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I? KARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA.,
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14. 191R
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KENTUCKY
BROWN & HAGIN CO., Distillers
Acute Indigestion
Foil
OWS
Big Christmas
Dinners
Take Nuxcara—Eat Anything
C HRISTMAS claims more victims from
ACUTE INDIGESTION than any season
of the year. More deaths follow the holi
days than for twice the same length of time
throughout the year. The reason is plain. The
feasts incident to this season, together with the
sweets and everything else that one can put into
his stomch, surpass any other season, and the
result is dread ACUTE INDIGESTION, which
claims its victims by the thousand.
Begin taking NUXCARA now and then feast
on turkey and sweetmeats to your heart’s content.
You will be safe from Stomach Trouble, provided
you do not overload it beyond all reason. In the
ten years’ time, during various tests, there has never
been one case of ACUTE INDIGESTION where
NUXCARA had been taken.
N UXCARA fits the Stomach for the work it
is called on to do, and fits it so well that
there is not the least danger from the holi
day feast you will be called on to participate in.
You can eat what you want in moderation and
NUXCARA will take care of you. Don’t wait
until you are stricken before taking it. Begin now,
and by the time the holidays arrive you will be in
condition to enjoy all the good things set before
you.
There is a guarantee with every bottle, and
there are hundreds of persons right here in Atlanta
and all^ver Georgia who can and will testify to its
merits. No other Stomach remedy has as yet been
discovered that can compare with it. Where doc
tors fail, NUXCARA will put you on your feet
and enable you to enjoy life as it was intended you
should.
Price $1.00 Per Bottle, Six Bottles $5.00
—FOR SALE BY-
EDMONDSON DRUG CO., 11N. Broad St., 106 N. Pryor St.
COURSEY & MUNN, 29 Marietta St.
LAMAR & RANKIN DRUG CO., Wholesale Distributors.
NUXCARA COMPANY, Atlanta, Ga.
S OF
Traveler Remarks Striking Con
trasts to Home Customs, and
Says Labor Rules Country.
NEW YORK, Dee IS.—“There are
too many people—-there are too many
that arc working hard to earn a llv-
Mg. Your big buildings are Impres
sive. but when I look at their banks
°f windows, 1 see only the swarms
inside that are tolling away, shut In
It Is not pleasant to think of so many
people having to work so hard to
make a living.''
That is an Impression of New York
from an antipodal standpoint, and It
came yesterday from Mrs. F. J. Ray-
ner. of Auckland, who Is at the Wol
cott. Mrs. Ravner’s husband Is a big
landowner in New Zealand.
“People don’t have to work so hard
In New Zealand," continued Mrs. Ray
nor. “Why. I have to give my laund
ress a whole hour off at noon, and if
she works a bit after 6 o’clock in the
afternoon the factory Inspector comes
around and fin* h me.
Odd New Zealand Laws.
“I have lived In New Zealand thir
teen years, and have found some of
the law s that a labor government has
given us rather odd when one Is used
to customs In another country. For
instance, If this hotel were in New
Zealand and J were entertaining some
friends, they would all have to be out
of the building by 10 p. m. On Sun
days a person who Is not. staying In
a hotel Ik not allowed to take ;i meal
In the building, nor is It lawful for
him to pay a call upon anybody in It.
I guppo*<- th< <• restrictions wen- Im
posed orlgtnallv as a means of help
ing regulate the liquor traffic. ’ You
see, at every election we vote on the
subject of* prohibition. It comes up
every time.
Women Vote There.
“Do the women take advantage of
th*- right of suffrage? Well, the ma
jority do. You se«-, we have had -the
right to vote down there ho long that
now we don’t think anything much of
It—about ns much, I fancy, us the
uverag** man. The wife usually votes
the same way as her husband, and aa
for the unmarried- why, personal In
fluence counts a lot.
“Do you know. I ate New Zealand
butter almost all the way to New
York. All the hotels and the trains
of the Canadian Pacific Railway serve
It, and I found It tasted Just as sweet
In Winnepeg as In Auckland* We
shipped 1 a,000,000 pounds last year to
Canada alone. You people have lost
ail the freight ami passenger-carrying
business between the Pacific coast and
New Zealand through the laws your
Congress has made which i^ut the
Hpreckles line out of business 7
LIOUOR CASES
TEST
CIIILS! LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL
E
Hair Coming Out? If Dry, Thin,
Faded, Bring Back Its Color
and Lustre.
Within ten minutes after an appli
cation of Danderlne you can not find
a single trace of dandruflT or falling
hair and your sCalp will not Itch, but
what will please you most will be after
a few weeks’ use, when you see new
hair, fine and downy at first -yes but
really new hair growing all over the
scalp.
A little Danderlne immediately dou
bles the beauty of your hair No dif
ference how dull, faded, nrlttlc and
scraggy. Just moisten a cloth with Dan-
derlne and carefully draw It through
your hair, taking one small si sand at a
time 'Fhe effect is amazing -your hair
will be light, fluffy and wavy, arid have
an appearance of abundance; an Incom
parable lustre, softness and luxuriance.
Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowltnn’s
Danderlne from any drug store or toilet
counler, and prove that your hair Is as
pretty and soft as any that It has been
1 neglected or injured by careless treat-
j merit that’s all you* surely can have
beautiful hair and lots of It If you will
•just try a little Danderlne. Advt.
Majority of the Near-Beer Saloon
Licenses Hinge on Court’s
Decision
AUGUSTA. Dec. ]3. Two liquor
cases, brought against the Cafe Met-
ropole and the Albion Hotel near-beer
saloon, will be tried before Judge
Henry C. Hammond next Thursday.
The City Council of Augusta has
recently fixed a tax of $1,000 per year
on each near-beer saloon, and wehth-
er or not these licenses will be taken
out by anyone depends upon the
decision of the court. There is said
to be a tacit understanding that
whisky rnay also be sold.
In the case against Albion saloon,
W. Inman Curry, attorney for the
Law and Order League, makes the
jpoint that the proprietor of the Al
bion pleaded guilty in 1910 to viola
ting the prohibition law and that he
automatically forfeited his licens*3
the nand is now holding it illegally.
If the court should hold that each
saloonkeeper who had pleaded guilty
to violating the law be disbarred
from selling near-beer, two-thirds of
the present keepers of saloons would
have to go out of business.
IT 1913 DINNED
Prominent Georgia Man To Be
Present at Jovial Event Set
for Next Saturday.
Plucky Woman Routs'
Burglar From Home
Mrs. Glanton, Daughter of Police
Lieutenant, Shoots at Intruder
as Father Sleeps
Sisters Elope; Wed
Uncle and Nephew
KLKTON. Ml.’, Dec. 13. A romance
which started soma months ago In
Manasquan. N J.. terminated yester
day In a double rjouernent when uncle
and nephew married two sisters here
Th • couple* ard Howard Height and
Miss Elizabeth Curtis and Carl A
Height and Allan Leol.t Curt la. all of
Manasquan
Howard Height Is the uncle of Carl
A. Height and the bribes are sisters
They were mat ried law'at night by Rev.
W. T. Quigfc. of ISlkton.
The chi Phi Alumni Association
will hold its annual dinner at' Lhc
Georgian Terrace Hotel Saturday
evening, December 20, at 7 o’clock. f
The Affair will be Informal. A de- |
I lightful occasion is promised, and a I
•committee on arrangements will in- 1
j troduce some innovations.
1 . The Chi Phi |Alumni Association
| has held ten annual dinners, this b«?-
ing the eleventh. Among the prom!-
I nent members of the fraternity wno
will be present are Governor Slaton,
Attorney General Felder, ex-Governor
Brown, Judge J. EC. Hines, Eugene H.
Black and Chancellor Barrow, of the
State University.
Students from chapters of fhls fra
ternity at the University of Georgia,
Emory and Tech will be out in large
numbers. Bob McWhorter and Ed
win Broyles, members of the Univer
sity of Georgia football team, will be
present.
Those desiring reservations should
communicate at once with John T.
Dennis, secretary and treasurer,
Fourth National Bank Building.
Wills $1 to Husband
0fHer$100,000Estate
PITTSBURG, Dec. 13.—Tho will of
Mary H. Broderick, of Brookline, be
queaths to her husband $1. stating that
“he never did anything for me."
Mrs. Broderick directs that Jl be paid
to her daughter, Elizabeth, stating she
had received a sufficient share from her
father. The residue of the estate is be
queathed to her daughter. Nora B.
Shock.
The exact value of the estate was not
estimated in the will, but it is believed
to be nearly $100,000.
AUGUSTA, Dec. 13. The father of
Mrs. Catherine D. Glanton is a for
mer police lieutenant, Lambeth Hop
kins, a man whose nerve under try
ing circumstances never failed him,
but Mrs. Glanton did not even awaken
hirn at 2 o’clock this morning when
she heard a burglar in her home at
Druid Park avenue and Walton way.
The intruder was in the kitchen,
having entered through a rear win
dow, and soon afterwards went into
the dining room.
Mrs. Glanton was the only person
awakened. The burglar heard her
coming and made a break for the
front door as Mrs. Glanton was going
down the steps. She could barely
discern the outlines of a man in the
dark hallway.
Finding he could not get out the
front door, the man went through a
window, but a shot from Mrs. Glan-
ton’s revolver evidently struck him,
as he dropped the ham. flour and sil
ver he was taking away.
Moves 5 Times and
Keeps House Number
PITTSBURG, Dec. 13.—Ivan Winoski
has given the postal authorities much
trouble, although Ivan is one of the
most peaceful of men. He works In a
South Side mill, and for some reason
he has moved his residence five times
within the last two years.
Under the postal regulations all
houses where free delivery exists must
be numbered. Ivan’s house was No.
309.
Ivan moved his place of residence four
times since, and each exodus found him
carrying along his original number.
Husband Won't Work;
Wife Given Divorce
PITTSBURG. Dec. 13. Because her
husband would not work in the sum
mer, complaining it was too hot, and In
the winter too cold, in the spring be
cause he suffered from spring fever
and played football in the fall. Judge
Ford has granted Mrs. Charles Stebler
a divorce.
