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CRUEL TRAIL
Thousands of Fugitives. Fleeing
to United States Border, Drop
From Hunger and Fatigue.
MARFA. TEXAS, t*e. 4.—A trail
«f death marks the path of thousand*
,f Mexican fugitives. Federal soldiers
• nd civilians alike who are fleeing
• rum the vicinity of Chihuahua City
the United States border. It is
*ared there are Americans among
he refugees.
The bodies of dead and dying, who
ropped from hunger and fatigue
ipon the desert, are monuments to
h<=* suffering of the fleeing, panic-
ricken fugitives.
Forty miles of the way lies across
barren desert across which no wa-
pt flows, and the only vegetation 1«
; .n occasional cluster of thorny cac-
j*.
Most of the fugitives are on foot,
nd were unable to supply themselves
with food and water when they
tcached the edge of the de.-wrt. Only
,i few are fortunte enough to have
•ack mules or burros to carry their
>w belongings.
Among the fugitives is said to be
ieneral Luis Terrazas, a millionaire,
who owns vast ranches and gold
mines in northern Mexico. But his
vealth failed to avail him in the des
ert, although it provided him w ith a
orse to ride.
There are at least 3.000 Federal
roops among the stragglers, all ot
v horn may cross the Rio Grande and
surrender to the United States au-
lorities rather than face annihila-
on at the hands of the Constitutiori-
• lists. There are a iso a number of
foreigners among the fleeing band.
Chicago Women to
Keep Up Egg Boycott
1 HICAGO, Dec. 4.—The boycott
■gainst high-priced eggs will be kept
ip all winter unless the price s
brought down to the maximum fixed
the women of Chicago—32 cents
a dozen.
Six additional woman's clubs joined
he boycott movement to-day.
ywvwv
CORN BOYS AND CANNING GIRLS
ARE LAUDED AS EMPIRE BUILDERS
IB
BE
Two ot' the leaders in the Georgia Girl Canning Club Competition. Out the right is Miss Clyde Sullivan, of Lowndes County,
the State champion, who canned from one-tenth of an acre 5,354 pounds of tomatoes at a net profit of $132. She is 14 years old. On
the left is Miss Josephine Simms, Floyd County’s fairest young canning girl.
Ill III
Get Out “of the
Rut”
Don’t oontimie, day after
(lay, In that half sickly
oondltlon—with poor appe
tite, sallow complexion and
clogged bowel a You can
help Nature wonderfully
In overcoming all Stomach,
Liver and Bowel troubles
by taking a short course of
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH
BITTERS
TRY A BOTTLE TO-DAY
AVOID SUBSTITUTES
IIS III
GEY
KODAK
FOR
XMAS
I 15 to $65. Brownies $1 to $12. Send for
I omplete catalog to-day. SPECIAL ENLARG-
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I A X HAWKE3 OO. a Tlanta
Kidney and
Liver Treatment
uart's Buchu and Juniper
Compound, an Absolute Rem
edy, With a Most Remark
able Action on the
Kidneys, Liver and
Bladder.
\'o more dizziness, pain in the back,
■idache, puffy eyes, carbuncles or any
Ter symptoms of kidney trouble. You
n going to get well by taking Stuart s
' hu and .Juniper Compound.
A bottle of Stuart’s Buchu and .Tuni-
r Compound will give you such won-
nftil relief of kidney and urinary trou-
• as to astonish you. No matter how
d your case even if the urine shows
ices of blood. Stuart's Buchu and
nlper Compound holds out hope for
u, because it has cured hundreds of
st such cases.
>n’t Wait Until You are Twisted All
Out of Shape With Bone or Back-
Pains. But Get a Bottle of Stu
art’s Buchu and Juniper
Compound.
