Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 09, 1913, Image 2

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RELIEF SENT TO TEXASFLOOD DISTRICTS Known Dead Now Reaches 150. Serious Conditions Still Exist in Stricken Section. OALl.AS, TKXAS. D* !< -Wltn several thousand refugees marooned in ha If-flooded cotton glnhoufte* and dwelling*. Hood condition* in t'entrai »nd Southern Tewia still >\ere unre lieved to-day. civic organisation* in the largest « ities in the State ha> • organised relief expeditions which will cet into action as soon a* the waters recede enough to permit the penetra ti. *r: of the devastated country. The tota known dead was in- »reased to-day to li>0, and reports which have not l»een confirmed indi- ate a much larger death list. In its for money to reliev tiie sufferers the Bryan Commercial Club sent out c ircular* estimating tin- total dend at 500. .V large shipment of motorboats from Houston whs deliver'd in Aus tin bounty, but little work could be. rioneln them while the flood stn high. D. A. R. RAISES FLAGON NEW COURTHOUSE MRS l!l< HAIM) I*. HROOKS (; EOK(i IA N A NT) NEWS. n was Would Itch and Burn. Caused Great Disfigurement. Also Had Dan druff on Scalp. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured Perfectly. R. F D No 2, Box 40 Matthews Ga " For three years or more f wax troubled with pimples and blackhead* At. first my face would itch and burn and then the pimples would break out. They looked al most as If I had meaales. causing great dis figurement They would make my face very red and sore Then they festered and came to a head and large boils would come on my chin and nose “ I also had dandruff which caused my m alp to itch and bum It itched and burned so that I had to scratch it until it was irri tated. The dandruff scaled off and allowed plainly in my hair It also caused my hair to break off and become very thin I used M»\eral- remedies which did not cure and gave but little relief, \fter 1 received a free ►.ample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment 1 began using them according to direct Ion* I secured two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment which ■ ured me perfectly." (Signed) Mias Willi© M. Walker. July 31. 1912. When yon buy a fine toilet soap think of the advantages < 'uticura Soap pomes*** over the most expensive toilet soap ever made. In addition to being absolutely pure and re freshingly fragrant, it. is delicately yet effec tively medicated giving yon (wo aogps it* *ne a toilei and a skin soap at. one price. «’uticura Soap . and Cuticura Ointment 50c are sold by druggists and dealers throughout the world. Liberal sample of • ach mailed free with 52-p. Skin Hook Ad dress post-card "Cuticura. Dept. T. Boston." Men who shave and shampoo with Cu- 11rlira Soap will find it best for skin and scalp. TWO AND A HALF DOLLAR GOLD PIECE FOR A CHRISTMAS GIFT SLEUTH PLAY Support in ‘Argyle Case’ Is Splen did, and Majority of Lines Carry a ‘Punch.’ SlDIUGHTS GEORGIA POLITICS ' JAMtS B- NEVTN A Impressive Ceremony Marks Un-j furling of Banner Given by Piedmont Chapter. Atlanta's Oldest Savings Will Suppl^ You. Bank Why puzzle vour brain about what to \e for a Christmas present? Rome op> suffer » nervous breakdown, and mo*i go crazy in solving this prob O lem. The Georgia Savings Bank and Yrust • mpanv the bank that makes saving as> by accepting deposits as small as 1.00. will give you » brand-new Tw-> n<i a flalf Collar gold piece of the 1013 oinage for its equivalent in any other * nomination. \ passbook would also be a nice thing put in the slocking This bank pay* 4 per cent interest and ‘•»uld appreciate y«»ur savings account. GKOKtlR M BROWN. President loHN W GRANT. V. Presidtn; JOSEPH E. BOSTON. Sec. and Trcas. Ad vt Most Men Who Make j Money | j On limited capital ar© those always on the lookout for snaps of all ; kinds. In this day and age the WANT AD pages is the only place a complete list is ever offered. In Atlanta It’s The Georgian Where the Largest List Is Found An impressive ceremony will take place Tuesday in the raising at the new courthouse of the Ameriran fla-g. presented t<» the Board «»V County Commissioners by the •'ledmont Con tinental Chapter. Daughters of the American Revolution The beautiful banner will be un furled it 11 o’clock. Mrs. Richard 1* Brook, of Forsyth, regent of the chapter, will make the presentation address f Other speakers on the program will be General Clifford Anderson. Lucien Umar Knight. Mrs. Shepherd \V. Foster. Alts. William Lawson Peel, and Mayor Woodward Cardinal Sends