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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
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pnCTnmPf IQ'Capital Oppresses EfipiMEt
i PI IllUPr Wisconsin Eugenics lllflDIYr
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ULAin UUIVILG !U For shooting; nght riLrnISVIftIVU 1 U 11
rUdlUrrluL Id Poor People, Says LlVbllilLi
HUIM Law Made Invalid VVIHIIXL
.Hd ULnUL
Victim in Hospital
Pioneer Atlantan and One of City's
Best Known Men Victim of
Paralysis.
Colonel TV. 5*. Thomson, on? of th*
iSe^t known and mn*t highly esteemed ]
men in Atlanta, died at his home on ]
North Boulevard Monday morning at
4 30 o'clock.
Colonel Thomson had been in fail
ing health for many months. He had
become almost blind from a cataract
growth over his eyes several weeks
hgo, when he was stricken with pa
ralysls. From that time until the end
his death was feared each day. He
was 70 years old.
Few men In the South led a more
Interesting and useful life than Colo
nel Thomson To all who knew him
welt the firmness of his character im
pressed him as a man among men.
This element was illustrated strik
ingly by an incident in his early life.
He was born at Summit Point, Va..
April 12, 1843. At the outbreak of
the war between the States he en
listed in the Second Virginia Regi
ment, which was a part of what be
came known as the famous Stonewall
Brigade because of its valiant condu t
at the first battle of Manassas.
Rises to Captaincy.
Later he joined Ashby’s Cavalry
and rose to captain, and then to adju
tant in Stuart’s Horse Artillery.
At the end of the war his I home
was within the bounds of the new
State of West Virginia. It was de
manded of him that he take the oath
of allegiance. He refused, and to
avoid trouble migrated to Georgia.
Colonel Thomson had studied law',
and on his arrival In Atlanta formed a
partnership with Judge George X
Hester. Some years later he formed
h new' partnership with the late Mil
ton A. Candler, and they practl ed
together for more than 30 years, until
their firm was the oldest in Georgia.
The name of the firm was changed
some years ago when Colonel Thom
sen was made president of the Title
Guarantee and Trust Company, when
1t was made Candler, Thomson
Hlrsch.
Colonel Thomson had a most Im
pressive career as a member of th *
City Council. There time and again
the firmness of his convictions was
emphasized.
Made Several Fortunes.
He was an active member of Ora o
Methodist Church for many years,
was a member of Camp No. 159.
United Confederate Veterans, of
which he was past commander, an 1
bad held many minor positions.
In his business life in Atlanta Colo
nel Thomson made several fortunes,
but. bis friends say of him, be was a
man with a larger vision than the a •-
simulation of money, and while lie
was always well-to-do, his estate is
not expected to be very largn.
Eight children survive him. The;-
are Frances D., Edith Fv. Adelnide C .
Mildred, William D., Albert D., John
D. and Hogan D. Thomson.
The funeral services will he held at
Grace Methodist Church Tuesday aft
ernoon at 2:30 o'clock. Bishop W. A
Candler, a lifelong friend, officiating.
The interment will be in Oakland
f’emetery. the cemeterv over vvhl 'h
Golonel Thomson watched for many
years and had made beautiful as
< halrman of the City Cemetery Com
mission.
The pallbearers will be Harold
Hlrsch, Walter Mayaon. James T.
Wikle. C. M. Candler. Asa G. Candler,
.1 Frank Bailey.
Canal Grafter Not
Liable Under Law
WASHINGTON. Dec. 22. John
Burke, now under investigation by
the War Department on the charge of
accepting graft while In the employ
of the Panama Railroad, can not be
criminally prosecuted, according to a
decision of the Department of Justice
received by Secretary of War Garri
son to-day.
Canal May Be Open
To Ships in January
Special Cable to The Atlanta Gaorqlan.
PANAMA, Dec. 22.—Officials of the
''anal Commission believe that, if no
further slides take place, the first ship
will go through the canal in January,
instead of some time next summer,
as ha<l been expected.