Cse as directed on bottle. The good
'••ct will come quick. There will be
long-drawn-out guesswork aboul it
J’i will know positively by the result
u few hours that Stuart's Buchu and
niper Compound is the kidney medi-
you need. 141
Bright's disease, diabetes, cystitis in-
mmation of the bladder, swollen limbs
these are some of the many troubles
uifcdled by Stuart’s Buchu and Juniper
inpound.*
Rheumatism, gout, lumbago, sciatica,
uritis and other painful arid condi*
-ns of the blood will be quickly elinii-
lt ei.\ Stuart’s Buchu and Juniper
»mpound works almost like magic.
feel the result almost at once, ana
is only a question of how had your
whether you need to continue tak-
Stuart’s Buchu and Juniper Lom-
1 md more than iust a few days
not delav lo send for the ?1 bottle
'*> You w ill get the greatest inedi •
wp know of for the kidney*
fuggists Full directions with ear.
■tde.- Advt.
Speakers at Rousing Meetinj
Capitol Pay Tribute to
Young Georgia.
A thousand sta’wart young farm-
j ers of Georgia gathered at 10 o’clock
I Thursday morning in the hall of the
J House of Representatives in the State
Capitol and heard from high officials
j Just what their efforts on Georgia's
j red old hills meant to them, and to
the Empire State, and to the South,
and to the nation.
Not only the thousand corn club
boys were there.
There also were the 40 girls from
{ the canning clubs of Georgia—and
they heard something, too—something
that made them blush and smile at
the praise, and especially at the not
too well-veiled promises that they
would make the best sort of help
meets to—well, to : the ambitious
planters of the Young Georgia.
Wilmer Moore a Speaker.
And then there was a great crowd
of onlookers, to cheer the proceedings,
and the award of prizes and diplomas,
and, in fact, to keep things moving at
a lively pace until nearly noon.
Wilmer L. Moore, president of ‘.he
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, pre
sided, and did a bit of speaking, to »,
in his usual happy vein. M. L. Brit
tain. State Superintendent of Educa
tion spoke, and then came the award
of prizes and diplomas.
Chancellor David C. Barrow, of the
University of Georgia, who was
scheduled to be one of the speakers
at the meeting, telegraphed Secre
tary Cooper, of the Chamber, that se
rious illness in his family prevented
him from coming to Atlanta.
J. Phil Campbell, of the United
States Department of Agriculture,
hoad of the corn club work in Geor
gia. had charge of the prizes for tho
corn exhibits and also of the canning
show, and he had a lot of awarding to
do.
So did Dr. A. M. Soule, president f
the State College of Agriculture, w no
gave out the diplomas lo the 85 boys
who had made ino bushels or more on
the acre they cultivated in the great
contest.
Then there were some more talk*
H nd a lot of handshaking, and som *
Relax in the Rest Room—Third Floor rW«V^££
* M. RICH & BROS. CO. 1:
BANG!!
Movement Started in Atlanta Is
Likely to Become Georgia-
Wide by Next Year.
Atlanta’s "Go-to-Church Day." set
for December 14. is attracting atten
tion in many parti* of the State ani
will bo observed in several of the
cities this year on the same date that
it is in Atlanta. The indications ?r-
that the movement started In Atlanta
will be State-wide by another year,
and that all of tiie churches through
out Georgia will join in what wtli
prove probably the most striking dem
onstration ever made by any band or
organization of churches in America.
Th« plan has met with instant ac
ceptance from the ministers. It sup
plied Just the stimulus which it had
been impossible to obtain it) any oth
er manner. Every church had held
rally days when the ministers w«-r •
able to * aek the building to the door*,
but the idea of a concerted rally, when
every church in the citj would uv
packed at the same time, when ever.'
minister would bo exalted by the sea
of faces before him and when more'
voices than ever before simultaneous
ly would be raised in song and praye,\
never had occurred to many of tht
ministers, much less been regarded
as a possibility.
Favor for Plan General.
The "Go-to-Church" plan provided
for just such a situation. Every min
ister was to use his utmost endeavof
to get out every perron on his mem
bership roll to the ‘wo services pr
December 14—even to those who h:vl
not been inside the church doors f r
weeks and months. An actual show
ing of strength of the churches
was to be made. This immediately
struck the minds of all religious work
ers as an admirable plan, and they
fell in with the project heartily and
lent their assistance to make it a sue,
cess.
Jackson. Ga.. is the latest town in
the State to Join in the movement.
Dispatches from there Thursday say
that the day will be observed Decem
ber 14 as it is in Atlanta. The min
isters of the place have taken hold of
the work and have aroused the whole
town to an active Interest. The
movement also has the indorsement of
a large number of business men and
other members of the laity.