Xmas Greetings to Kings BALTIMORE, Dec. 9 In accord ance with a custom of centuries standing. Cardinal Gibbons has sent out his official Christinas greetings to a n i*i the crowned heads of the Cath- « *ic countries and to the members • the Sacred College of Cardinals. The King of Saxony and .he Kings and Queens of Spain, Belgium and Varia will be the royal recip ients. Porter Begins Jan. 10 On Insurance Work Leon Porter will enter January 10 upon hi- duties as Deputy Insurant* Commissioner in Comptroller General \Y. A \\ right's office, succeeding John Copeland, resigned. Mr. Porter is now actuary for ♦he State Mutual Life Insurance Com pany of Rome. 125 Aboard Vessels Grounded in Hudson N K\v YollK Dec -The steamer* Adirondack ami Trojan, of the Peoples Line, are aground up the Hudson River, according to dispatches received by their owners to-day. The dispatches -tated neither beat was in danger. There are about 125 passengers on board both vessels. HOTEL MEETING TO BRING 200 GUESTS Royal Entertainment for Friday and Saturday — Legislation Is Sought. Bv ^ARLETON COLLIER. Hail th& ..‘.potheftMlH of the detec tive! Nowaday* be beeome* the modern knight, rescuing the oppress ed maiden, swatting the oppressor, and then marrying the lady in ques tion. all in true Ivanhoe 'style. And being a detective would be rather de sirable, if women were not so rasp- ingly neurotic. These are one of two of the im pressions that come to you as you watch Robert Hilliard and the others in “The Argyle Case.” which opened at tiie Atlanta Monday night There are other impressions, too. but you received them so long ago from the ten thousand detective stories that they may be trite that the police de tective is not only fallible, but bun gling that a true hero can face the gun of in infuriated villian. and dare him to shoot, and all those things. But the firmest impression you re ceive is that here is a play with ev ery line written to convey a delib erate punch. The general effect Is ari unflagging interest that is at times, and very often, thrilling. It is melodrama, but a not unreason able melodrama, even for a detective- crook play. And it must afford soul-satisfaction to a bunch of actor* to realize that they have a part in a drama like “The Argyle Case." in which everybody ha* at least one great moment and comes in for one hearty hand of ap plause. At least, it is satisfying to the audience that they should see a cast in which every individual de serves the applause he gets. Robert Hilliard and his supporting company are a group well balanced as to abil ity and are uniformly as capable as any actors that find their way into these parts. Ruben Hilliard himself leaves little to be desired in his interpretation of the not too fanciful part of the ultra- new detective, who out-Burr~ Burn:-, who hobnobs with those high in sta tion and who is at all times the mas ter of the situation. He is known to Atlanta, having apepared in “A Fool There Was” three seasons ago There was an uncomfortably largo amount of neurasthenia written in*.) the line* of the women in the play, and they were called up to shriek and eob and fidget. However superb our* masterful detectives might be, then* roles were not nearly so difficult a* those of the women. And, very hap pily. the women were equal to it all. Edwin Holland, as Hurley, the mur derer in the <ase; Gustav Von Seif- fertitz. as Frederick Krelsler. a fan tastic counterfelte ir ,and Joseph Tun- h\. as Joe Manning, a rather human detective, were some of the unusually j good company w hose w ork pleased "The Argyle Case" will be at t'^p Atlanta Tuesday and Wednesday \ evenings and Wednesday matinee. Egg Corner ‘Busted’ By Accommodating Hen; Prices Lower WASHINGTON. Dec. 9—The egg corner has ben broken, and boycotts may be declared off. This was the good news sent out to-day by the Department of Agri culture "egg specialists," who an nounced that pullets on the Govern ment farm as well as throughout the country "have at last begun to lay.” and already many poultry owners are reporting a 50 per cent egg produc tion. , The reauction in the price of eggs recently Is due to the industry of the pullets, according to the Gov ernment specialists and not to the boycott. This new supply of fresh eggs now beginning to reach the mar ket "necessarily lias reacted on the prices at which storage eggs have been held." says the report. ONLY ONT. “Bromo Quinine" that is Laxative Rromo Quinine Cutes a Cold in 1 Day, Grip in 2 Days on box. Jrxnst.