The Court said the wife had just
cause in Reeking a divorce from her
“much opposed to work’’ husband.
TD
£ SOLOIST AT
FREE CONCERT
Noted Dramatic Tenor. Now Resi
dent of Atlanta, Will Sing at
Auditorium-Armory To-day.
Herr de Cortez Wolffungen, a noted
dramatic tenor, who has recently be
come an Atlantan, will be the soloist
at the free concert this afternoon at
the Auditorium-Armory.
Just prior to coming here he was
director of the Washington (D. C.)
Grand Opera chorus, and now has
charge of the Atlanta Music Festival
chorus, under Music Festival direc
tion. He will sing the aria from the
Biblical drama, “Joseph,” which never
before has been heard here.
His recitals in Northern cities have
won him enthusiastic commendation
of all the leading musical critics.
The music editor of The Public
Ledger, Philadelphia, said of him in
the same Joseph role that he will sing
here that he sang superbly and was
the possessor of an excellent voice, of
wide compass* and fine musical quali
ty. He will also sing selections from
the composers Becker and D’Hardc-
lot.
Charles A. Sheldon, Jr., whose work
on the organ at the Auditorium has
delighted music lovers at various
times throughout the summer, will
preside at the organ again on this oc
casion, and will give a number of
solos, including the Lohengrin Pre
lude.
Agent in 15 Calls
Finds Only Bad Luck
HAMMOND, IND., Dec. 13.—Scotv
Shattuck, of Brazil, Ind., an insurance
collector, asserts this story is the rec
ord of hard luck tales. He made fifteen
calls recently and not one collection.
He found, on his first call, the hus
band sick In bed; second call, the wife
and family sick In bed, with the hus
band, caring for them; third, the hus
band bad just lost three fingers In an
accident; fourth, crape on door; fifth,
the stork had just come; sixth, child
lost an eye in an accident; seventh,
child dying from infantile paralysis;
ninth, man had Just dropped a barrel
of oil on his foot.
Stattuck reached the tenth home In
time to help carry the husband Into
the house from an ambulance
Quits Wife for Army?
Patriot, Says Judge
—— , I.
SPPINCIFIELD, ILL,., DfCj 11,—A
married man who leaves his wife to
Join the I'nited States arm^ is a
patriot and not a wife deeertW, ac
cording to a ruling by Judge CTelgh
ton, in the Sangamon County Circuit
Court.
The opinion was expressed in a
ruling by the court that Mrs. Alice
Ridener must chance her hill of di
vorce from William P. Sidener to
say that Sidener "left" her to Join
the army, instead of "deserted’’ her
for that purpose.
"A man can not be charged with
desertion because he joins the army,"
Judge Creighton observed. “That is
a patriotic act.”
FRUIT LAXATIVE IF
TAKE“CALIFORNIA
SYRUP OF FIGS"
Best Liver and Bowel Regulator
for Mamma, Daddy and
Children.
If you’re headachy, constipated, bil
ious or stomach is disordered an<l you
want to enjoy the nicest liver and bowel
cleansing you ever experienced, fake a
tablespoonful of “California Syrup of
Figs” to-night and in the morning all
the constipation poison, bile and clog-
ged-up waste will gently move out of
the system without griping, and you
will feel splendid.
Every member of the family should
use this fruit laxative as occasion de
mands. It is just as effective for
grandpa as it Is for baby, ft simply
can not injure. Even cross, sick, fever
lsh children just love its pleasant tast*i
and mothers can rest easy after giving
it, because it never fails to effect a
good “inside cleansing.”
For thirty years “California Syrup of
Figs” has been recommended by physi
cians as the ideal stomach, liver and
bowel cleanser. Millions of families
who are well Informed use nothing else,
but recently there has come a flood of
spurious fig syrups, so we warn the
public to ask plainly at drug stores for
a 50-cent bottle of “California Syrup
of Figs." and see that It is prepared'by
"California Fig Syrup Company.” We
make no cheaper size. Hand hack any
“counterfeit” with contempt.-—Advt.
1433 Market St.
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn.
Dread
a We Honestly Believe That .
^ No Whiskey of This Quality
Was Ever Before Sold at This Price
There is Quality in
Diamond Rye Thai
Others Cannot Dupli-
Don't Wait---
Order! “The Proof’s Inside”
cate.
Hagin quality has been the
standard of excellence since the
Hagin brands were established.
This popularity lasts, because
they never disappoint. Based
upon a sound knowledge of the
art of distilling, our whiskies
combine all the excellence to
which the most discriminating
are entitled.
These Four Quarts
Hagin’s Sweet Mash
Corn
$2.65
Express Prepaid
This Quart of Cele
brated Kentucky
Bourbon Absolutely
~FREE"~
These Four Quarts
Hagin’s Diamond
Rye
$3.00>
Express Prepaid
FREE
With Every Eight-
Quart Order
This bottle of fine Kentucky
Bourbon never sold for less than $1
per bottle. It's offered to YOU ab
solutely FREE because we want
you to become acquainted with the
Hagin Brands.
This kind of an offer comes once
In a lifetime. Don’t overlook It—
send order to-day.