Each of the Atlanta churches will
have committees to see that the ef
fects of "Go-to-Church Day" shall be
lasting, and that the persons who at
tend on December 14 are personally
invited to attend on a!! of the suc
ceeding Sundays
Plan Annual Observance.
In other cities where a movement
of this sort has been undertaken ’he
results have been of a permanent na
ture. It Is the determination of th<
Atlanta phstors that the same shall be
true here.
The ministerial committee whi *h |
has charge of the arrangements for
the day in all probability will take j
steps to perpetuate its observance an
nually and to spread it to every city
in the State.
Atlanta pastors F inday again will i
urge their congregations to turn out in
full force at both service.*.
The negro churches are co-operat
ing and will add,thousands to the to- i
tal attendance for the day
15.000 MADE IDLE.
CARDIFF, WALES. Dec 4.-Fifteen I
thousand coal miner* in Southern
Wales were thrown out of work to I
I day by the strike of engine drivers I
J and stokers on the Great Western Rail- I
more blushing, and finally a whole lot
PHICHESTER S PILLS
V ^ T ■ F DIAMOND H K A ND. A
(hi
Tak« *• •(Hep. Bar or »©
Uruflit- As* fnr<’iri-i'llES/TFB*S
DIAMOND ft It A N D PILLS, for *&
year* k bowtj as Best, Safast. Always ReHable
SOLB Bt DRIGGISTS EVERYWHFP
KODAKERS.
Special Enlargement Offer
5x7 Art Mount . . . 25c
8x10 Art Mount . . . 30c
By Mail Sc Extra
Select your favorite negative* and have
enlargements made-handsomely mounled
- a desirable Xmas gift.
CONE’S—Two Stores —Atlanta, Ga.
of laughing and talkin'* all at once,
and* the ceremony came to an end, and
everybody started out to luncheon an I
to get ready for the big parade in the
afternoon.
Georgia’s girls shared honors with
j the corn club boys when the prize-
were announced Thursday forenoon
i in the House of Representatives at
| the Capitol just as thoughts w^re
turning to the big parade to be held
at 2:30 o’clock.
Remarkable records had bp-n
made by the girls in their canning
competitions, and. as for the excel
lence of results, it appeared that tin*
mothers of the Stale would have to
look to their laurel if the' did not
wish to be surpassed bv their da ugh
I ters who are no yet out of their
r ‘teens.”
Take Miss Clyde Sullivan, the young
j champion, for example. She is from
I Ousley, Ga., and raised the tomatoes
I she canned upon one-tenth of an acre,
like the other contestants
I Here is her story of what she ac
complished :
’I planted my tomato seeds Febru
ary 20. We have to keep a record of
everything we do, so as to make our
reports here, and that Is how 1 know.
Transplanted in March.
"Then it was the last day of Mar»*!i
that I transplanted them. I put them
in rows 2 1-2 feet apart. I didn't
have any trouble with them to speak
of. The insects were the only thing
that bothered mo a all. and I kept
them picked off pretty clean all of the
time.
"The first fruit showed up on May
7. The first week in June the toma
toes began to riper, well.
‘ Flow man> tomatoes do vuii think
I "freed? Oh. you're a poor gues'* ?.
I raised jus*, 5.354 pounds. Tint
wasn’t so bad, was. it?
' Now, of course you couldn't gue^s
how man> cans of tomatoes I made
out of these 5.354 pounds. I vet me see
—there were 212 No. 3 cans (they
hold a quart) ^nd 2.2 >4 No. 2s. The
No. 2h hold 22 ounces, or about two-
tbirds of a quart.
'‘Besides ail this. 1 put up 6b pounds
of ketchup and 50 pounds of tomatoes
in jars.
"The total cost of all the work-
the cultivation, the fertilizer, the cans,
etc.— totaled $80.22. My gross re
ceipts were $212.01. leaving me a tie.
profit of $132,310
One Grower Prunes Plants.