* 25c More than 200 Georgia hotel men will lie in Atlanta next Friday and Saturday, to attend the annual con vention of the State Hotel Men's As sociation, which opens at the New Kimball House at 9:3 Oo’clock Friday morning Mayor James G. Wood ward will deliver the address of wel come, and J. S Newcomb, of Augusta, first vice president of the association, will respond. Most of the business of the conven tion will be transacted Friday morn ing and afternoon, and Saturday will be devoted to having a good time Several luncheons are scheduled for the visitor!*, and there will be auto mobile tours of the city, a trip to the Capital City Country Club*-a trip to “Farmer Hill" Zimmer’s farm. A theater party is also in the enter tainment plans. The theater party- will be for the women Friday night while the men hold a "get-together” meeting. A discussion of hotel legislation that rna” result in several bills being introduced before the next Legisla ture will be one of the most impor tant matters to come before the con vention. It will be held Friday and Lee M. Jordan, attorney for State and local associations, will lead the discussion. Several prominent hotel men and representatives of various societies of traveling men will address the ses sions of the convention. Among them arc John Willy, *»f Chicago, who will spi-ak on “The Country Hotel Man of To-day and the Country Hotel Man of Thirty Years Ago;” Marcellus M. Anderson, of the Travelers' Protec tive Association; H. D. Shackelford, of the United Commercial Travelers; YY C Ixnmsbury, of the Georgia Travelers’ Association; IT. X. Dutton, manager of the Piedmont; Jacob Miller, of Chicago, president of the International Stewards' Association; Will V. Zimmer, of Atlanta; James A Stokes, of Philadelphia, president of the Greeters of A meric* and Fred Houser, secretary of the State asso ciation. Await Funeral Plans For Algernon Swann Funeral ai-rangements have not vet been made for Algernon Hoke Swann, who died Friday at the residence of his parent?, Mr and Mrs. Vincent D. Swann. No. 122 1-a France avenue, after a lingering illnesr Young Swann graduated from toe Hoys’ High School and was one of the most popular students the schoM has ever hacl. He was a member the First Methodist Church In the thought that a change of cli mate might prove beneficial, he was taken to Asheville. X. C.. but failed to improve. In addition to his parents, the deceased si survived by three brothers. T. C„ J. B. and S. A. Swann, and two sisters. Misses Mary and Hel en Swann. When Chairman Murphey Candler, of the Railroad Commission, makes on'* of hi* occasional and rare excur sions to points without the State ol Georgia he tries to leave somebody sitting on the lid back home that he fe*!» reasonably sure will stay put. Wherefore, when he left for Chicago Monday afternoon, in company with h^ friend, Chairman Burr, of the Florida Commission, and took Rate Expert Prince Webster with him, he summoned Judge George Hillyer, as sociate member if the commission, to the chairmanship presence, and in formed him that he had been selected to sit on the lid while Candler and Webster w*ere exploring the wilds of Chicago, and incidentally having a look In on some sort of railroad com- missoners* powwow now ~\on In the Windy City. Tiie Judge took over the job more or less gingerly; but with great resolu tion and sincerity, nevertheless. Ha is one of the most experienced lid- sitters in the United States, and he has little doubt that he will be able to get away with the Job Chairman Candler has put him up against, even if il may fret his patience at times. He has had a lone and most distin guished career—a* lawyer, judge and statesman. He is a man of poise and far-sightedness, equal to any emer gency. and incidentally is willing to try anything in the line of lid-sitting once, anyway. *‘I feel that things will be safe and secure in Judge Hillver’s hands while I am away." said Chairman Candler. "He will hold the fort, I know. Any predatory interest that think* it can sneak something over while Webster and myself are looking the other way has another think coming to it— that’s all! “Judge Hillyer has eyes in the back of his head, when it come* to seeing things in all directions at one and the same time. He is the best lid-sitter I know!” chairman Candler and Mr. Webster will be absent in Chicago for four or five days, possibly a week. Judge Moses Wright, the eloquent, is in Atlanta to-day, on hi* way home from Savannah, where on Sunday he delivered the Memorial Day address to the k*~al Elks’ Lodge of Sorrow. Judge Wright is perhaps the best informed man in Georgia—unless one may except