Jesse C. Russell, of No. 46 Savan
ish street, s at the Grady Hospital
ith a dangerous bullet wound, while
eorge Cook, of No. 58 Savannah
reet, is held in connection with the
tooting
The young men engaged in a. fight
tturday at Carroll and Shelton
I str ‘ is, started, it Is c laimed, by Rus
sell throwing a rock at Cook.
After Russell was taken to the hos-
! pltal In an ambulance Cook w'ent to
| police headquarters ami surrendered.
I Hi , ■! i tin ■ elf«4#fnuN a
charge of disorderly conduct wat
j made against him At the Grady
Hospital It was said Monday that
Russell’s condition was serious.
AttacksGirl; KillsHer
Father; Posse on Trail
AMSTERDAM, N. Y., Dec. 22—A
posse* with bloodhounds is searching
Montgomery County for a man who
killed John Barret, a wealthy farmer,
after murderously attacking his
daughter. The murderer set fire to
the house.
All but Mias Barret had retired
when the man burst In upon her.
MIsh Barret acredmed, but before she
could move the man struck her on the
head with an iron bar. rendering hefi
unconscious. The girl's father ran
downstairs, but when be reached the
bottom he fell dead with a bullet In
his heart.
Express Offices Are
Ready for Final Rush
The express offices In Atlanta started
the week with cleared decks, everything
having been put in ship shape by 4
o’clock Sunday afternoon. To accom
plish that a force of 200 extra men, 25
additional wagons and a dozen extra
trucks were added to the force.
With the local office completely up
with the work Monday morning. Agent
Elder, of the Southern Express Com
pany. stated that he expected to handle
the last of ttie Christmas rush with the
utmost dispatch. The amount of busi
ness handled by he company in the past
ten days breaks all records for the At
lanta office.
Veteran Railroader
Goes Into Business
COLUMBUS, Dec. 22. S. M. Well
born, who for the last twenty years
has been connected § with the traffic
department of the Central of Georgia
Railway in Columbus, for fifteen years
of that time as commercial agent, has
resigned to become interested in the
wholesale brokerage establishment of
E. H. Stanley & Co.
He is succeeded ss commercial
agent by Thomas P. Wade, formerly
soliciting freight agent.
Poison Kills Keeper
Of Becker Household
Tuesday and Wednesday,
Fancy Atlanta Dressed
TURKEYS
25c Lb.
Fat Tennessee Turkeys being
dressed daily. The Woodall
kind.
Large white
Celery Stalks,
Come early and get the best.
WE DELIVER
WOODALL’S
815 Peachtree.
Phone Ivy 7629, 7630. 7631.
President SeverelyCriticises Army
and Navy Men for Their
Jests at Dinner,
WASHINGTON, Dec. 22. A repri
mand for the officers involved in the
Carabao dinner incident was ap
proved to-day by President Wilson.
He took this action on recommen
dation of Secretary of War Garrison
and Secretary of the Navy Daniels
His letter to the two Secretaries fol
lows:
My Dear Sirs—Allow me to
thank you for your report on the
action of certain officers of the
army and navy at the recent din
ner of the military order of the
Carabao.
The officers who were respon
sible for the program of the
evening are certainly deserving
of a very serious reprimand,
w'hich I hereby request be admin
istered; and I can not rid myself
of a feeling of great disappoint
ment that the general body of
officers assembled at the dinner
should have greeted the carrying
out of such a program with
apparent indifference to the fact
that it violated some of the most
dignified and sacred traditions of
the service.
I am told that the songs and
other amusements of the evening
were intended and regarded as
"fun.” What are we to think of
officers of the army and navy of
the United States who think it
"fun” to bring their official su
periors into ridicule and the poli
cies of the Government, which
they are sworn to serve, with un
questioning loyalty, into con
tempt? If this is their idea of
fun, what is their idea of duty?
if they do not hold their loyalty
above all silly effervescences of
childish wit, what about their
profession do they hold sacred?
My purpose, therefore, in ad
ministering this reprimand is to
recall the men who are respon
sible for this lowering of stand
ards to their ideal; to remind
them of the high conscience with
which they ought to put duty
above personal indulgence and
conduct themselves as responsible
men and trusted soldiers, even
while they are amusing them
selves as diners out.
