally, she began to take Dr Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin and to-day she is no longer troubled and eats what she likes. Many others will tell you that they have tried most things recommended for this purpose but have found Syrup Pepsin the only one always reliable. A bottle U __ MRS. N. FRANTZ. can be obtained at any drug *ttr» for fifty cent.* or one dollar, the lab. ter size being bought by families al ready familiar with Its merits Syrup Pepsin is mild, pleaaam- tasting and non-griping Mother* give It to tiny Infants, and ret it is effective In grownups. It ia for everyone who suffers from any form of stomach, liver or bowel trouble constipation, dyspepsia, biliousness, etc. Its action will so delight von that you will forever avoid harsh ca thartics, purgatives, pills and salta Families wishing to try a fre* Ham- pie bottle can obtain it postpaid b* addressing I)r, W. B. Caldwell, 419 Washington St.. Montieello, Ill. a postal card with your name and ad dress on it will do. Visitors to the corn show will find all the enthusiastic young ex hibitors will ing, even eager, to tell of their crops, and the modern methods used in get ting the won derful re sults. ral free deliver) route in America. There was a lot of boost for New ton County there, and every boy’s ex hibit of corn, piled on a little wag on. pulled by a tiny horse, was marked with that boy's photograph. It was at that exhibit, too, that some “inside” information was pick ed up about the technical peculiari ties of corn; how and why some corn w as good and prolific while other corn was not. and how to tell the differ ence. Here’s one point that maybe you don't know: “You take an ear of corn’ -Deca tur Conner, of Hall County, was speaking—“you take an ear of corn and roll it in stiff paper, binding it to hold just the shape and size of the ear after it is taken out. Then you shell the corn. The shelled corn should fill the ‘mold.’ That is. if it’s a good ear. Size of Ear Doesn't Matter. “If it doesn’t, something's the mat ter with the ear. There’s a good one now. See how regularly the grains Stop at Atlanta's Newest and Finest Hotel W inecoff run, and how they cover the cob, clear down to the smaller end, while there is a sort of ‘cup’ in the big end, with the grains kind of overlapping it to make the rim. “That's good corn. The size of the cars doesn’t matter so much, only if they are too large there won’t be any great crop to the acre. None of the prolific kinds are big ears—Hastings’, Butts'. Marlborough—they’re not big ears, but fine and regular and full of corn, .and Jots of them to the stalk." All these boys know that, and lots more. There is Gradv Conner, of Hall County, who made more than 100 bushels on his acre, and he’s just 13 years old. “What’s more, it was the cheapest raised corn on the whole place,” said Grady’s father. “Cost a lot less than corn 1 made at ten or fifteen bushels to the acre. You see. you have to do almost as much fertilizing and work to get a dozen bushels to the acre as you do to get four times as much. I’ve learned a lot from this contest thing, -and right now J've picked out eight acres that. I’m going to make 600 bushels on nVxt time. The boys are sort of getting ahead of us old- timers," he added, and laughed a lit tle, pulling his son’s hair, protest ing! y. Blackstone of the South Is the Hotel Winecoff EDMONDSON DRUG GO. Prescription Specialists. Two Stores: 111 N. Broad St.—106 N Proyr St. PROMINENT REAL ESTATE OWNER PRAISES QUAKER Your Dental Work Sale in Our Hands No experiments or experimenters here Every dentist is skillful and experienced—no students or failure* Was Chrome Sufferer From Rheumatism, but as Usual "Quaker'’ is Again Victor Henry Karwis. h lives ut 175 Kirk w ■ hi avenue this city He ia a heavy real .-state owner and well known in the city About fifteen 5 ears ago he first noticed that the pangs «*f rheumatism were beginning to creep into his Joints and muscles He had severe pains in the shoulder*. h'\ver limbs and back. At times : « was unable t<• leave his home <•!■ tnt . I the mUer> in* endured, would hIh.i fe**l sick atm dizzy was weakened b> the torture* s trouble. lie had to rise fre- tly at night aj.d was in an ai- sp. ioZem fa.li s water He Kept getting worse all the time, and the pains in his legs were ho bad that lie began to fear for his future use of them He Buf fered in that way for years, always grad ually worse, and he was attract ed to the work of the Health Teach er and Quaker He was told to try Quaker Kxtract ami oil of Balm. Mr Karwisch began their use. and n 'U after only three bottles of the Fxtract have been taken, he says: "l have never seen the equal of the wonderful Quake: Keunslies in tny i !<* 1 Mtffcre-o f-*r many \ ears, whereas l . ..old have been well if I l**1 only known about these me.i. > :ties. 1 find Ui.it 1 am like a new tt.a.;. man. I have no such distresses as formerly and can get about with • a f4 o. I am 71 years old, so you see t - all the more remarkable. Mv • laughter-in-Uw. who had kidney yT '• stomach trouble, has also taken '" ' bottles ».f the Kxtract and ;* catt enjoy life now. after being in mi«er> a long time. I will alwavs have « good word for 'Quaker ' I he Ilea th Teacher said vow are surely missing a golden opportunity 'f you persist in allowing vourself to suftV- w -h any branch of kidney, stomach or bleed troubles; also ca tart : or rheumatism, when the cures that are being derived right here in your own city are being numbered b> thousands, not dozens or hun dreds Call at tin Conrsev * Munn ' 'nig Store *jm Marietta street. Quaker Kx ract. $5 00 »‘.*r s:\ bottle treatment, which is always required in an> chronic - use. .Mt f u r vfiort treatment of three bottles, whi. h is 1 he shortest length of time a perma nent disposition can be made In the system; $100 single bottle, which is sometimes sufficient for minor com plaints and worms in chl’drcn. oil .•f Balm for pains or ache*. *_*5u \V> prepay exptess charges oo’y'ii old. t> ! «»f $5.00 or over. All Work Guaranteed Ten Years Exami nations FREE These Are Our Prices lor Best Quality Dental Work Gold Crowns, $4 Set ot Teeth, $5 Bridge Work, $4 Atlanta Dental Parlors DR. C. A. CONSTANTINE. Proprietor Cor. Peachtree and Decatur Sts. Entrance 19*4 Peachtree What-To-G i ve - Him - Hints *—****"ctctaJi—iwa mmmbbbi juj—*—aiwumxa t—wi—im ih>i ■ nm »a THESE GIFTS for MEN Thing's He Wants- --and Wears and N ceds There's so much that’s new—and different—you ought to stop in and see them. There are too many good things for us to fully describe—we’ll just suggest a few of which we have of the most attractive kinds- Silk Neckwear, Jewelry Boxes, Good Underwear, Initial Handkerchiefs, Military Brashes, Fine Shirts, Gloves—all kinds, Glove and Handkerchief Coat Sweaters, Gold Cuff Links, Cases, Wool Sweater and Golf Fine Stick Pins, Umbrella Canes, Coats, Silk Mufflers. Auto Reefers, Silk Hosiery, Initial Belts, Collar Bags, Smoking Jackets, Dressing Gowns, Bath Robes, Easy Slippers, Silk Pajamas, Golf Suits, Day Waistcoats, Evening Waistcoats, Overcoats, 1 Raincoats, Dress Suits, Cravat Racks. Outing Pajamas, Tuxedo Coats. Matched Sets of Handkerchiefs, Ties aud Hosiery in dozens of beau tiful colors. P a r k s=C h a m b e r s=H a r d w i c k 37=3M Peachtree Company ATLANTA. GA.