Game Warden Davis—on the ins and outs of the new game law. The Judge is a most ardent sports man. besides being a tireless hun*er and a genuine crack shot. He can n >i afford to break the law on his numer ous hunting expeditions—being a judge of the Superior Court—but he likes to know how to sail right up to the breaking point, if necessary, an 1 still not get over the line! Judge Wright is rated one of the very ablest jurists in Georgia, and it is an open secret that he is being held tentatively in reserve by the powers that be as a possible member of the Supreme Court eventually. The arrangements made by William J. Harris, of Georgia. Director of the Census, for the wider distribution of statistics collected by his office con cerning the quantiy of cotton ginned, the quantity of cotton consumed monthly and the stocks of cotton to hand at the end of each month haa met with general approval through out the cotton-growing States. He has received numerous sugges tions concerning a still wider distri bution of these statistics, and he lias made arrangements with the Post master General to allow the postmas ters in every postoffice in counties where cotton is grown to post in a conspicuous place copies of the re ports containing statistics of cotton. These copies will be printed on extra large cards, so the figures can be, easily read. Mr. Harris hopes that in this man ner he will be able to give the farm ers and all others access to the valu able statistics collected by this bu reau. Heretofore the reports have been given by the Bureau of the Census to newspaper representatives and o the different telegraph companies for distribution. Following this distribu tion. copies of the reports have been mailed to the ginners. manufacturers and warehouse men, but there has been no practical method devised for the distribution of the information directly to the farmers, It is Mr. Harris’ purpose to give the statistics to the farmers, so they van take ad vantage of the information collected by the Federal Government. To th* entire Georgia Congression al delegation, including both Sena tors and every Representative, and particularly to Representative W. C. Adamson, of the Fourth District, is due whatever measure of thanks and appreciation Georgia may feel for the apparent disposition of the President of the United States to change his determination with respect to the proposed droppng of Judson G Clements from the Interstate Com merce Commission. A big and not-to-be-mistaken wave of protest arose from all over Geor gia when it was first announced that Mr. Clements was to be dropped from the commission, despite his long years of splendid service, to make room for former Governor Glenn, of North Carolina. The latter is slated for “something good” because of his Wilson leanings in the Presidential primaries last year. It was not long before Washington, and the Georgia Congressional dele gation in particular, became fully aware of that Georgia protest and there was something of a scurrying and scuffling around almost imme diately. It had been taken as a "mat ter of course” that Mr. Clements would be reappointed, and when it was found that the President was about to sidetrack him, the Georgia delegation was little short of amazed. By reason of his chairmanship of the powerful Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee of the House, Judge Adamson was an ideal man to lead the fight to save Clements— and it appears that his efforts have been altogether successful. In the meantime Georgia generally is both happy and gratified that the President seemingly has determined to change his mind about dropping Clements. Representatives Samuel Olive. Rob ert Hardeman and William H. Bur- well are in Atlanta to-day—no one of them bent upon a political mis sion of any sort whatever, of course’ TO DAY’S MARKET OPENINGS. NEW ORLEANS COTTON. State Not Represented in Chicago Cattle Show, and Veterinarian Stresses Needs. Since his return from the Interna tional Live Stock Show’ in Chicago, Dr. Peter F. Bahnsen. State Veteri narian, is impressing Atlanta stock men with the fact that Mississippi is far ahead of Georgia in the very im portant matter of stock raising. “Mississippi won first prize for the best Hereford bull, and for the best steer.” said Dr. Bahnsen, "and that made it pointed that Georgia not only was not a prize-winner, but was not represented at all. "Georgia is in the tick-infested dis trict, it is true, but so is Mississippi. With the co-operation of cattle own ers and Government experts and the State department, there is no rea son why Georgia should not be treed from the tick—but the cattle owners must do their part. “Then there can be no reason why Georgia should not raise just as good beef cattle as any of the Middle West States, which now* are regarded as the princpal sources of production.” Dr. Bahnsen said the Chicago show was one of the greatest exhi bitions he ever had seen. There were horses and cattle, sheep and hogs from Canada. England and France, and the showing of Mississippi was particularly gratifying to a repre sentative of this section. Wife Beater Forced To Kneel at Her Feet BAYONNE. N. J., Dec. 9.