Peary Wants U. S,
South Pole Station
NEW YORK, Dec. 22.—Admiral Peary
urges American scientists to continue
bringing glory to the United States.
"In The discovery of the North Pole
and with the completion of the Panama
Canal, Americans have accomplished in
five years the things of which men had
dreamed for ages," he said. “I would
like to see Amerlcun scientists sta
tioned at the South Pole.”
Married Forty Years
Slays Wife and Self
CHATTANOOGA, TENN., Dec. 22 —
Inquest by the Coroner's jury into the
double crime of John Patton, who mur
dered his wife Saturday night and then
committed suicide, after forty years of
married life, failed to disclose any new
aspect.
All evidence pointed to mature delib
eration upon the part of Patton to car
ry Into effect his frequent threat "to
end my part of this trouble and some
body else's, too.”
NEW YORK, Dec. 22.—Refusing to
allow’ the doctors in Ford ham Hos
pital to operate upon her, although
told it was the only chance to save
her life, Lena Schneider, housekeeper
for Mrs. Charles Becker, wife of the
police lieutenant convicted of mur
der. died to-day from bichloride of
mercury which she had swallowed by
accident.
Becker's mother died last week.
\ New $5 Gold Piece
To 14,000 Car Men
NEW YORK. Dec. 22 —Each of the
14.000 men employed on the subway
and elevated lines of the Interborough
Rapid Transit Company will receive
a $5 gold piece for a Chrismtas pres
ent this week
Theodore P. Shonts sent to the
United States Subtreasury for newly
minted coins.
200 Wreck Victims
Taken to Hospital
WINNIPEG, Dec. 22.—Two hundred
passengers injured hen five coaches
of the Canadian Northern (Duluth to
Fort Williams) train were ditched,
overturned and caught fire were cared
for here in hospitals to-day. A relief
train brought them to Winnipeg None
Baptists Give $55,000
For Needy Ministers
RALEIGH. N. C., Dec. 22.—The
North Carolina Baptists have appro
priated $55,000 for home missions, the
money going particularly to the sup
port of 166 ministers in the destitute
districts.
The amount contributed to each
missionary worker ranges from $50
to $600 a year.
XMAS PENS.
John U M***re A.* Sons have the
j ‘Ideal ' Waterman pen; gold, silver and
I plain Het their pen sal- .-man help you
make your '••lection. John L. Moore
j «Jc Sons Advt.
Slayers Get Respite
Until After Holidays
RALEIGH. N. C. Dec. 23— Gov
ernor Locke Craig, on his return from
Hot Springs. Ark., commuted until
dates in February the sentence of
three men condemned to electrocu
tion, and murderers* how will cele
brate Christmas, a season which
would have been denied them had
their sentences stood.
BARELI HEN
i
200 Extra Clerks Work Rapidly to
Send Out 50,000 Parcels To
day—Mail Pouring In.
T. L, Sims, Veteran
Of Wheeler's, Dead
Wheeler's Cavalry lost a loyal
member in the death of Thomas L.
Sims at his residence, No. 292 North
Jackson street, at 10:30 o’clock Sun
day night. Mr. Sims had been in good
health until a few- days ago and his
death was unexpected.
Mr. Sims was 75 years old and was
a native of Gumming. Forsyth Coun
ty, Georgia. He came to Atlanta aft
er the war, having served four years
with Wheeler’s Cavalry. He is sur
vived by his wife, a brother, five sons
and five daughters The brother Is
George E. Sims, of Gainesville, and
the five sons, George Hallman Sims.
A. H. Sims, S. R. Sims and M. C.
Sims, of Atlanta, and F. J. Sims, of
New Orleans. The daughters are Mrs.
R. L. Hogan, of Washington; Mrs. A
R. Hightower, Mrs. R. C. Casaels and
Miss Ruth and Grace Sims, of At
lanta.
Funeral services will be held at the
residence at 10:30 o’clock Tuesday
morning.