Little Miss Eron Dooley, of Bishop,
Oconee County, in addition to mak
ing a great success our of her tenth-
acre garden, submitted a highly in
teresting notebook. In which she nar-
i rated all the work she had done in
J raising the tomatoes and illustrated
with water colors the various stages
of the plants’ development.
She related a surprising experiment
she had made in pruning the plants.
One which she had trimmed down to
three stems yielded 26 pounds of to
matoes. Another that she trimmed to
two stems yielded 33 pounds. A third
one, on which she left only the main
stem, yielded 47 pounds of big, crim
son tomatoes, or nineteen pounds
more than the three-stem plant. Miss
Dooley made $91.60 profit on her can
ning
Miss Lela E. Dixon, of Fayetteville.
Fayette County, had excellent yield
and profits and turned in one of the
best notebooks in the competition
The exhibit counts for 40 points, and
the report, the yield and the profit for
20 points each.
About 50 of the girls from various
parts of the State are in the city to
attend the exhibit, which is being
j conducted tinder the auffpices of the
i Georgia Girts’ Canning and Poultry
i Club. Miss Mary E. Cresswell. of
i Washington, in rharge of the girls’
demonstration work that Is carried
sale when the
Miss Dowd le
comprehensive
"I know of no
Commissioner of Agriculture
Price and Miss Eron Dooley,
both of Oconee County and both
proud of it. Miss Eron, who is
only 11 years old, packed 1,415
one-quart cans of tomatoes from
one-tenth of an acre, netting her
a profit of $91.50.
on by the Bureau of Plant Industry
and the General Education Board, has
been active in making the Georgia ex
hibit a success.
Miss Elizabeth Holt, of the State
College of Agriculture at Athens, and
Miss Lois P. Dow die. superintendent
of the clubs for the .Northern District
of Georgia, also are assisting in the
manage.nent of the competition.
The first individual award carries
with it. a trip to Washington. The
first county prize is a check for $51*
which the club of the winning county
may use as it desires.
Atlanta housewives who are short
on canned goods and preserves will
find an excellent selection at the Cap-
! fto).
“All these are for
j show Is over." said
l Thursday, with a
#weep of her hand,
better way the women can encourage
the girls than to turnish a market for
their product*.
"We don't have to brand our goods
a certain per cent of benzoate of
soda.” she continued, with a smile.
"There is no chemical preservative ot
any sort used. One will know* Can
ning Club products In the ‘4-H
brand. That ‘4-H’ stands for 'Head
Hand. Heart and Health.’"
Hundreds of Boys to March.
Hundreds of enthusiastic lads who
have been in attendance at the Corn
Show will put themselves in conspic
uous evidence before the city Thurs
day afternoon by parading through
the principal streets.
The boys were instructed Wednes
day to report at 2 o’clock Thursday
afternoon at the Capitol, where the
youthful army of prize corn raisers
was to get Into marching formation.
If J. Phil Campbell, patron saint of
the lads, is able to whip his irrepres
sible charges into some semblance of I
order within half an hour, the parade)
will start from there at 2:30.
It is estimated that close to 1,000
boys are in Atlanta for the purpose
of taking charge of their own exhib
its, or, If they are not contestants
to get pointers on what to do next
\ear, when they propose to compete
for the prizes.
More than 3.0fii> exhibits from 85
counties are on display on the first
floor of the Capitol. Eighty-five of
the boys are in the 100 bushel class
There weu* only 69 with this envia
ble distinction last year.
LIMBS AND FEET
With Watery Blisters. Also on Neck
and Face. Itched So Couid Not
Sleep. Used Cuticura Soap and
Ointment Six Days. Trouble Left.
19 Roach St.. Atlanta. Ga.—"A f«w
months ago I had some kind of akin eruption
that spread until my limbs and feet were
jp a covered with blotches and
watery blisters. It looked
¥ __ like e»'7,ema When the
fl *** Jv trouble reached my neck and
vi P face 1 wa* almost drisen
► A frantic. It itched and stunt
\ ko iniensoly that I could not
viv ; or wear any clothing on
'”'7 \f the affected parts. I used
almost everything without re
lief After two months I commenced to use
Cuticura Soap and Ointment and aft or two
day* I noticed improvement and in six days
the trouble left My skin was fair and
smooth again and the eruption never re
turned
“My cousin was a sufferer from pimples,
known as acne, on his face and seemed to
grow worse all the time I recommended
Cuticura Soap and Ointment to him and
now his face is smooth for the first time In
three years and he owes it all to Cuticura
Soap and Ointment." (Signed! V> alter
Battle, Oct. 7. 1912.