— In lieu of a jail sentence Recorder Mara compelled Francesco Domorski, charged with wife beating. to kneel on the floor, kiss his wife's hand and ask her forgiveness. I I t (First! Prev •Ooen’High Low Call Clo** Dec. Jan. Feb. Mch. A pril May June July Aug 13 02;13 02:13.02'13.02 1 13.95-96 . !T3.17 13.17 13.17(13.17 13.04-05 i I 13.06-07 ' n.is'-iz.Zi 13.22 -.3.22 13.18-19 13 27-29 . ' i3!aaiii!23 i3.22ii3.22 13.25-26 i 13.26-27 13.27-28 ~ f '' ,.| T2-00 NEW YORK COTTON. j Dec. , | Jan. . Feb. . ! Mch. i Apr 11 May j June I July . Aug. Oct. . ; ,First Pr*v I'OpenSHigh Low i Call Clo*#^ , .'13.osTsToj 13.03; 13.03 13:03 I . . 12.84 12.85 12.84 12.86Y2.W-8T 12.81-83 .12.97 12.98 12.36 12.96 12.97-98 j 12.91-93 . 12.30 12.90.12.88 12.89 12.90- ’ I ; ! | |l2.S5-87 ' i2.7912.7y 12.78 12.78 12.80-31 ! j 1 12.55 o7 ■ " ’ 11 97- '8 LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET This is The Can that holds the finest syrup you've ever mouthed. There’s no just-as-good in flavor or quality. It'a always the same. VeIva ought to be on your table to spread on biscuits, waffles and muffins. Try it on batter cakes and you’ll say, “That’s fine”— you can’t help it. Red and green cans—your grocer’s. PENICK & FORD, Ltd. New Orleans 10c up Futures opened steady. uueiimc Dec . . . D^c.-Jan. Jan.-Feb. Feb.-Mch. Mch.-Apr Apr.-May . May-June June-July J uly-Aug. Aug.-Sept Sept.-Oct. Oct.-Nov. Laden Steamer Sinks As She Leaves Docks NEW YORK. Dec. 9.—The Red D' liner Zudla sank In East River early to-day just as she was preparing to clear for Venezuela with a cargo of flour and apples. A heavy steel shaft had slipped from the derrick tackle and crashed through the hull. The seamen fought seven hours to save the vessel, but failed The loss is estimated at f 100.000. Cures a Cold in 1 Da'’, SVJ-A TO BUILD NEW CHURCH. DALTON. Dec. 9. A movement to erect a new church building to take the I lac- of the oVl Mount Rachel Baptist Church has been started by the congre gation of the Second Baptist Church, whose pastor is the Rev. E B Farrar. Dr, Craig Freed Of Knabe Killing SHELBYVILLE. INP., Dec. 9 —The judge Instructed the jury this morning to acquit Dr. Craig, charged with th$ ni-iT-ibT -I Helen Krabe. Typewriters rented 4 mos. $5 up. Am. Wtg. Mach. Co. We have moved to our new store, 97 Peachtree Street. ATLANTA FLORAL CO. Range .* ! 6.91 -6.91 i . .6.70^-6.89 . .6.91 -6.90 . .6.91 -6.90 .6.91 . .6.91^-6.90 . .6.88^-6.89 . .6.83^-6.89^ . .6.71 Vx-6.72 . 6.49\i . . 6.39 x /fe -6.40 2 p. m. Close . 6.93% 6.94 1 /* 6 92 * 6.90V6 t 91V* 6.90 6.91\i 6.91 6.92 6.91 V92Vi 6.91 6.92 V* 6.96V* 6.90 6.87 V* Send for booklet of cooking and candy recipas. SICE TER KEEPS YOUR MIR DARK When Mixed With Sulphur Brings Back Its Luster and Abundance. Gray hair, however handsome, denotes advancing age We all know the ad vantages of a youthful appearance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the fate When it fades, turns* gray anti looks dry. wispy and seragglv. just a few applications of Sage Tea and S'dnhnr will enhance its appearance a hundredfold. Don’t stay gray! Look young. Either prepare the tonic at home or get from any drug store a 50-cent bottle of 'Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem edy." Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use preparation, because It darkens the hair beautifuUy and re moves dandruff, stops scalp itching and falling hair; besides, no one can possi bly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. Van moisten a sponge or soft brtsn with it. drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. Bv morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or tw’o. its nat ural color is restored and It beconw_*s thick, glossy and lustrous, and you ap pear years younger.