M. R. Stephenson, one of the leading
citizens of Conyers, Ga., died at the
home of his son. T. R. Stephenson,
No. 121 Broyles street, early Mon
day. Mr. Stephenson was eighty-
seven years old. He was visiting
his son. The body will be taken to
Conyers for funeral and interment.
Surviving are seven sons, J. C. Ste
phenson, of Decatur; J. J. Stephen
son, of Rockdale County. T. R. Ste
phenson, of Atlanta; B. F. Stephen
son. of Hlthonia; R. and J. E. Ste
phenson. of Atlanta, and three
daughters, Mrs. Ed Robinson, of
Covington: Mrs. Annie Park, of Li-
thonla, and Mrs. Lizzie Evans, of
Hlthonia.
John R. Simpson, forty-one years old,
died at a privqte sanitarium Mon
day. The body was removed to Har
ry G. Poole's and will be taken to
Newnan for funeral and interment.
Steals Horse to Go
In Search of Santa
LANSING. MICH.. Dec 22—Five-
vear-old Arthur Fisher’s mamma told
him Santa Claus would not come to
their house this year. Arthur was
found several miles from his home
with a stolen horse.
"I was trying to find Santa to get a
present for mamma,” he explained to
the Sheriff He was released.
Of course It is too early in the par
cel post regime to talk about break
ing records. There aren’t any par
ticular records, yet/ But it looked
like the setting of one Monday morn
ing, when it was announced at the
superintendent’s office in the Federal
Building that about 50,000 parcels
would be bandied out of Atlanta be
fore the day’s work was done.
Bolling Jones, postmaster, started
his day s work soon after 5 o’clock
Monday morning
"I have to get on the job early,”
he said. "We’re Just managing to
keep up with the game, with a cou
ple of hundred extra employees, and
I must say the public is doing its
share nobly. It !s a pleasure to work
and plan for people who co-operate
with us the way the Atlanta public
is doing in this tremendous rush."
Nobody Minds Jam.
Then Mr. Jones wanted to know if
it didn’t look like a jolly, happy bunch
that packed the big lobby.
It did.
There was a terrific Jam, nobody
seemed to mind it a bit. Rows of
weighers and sealers and stampers
and tiers and information men and
general helpers looked after the
crowd, and the erow’d formed readily
and pleasantly into lines, and each
took his turn, and refrained from
shoving, with a delightful evidence of
the real old Chri tmas spirit.
There were eight stamp windows in
full blast. A like number of weigh
ing machines, operated by clerks with
the rate books spread out before
them, supplied the needful informa
tion to men and women and children
with great armfuls of bundles and
packages, piled up like stove wood,
and blazing with Red Cross seals
and gay Christmas stickers.
Mail Pouring Into Atlanta.
At another line of tables the parcel
post insurance tags were attached to
valuable parcels—and a lot of them
seemed to be valuable, too. Five and
10 cents was the tax, and it covered
the delivery of a parcel very much
like the registry feature of an im
portant or valuable letter.
"Forty to fifty thousand parcels
going out to-day," Mr. Jones said,
“and nearly that many coming in
That gives a hint of the volume of
business passing through this office.
"As to the incoming Christmas
mail—well, we got five solid cars in
last night; cars crammed to the roof
with packages and not a clerk in
side; no room for any. The cars
were sealed and rushed straight
straight through to Atlanta to be
‘worked’ here.”
But it was all merry Christmas
work, in spite of the hurry and the
rush, and everybody seemed to be in
the best possible humor, including
Mr. Jones, not even considering that
he had got up at 5 o’clock In the
morning.
U. S, Consul's Widow
Held as Fraud Abroad
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Dec. 22.—Mrs. Hannah
Gordon Watson, widow of a former
United States Consul, to-day was heid
in $250 bail on the charge of de
frauding the Waldorf Hotel out of $40.
When arraigned in Row Street
Court, Mrs. Watson declared she had
no intention of defrauding the hotel,
but bad not been able to pay her bill
owing to delay of an American remit
tance which she was expecting. The
United States Embassy provided
counsel for Mrs. Watson.