A single hot bath with Cuticura Soap and
s gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointment
are often sufficient to afford Immediate relief
in the most distressing cases of skin and
scalp diseases when all else falls Cuticura
Soap (25c ) and Cuticura Ointment '50c )
are sold every where. Liberal sample of each
mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Hook Address
post-card “Cuticura. Dept. T. Boston
MTNlen who shave and shampoo with Cu
ticura Soap will find it best for skin and seal*.
Our coals will please you.
Call us.
CARROLL & HUNTER
B. F. STOCKTON
PLUMBING
24 S. PRYOR STREET
BOTH PHONES 161
Prices on New
$15 to $25 Suits
Coats & Dresses
Drop Down,
Down, Down to
cq_ for $1.25 to $2
dress goods—Con
sist of short lengths 1 1-2 to
5 yards, in white serges
with black or colored
stripes, plain colored zibe-
iinos, brocades, panamas,
etc.
(Main
Gold-Filled Bracelets
A Sale of
Samples
Sample bracelets from which the maker took orders.
Every piece, therefore, as perfect as he could create.
Every piece fresh and new. Gold filled; warranted for
years. Roman or polished finish; embossed and hand-en
graved designs. Styles for misses, children and ladies. A
lavish assortment at these savings:
$1.29 values .to $2.25. $2.98 values to $5.00.
$1.98 values to $3.50. $3.98 values to $7.00.
You might expert such
prices in February, on the
End-of-the-Season T a g
hinds. But surely not on
fresh, new merchandise at
the beginning of Decem
ber. In no previous sea
son do we reeall such val
ues. Choose from
$16.75 to $23.50 Dresses at $10
There are 113 silk dresses chiefly in crepe de chines and
messaline. In the approved styles, cleverly made; excel
lently finished: smartly trimmed. Black and leading
colors.
There are 79 wool dresses in French and storm serges,
wool crepes, brocades and matelasses. All new. Choice of
black and colors,
$15 to $20 New Winter Coats $10
Choose from, plain gray chinchillas, velours and heavy
Bedford Cords. Also zibelines, either plain or with neat
white or colored stripes. Self or velvet collars and cuffs.
Black, gray, blue, brown and mixtures.
$15 to $20 Winter Suits at $10
Just twenty-eight in all, including serges and cheviots
in black and navy blue and shepherd checks. All new
this season. (jooij puoosg)
Starting the Pre-Inventory
\ Sale of Silks
»
• The Yearly Event That Distributes the
E Finest Silks, Robes and Trimmings at
I Half & Less Usual Prices
T; Included are such values as these:
< Choice of any colored $2 or $1.75 <t» 1 A Q
crepe de chine in stock *•
Choice of any colored $1 silk 7 0
messaline in stock at • GC
$8.50 imported silk bengalines at $3.50.
$1 and $1.50 fancy silks and remnants. 59c..
$1 black silks, a small lot at 59c.
$5 and $6 velvet and fur coatings at $3.50.
$7.50 and $10 Tunics, $3.95 $17.50 Tunics, $9.75
Imported Dress Patterns
Fashionable fabrics of silks, chiffons and velvets; bro
caded, printed and some beauties with gold and silver.
$7.50, $8.50 and $10 Fabrics at $4.95
$10 to $15 Fabrics at $7.50
$20 Fabrics at $9.95
$25 to $30 Fabrics at $12.50
Clearing Wool Remnants
We’ve gone through stock, assembling the va
rious short lengths that inevitably’accumulate
through a busy season. They leave to-morrow
thus:
Qg c for $1-75 to $2.50
dress goods—A big
table of fashionable whip
cords, vigereaux, serges,
suitings, ratines, brocades
and matelasses. 2 to 5-yard
lengths.
Floor, Left Annex.)
I
M.’- ■»**•»•* M. RICH & BROS. CO. WJMNWtffk