—Advt. Tell Yoor Real Dealer Saw His in The Insist that he advertise your property in the paper the class you want to reach read the most— That’s The In this vicinity, because it goes to the man at practically the only time he has to read—in the Quick sales the ml© from Georgian Real Es tate Ads. J 6.85V 6.73 6.50 6.40 RIDLEY & JAMES GEORGIA + AUDITORS ATLANTA - - NEW YORK STOCK MARKET. Slock quotations to 1# a. m. STOCKS- High. 70>, 27V* 34Vfc 98 86 s 4 331 8 Amal. Copper. American Can Anaconda .... Atchison xB. R. T Can. Pacific... 226 C. and 0 57 G. North. Ore. Lehigh Valley. 149Vs Reading .... 164 So. Pacific...,. 87V* St. Paul 99Vg Tenn. Copper. 36Vi Union Pacific. 153Vi U. S. Steel. .. 57 do, pref... 105 : * Utah Copper . 48** Low. 70% 27 VS 34 V a 93 86 33 148?i 184 87% 99 V* 36 Vi 153V4 57 105* g 58 U 250 MORE PEOPLE WANT DOGS FOR HUNTING PURPOSES Four dogs advertised for sale in the “Want Ad” columns of Hearst’s Daily Georgian and Sunday American brought more than 250 REPLIES The Want Ads: x—Ex-dividend l 3 -* P*** cent. Mother Stanislaus Tells of Recovery Thretr Trouble*, like continued coughs »n<l colds, often seriously affect the lungs. If you have not found any Improvement from the treatment you have tried. ineaati*ate tbe m«ny report© showing benefits. *nd. in numerous cases, complete recoveries, brought about by the use of Eckmsr.s Alterative. This is s medicine for Throat snd Lung Troubles, far orghly known for more than fifteen ye*rs. Read this esse:— Convent of St. Anne. 8«nford. Fla. “Gentlemen: In February. 1911. our doctors examined my throst and pronounced the neces sity of an operation Haring heard at Peeks- kill. V Y . Motherhouse of the Sisters of St- Francis, where I «u visiting, of Fckmgns Alterative. I determined as a last resort to try it. After taking four or five bottles large piece* of diseased tissue came sway I con tinued the Alterative, to my grateful and daily relief In ten months I was restored to per fect health 1 would be glad to write or talk ?e any person who may have a doubt about It 1 would like them to see and bear from my own lips. If they so desire, ail I would say ^IStrinJ’ MOTHFK M STANISLAUS ( Above abbreviated- more on request.) Fokman’s Alterative has been proven by many years' test to be most efficacious for severe Throat ard Lung Affection©. Bron.htUs. Bron chial .Asthma. Stubborn folds and tn upbuild ing the system. Contains no narcotics, poisons or habit forming drugs Sold by all Jacobs’ Drug Stores and other leading druggists Write the Eckmar. Laboratory. Philadelphia. Pa., for booklet telling of recoveries and additional evi dence MEAT CAUSE OF Take Salts to Flush Kidneys Back Hurts or Bladder Bothers. If you must have your meat every day . rat it, but flush your kidneys with gaits occasionally, says a noted author ity who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the kid neys in their effort to expel it from the blood. They b come sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery In the kidnr region, sharp pains In the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinge- The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore ard Irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night To neutralize -ese Irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flash off the. body's urin< js waste get four ounces of Jad .Salts from anv phar macy here: tak* a tablespoonful in a glas* of water before breakfast for a few days and ->ur kidney* will then act fine. This amous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combiner with Iithla, and has been used for g-nerarions to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neu tralize the aclcs in urine, so it no longer irritates thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is nexpensive; can not in jure. and makig a delightful efferves cent llthia-water drink.—Advt. I HAVE three as fine young, well- trained dogs as can be found; while they last. $30 per pair. Will sell single if desired. H. W. Springfield, Dalton, FOR SALE—Thoroughly trained point er bitch; two g^&sons; fast and relia ble; steady on field and fast hunter; fine chance to breed some full-blooded dogs. If you kill a bird she will find it. Owner leaving State, reason for selling. Address Box 14. Macon, Ga. What They Say: Macon, Ga., December 1,1913. The “Want Ad Man” Hearst’s Daily Georgian and Sunday American, Atlanta, Ga. Gentlemen—Please stop this “Want Ad.” 1 have received about 50 replies already. Yours trulv, J. F. WORSLEY. Dalton, Ga., December 5, 1913. The Georgian Ads are the ones that bring results. Over 200 letters received saying: “Saw your ad in The Georgian.” Yours trulv, B. W. SPRINGFIELD. If you want what yon want when you want it, nse G El THSkLY ' BONO*' I CAN WANT ADS” • —-