Preacher iu Sermon
; Member* of the congregation of the
| Rev. Allen .Shuler, of the Hast Side
Tabernacle, were commenting Mon-
| day on the forceful sermon he dellv-
! * red Sunday night on "child slavery"
I carried on by the capitalistic class.
"That the working class as a whole
Is suffering oppression at the hands
of wealth and greed is admitted ev
erywhere." he said. "That the war
Is on—class against class—Is con
ceded on every side. Amid all the
strife and turmoil, the oppression and
the greed, what should be the mes
sage of the church?
"Let God speak. To the man of
wealth and power He says: ‘Thou
shall not press down upon the weak
burdens too heavy to bear.’ ”
Quit Gum aud Rum
Aud Build Warships,
Is Advice of Maxim
NEW YORK, Dec. 22.—"The $30,-
000,000 spent yearly in the United
States for chewing gum would pay
for three dreadnoughts and the $2,-
000,000,000 contributed annually to
John Barleycorn would pay for 200
battleships."
Hudson Maxim suggested this novel
means of supplying a greater navy in
an address delivered to-day at the
“Peace” services in the New York
Theater. The only way to prevent
war, Mr. Maxim said, was to be ready
for it. He declared that if Spain and
the UnitedStates had been a little
better prepared there would have
been no war in 1898. Modern weapons
contributed to peace, he said.
"The machine gun is a labor-saving
machine,” said Mr. Maxim. “It makes
possible in case of war that nineteen
men should stay at home to do pro
ductive labor where twenty once had
to go.”
Sues When She Fails
To Get New Husband
TACOMA, WASH., Dec. 22.—Mrs.
Tydvtl Banks, of Philadelphia, has
sued the estate of Evan Llewellyn
for $7,000 for breach of promise. Thir
ty months ago, w’hile living apart
from her husband, she alleges Llew
ellyn invited her to become his house
keeper. agreeing to marry her when
she got rid of her husband.
The husband died Jung 30, but
Llewellyn did not marry her.
Collector Blalock
Off on Fishing Trip
A. O. Blalock, collector of internal
revenue and custodian thereof in At
lanta, has a Christmas holiday idea,
in pursuit of which Mr. Blalock and
Mrs. Blalock departed at 11:30 o’clock
Monday morning for Fort Myers, Fla.
The Idea Is that Mr. Blalock, hav
ing a certain number of accumulated
holidays coming to him. decided to
use them in a lump, as It w'ere, and
incidentally do some Florida fishing.
So the Christmas week of Mr. and
Mrs. Blalock will be spent in Florida.
Three Men Carried Into Stream
With Wreck Miraculously
Escape Death.
AUGUSTA, GA.. Dec. 22.—Two
passenger engines and four freight
»ars are in the Savannah River and
three men are badly bruised and In
jured otherwise because of an acci
dent on the Southern Railway trestle
here at 5 o’clock Monday morning
w'hen two engines ran into twenty
freight cars.
There was no light on the freight
cars, according to C. C. Forbes, hos
tler for the Southern Railway, w’ho
was bringing two passenger engines
from the Hamburg yards to the
Union Depot to be started out on
morning trains to Columbia and
Charleston.
The two heavy engines struck the
freight oars on the first spam to the
north of the new lift draw, which the
Southern installed several months
ago, and the entire draw was shaken
loose and both of the engines and
four of the freight cars which were
on that draw went dow’n with a crash
to the bottom of the river.
Forbes and Jimmie Bryant, a call-
boy, were on one of the engines and
Bert Corbett, a negro helper, was on
the other. When the engines struck
the freight cars, the entire trestle
seemed to reel and then there was a
slight apparent hesitation, then
freight cars and engines w'ent down
in a heap to the w r ater.
Forbes and Bryant had the pres
ence of mind to hold their breaths
while under the water and managed
to climb out on top of the cab and
onto some wreckage. Corbett’s en
gine was not completely submerged
because it fell on a jetty. All three
were badly bruised. Their escape
from death was miraculous.
All Southern trains will have to
run to Hamburg instead of coming
into the Union Station until the tres
tle is repaired.
MILWAUKEE, Dec. 22.- Until the
next meeting of the Legislature, one
year hence, the Wisconsin eugenics
law, which is supposed to become ef
fective on January 1, will be invalid.
The discovery was announced to
day in the finding of Attorney George
B. Walmsley of a Supreme Court de
cision recognizing a common law
• marriage All that is required of a
couple under the court ruling is an
agreement betw’een themselves that
they will accept each other as mates.
No record or announcement of the
match need be made.
The court decision states specifical
ly that no medical examination is
necessary. The new' eugenics law
requires a certificate of health from
both the bride and bridegroom.
Iowa Congressman
Dies After Operation
CLINTON, IOWA, Dec. 22.—Congress
man Pepper, of Iowa, died to-day fol
lowing an operation for peritonitis. Ha
was recovering from an attack of ty
phoid fever when peritonitis set in.
He represented the Second District of
Iowa in Congress and was considered a
likely candidate for United' States Sen
ator.
Seidel Stays in Race
To Rule Milwaukee
MILWAUKEE, Dec. 22.—Emil Sei
del, first Socialist Mayor of Milwau
kee, again will lead the Social Demo
cratic forces in the coming spring
election.
The entire Socialist ticket has been
nominated by referendum.
Robbers Loot Safe
In Theater of $800
LOUISVILLE, KY„ Dec. 22.—"The
Safeblowers” was staged at B. F.
Keith’s Theater last night without an
audience. The “team” took about
$800 left in the safe over night from
the advance sale.
Only $25,000 Needed, and Capt,
English Says “Leave It to
‘Heavyweights.’ ”
AVlth just $25,000 left to go befors
the quarter-million mark is reached
the Oglethorpe committees rested on
their arms Monday morning.
"Now, watch the heavyweights pm
It over,” said the tired bu? happy
chairmen.
w * ei * h j‘C m * ant Ca P‘»m Ja.
W English and his associates on the
executive committee—Ivan E Allen
and that class of accomplished and
powerful pleader for anything that
will be for the good of Atlanta.
The noonday luncheons were over
and one. The recording chalk had
made Its last figure on the big black
board. The friendly rivalry among
the working committees had ended In
a fraternal hand-clasp and the forma-
tion of an Oglethorpe University So
ciety, pledged through life to 'work
and pray for Oglethorpe.
It waa “up to the heavyweights"
And Captain English and Ills aides
smiled a little Monday morning, muck
as if they knew a good deal more than
they were telling, as they said:
"Just a little time, gentlemen; don’t
hurry us. You’ve had three weeks
and you’ve done wonders. Give us
our little Inning now, and let us corns
to bat in our own order. We’ll hit
the ball, and hit it hard—never fear!"
So the younger men laughed and
went on about their ordinary dally
business, just as if they hadn't put
over the biggest thing of the kind
that Atlanta or the South ever had
undertaken.
They had confidence in the "heavy,
weights.” They knew the "heavy,
weights” would “put it over."
BUSINESS NOTICE.
To Cure a Cold in One Dav
Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE
Tablets. Druggists refund money If it
fails to cure. E. W. GROVE’S signa
ture is on each box. 25c.
Daniels to Spend
Xmas in Capital
WASHINGTON, Dec. 22.—Secre
tary of War Garrison announced to
day that he and his family will spend
Christmas with his brother, Judge S.
J. Garrison at Merchantsville, N. J.
Secretary of the Navy Daniels will
remain in Washington on Christmas
Day, leaving that night for Raleigh,
N. e„ to spend four days with his
mother.
Foster Birthplace
City's Xmas Gift
PITTSBURG, Dec. 22.—The city of
Pittsburg will receive as a Christmas
present the birthplace of Stephen Col
lins Foster, famous song author. The
old homestead was offered to the city
to-day by James H. Park. Among
Foster's compositions are "Old Black
Joe," "My Old Kentucky Home" and
“Suwanee River.”
British Bankers Said To
Be Ready to Aid Huerta.
LONDON, Dec. 22.—An exchange tele
phone company dispatch from Paris to
day says that it is reported in financial
circles that a group of British bankers
there have signified their willingness to
lend $18,000,000 to the Mexican govern
ment.
The report is not given much credence
owing to the "financial starvation pol
icy” President Wilson had adopted to
ward General Huerta.
“I do my Christmas shop
ping from my office. I
send clean, pure,
healthful
WRtGLEYSk
NOW
BY THE BOX
OF MOST
DEALERS
1
Si
\
Movie’s Lure Forces
Church to Suspend
WEST ORANGE, N. .T . Dec. 22 —
Unable to compete with a nearby
moving picture theater, the Rev. Ed
uard E. Lowans has closed down the
Emmanuel Baptist Church.
The pews have been deserted since
the opening of the movie.
Columbus Factories
Close for Holidays
COLUMBUS, Dec. 22.—The manu
facturing plants of Columbus, em
ploying more than 10,000 persons,
have closed down for the Christmas
holidays. %
All of the employees have been paid
off and the Christmas trade is the
heaviest in recent years.
Big Christmas Dinner:
For Horses of Poor
CHICAGO, Dec. ^22 —Because of the
idleness of thousands of men in Chi
cago and the consequent Inability of {
teamsters to buy good feed for their i
teams, the Anti-Cruelty Society will i
serve a sumptuous dinner to all horses
whose owners can not afford to give j
their animals a treat.
TAKE STUART'S BUCHU
AND JUNIPER IF
KIDNEYS
BOTHER
AND FOR BACKACHE OR BLADDER
TROUBLE.
by the box of
twenty packages.
My dealer sells
it for 85 cents
a boxl"
i ‘ A whole box
of it is a real
present and its low
cost lets me “remem
ber” people I could
not send gifts to
otherwise.”
Be sure it's
WRIGLEY’S
It’s the gift you’re
sure will please.
1A
Ok
Chiefs Wife Is Fiued
On Bad Letter Charge
NEWCASTLE. 1ND . Dec. 22 — Mrs. j
John Wynn, wife of the newly-ap
pointed Chief of Police here, pleaded
guilty in Federal Court at Indianap
olis to sending objectionable letters
through the mail. She was fined $10.
Uric acid excites the kidneys, they be
come overworked, get sluggish, ache and
feel like lumps of lead. The urine be
comes cloudy, the bladder is irritated
and you may he obliged to seek relief
two or three times during the night
When the kidneys clog you must help
them flush off the body's urinous waste
or you'll be a real sick person shortly.
At first you fee I a dull misery in the
kidney region, you suffer from backache,
sick headache, dizziness, stomach gets
sour, tongue coated and you feel rheu
matic twinges when the weather Is
bad.
To cure above troubles and flush out
the kidneys, get from any pharmacist a
big $1.00 bottle of Stuart's Buchu and
Juniper Compound; take as directed on
bottle, and in a few days your kidneys
will then act fine. Stuart's Buchu and
Juniper Compound has been used for
generations to clean impurities from
clogged kidneys and stimulate them to
normal activity, also to neutralize the
acids in urine, so it no longer Is a source
of irritation, thus ending bladder and
kidney weakness.
Every one should take now and then
Stuart's Buchu and Juniper Compound
to keep the kidneys clean and active.—
Advt.
CAUTION
WMtC
The
great popularity of
the clean, pure, healthful
WRIGLEY’S gis causing un
scrupulous persons to wrap rank imitations
that are not even real chewing gum so they re
semble genuine WRIGLEY’S. The better class of
stores will not try to fool you with these imitations. They will be offered
to you principally by street fakirs, peddlers and the candy departments of
some 5 and 10 cent stores. These rank imitations cost dealers one cent a
package or even less and are sold to careless people for almost any price.
If you want ley’s look before you buy. Get what you pay for•
Be SURE It’s WRIGIEY’S.
Z' ai .r ir r n:r -i thf abo ™ "> n to Protect onr customers. who „ re continually wnting M
th« they Httleo oecowq by mutation, winch they purehied Uuakm* WsSSV’S