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nEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1914.
5 D
Wife Won't Let Harrison Run HUNGER MERELY URGES STUDY 61
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‘She's Boss/ Says Chicago Mayor PSYCHIC, EXPERT
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Holds Him to 1910 Promise Made
Chance Meeting With a Lawyer
Enables Youth to Claim
uncle’s Fortune.
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 26.—In the
prosaic award by Judge Graham of
one-twelfth of the estate of the late
Arcadia B. DeBaker, of Los Angeles,
to Robert M. Randlni, aged 18, a
grand-nephew of the wealthy dece
dent, there was revealed an overnight
transition of being Just a boy with
the world to combat to that of finding
himself wealthy.
Like the old-fashioned creations of
Horatio Alger, for which the youth of
the country possess an undying
penchant, Bandini, just as a fiction
hero, finds himself able to lift the
family mortgae and kick the wolf
from the door, if one threatens, while
the hill collectors now are apologiz
ing, and people who before would not
have offered more than a perfunctory
greeting are now seeking to win a
smile of recognition.
Nearly Half a Million.
Not that Bandini lacked for the
ordinary necessities of life. In fact,
he had more than the ordinary boy
of his age, but to that has been added
in round numbers nearly half a mil
lion dollars, all by the scratch of a pen
in court, by which Judge Graham ap
proved an agreement between Bandi
ni and the other heirs cf the DeBaker
estate of $7,000,000. By this agree
ment the boy, who lives with his
mother, Mrs. Ruth McMahon, with
draws all claim for one-twelfth of the
property.
A second likeness to the old-fash
ioned youth of fiction lies in the
strange fact that but for a chance
meeting with Attorney Arthur M.
Free Bandini still would be just that,
and not the possessor of half a mil
lion.
Free Remembered.
Free knew Bandini eight years ago,
and took an interest in the very boy
like 10-year-old. L*ter, the cares of
politics absorbing him, Free forgot
Bandini until a year and a half ago,
when the contest for the DeBaker es
tate arose, and he suddenly recollect
ed that the boy bore the name of one
of the heirs. Free sought far and near,
and finally found his boy friend In
San Francisco. Mrs. McMahon of
fered Free one-third if he could es
tablish Bandini’s title to part of the
estate.
Bandini proves worthy of his good
fortune.
"I want to complete my education,”
he says, "and now I have the chance.
I am going to finish school here and
then go to Princeton to study scien
tific farming. The future lies with
my mother.”
Girls Will Learn How
To Buy Clothing
OLYMPIA, Dec. 26—A committee to in
vestigate the most economical way to
buy clothes and report to the State La
bor Commissioner for the benefit of the
5.000 working girls in Washington has
just been appointed by Labor Commis
sioner Olson.
The committee is composed of the
five women of the office help minimum
wago conference.
s"
“His Family Needs Him,” Reason for Opposition
to Sixth Term.
OLD-HONED
CHICAGO, Dec. 26.—His wife won’t
let him. For this reason, Mayor Car
ter H. Harrison says, he will never
serve a sixth term at the head of Chi
cago’s city government.
Mayor Harrison declared he had
given his wife his promise not to run.
And, he says, she is the “boss” of the
family. Mrs. Harrison was asked If
she intends to hold her husband to his
promise.
“I certainly do,” she replied. "I
want to enjoy him myself just a little
bit. He’s so devoted to city business
that I hardly know him any more.
“Why, I have to Jot down on a little
card memoranda of the things I want
to talk to him about—No. 1, No. 2,
No. 3, and so on. It’s harder for me
to get a few moments alone with him
than It Is for a man who wants a job.
“I think his family needs him a
little. The city’s had him long
enough. He never gets home until
after 6 o’clock at night, and he’s usu
ally too tired to talk.
“I don’t care what the politicians
want. I want him myself. I wouldn’t
have let him run four years ago if he
hadn’t promised he wouldn't run
again, and I’m going to hold him to
that promise.”
Miles J. Devine, spokesman for the
2,000 members of the county Democ
racy, who Jammed the Mayor's office
and overflowed into the corridors, told
the Mayor they wanted his promise to
run, or they would hold a big demon
stration January 1 In the Seventh
Regiment Armory to force him into
line.
Professor A. J. Carlson Fasts
Five Days to See How It
Feels; Isn't Feazed.
CHICAGO, Dec. 26.—There are
many ways of stopping the pangs of
hunger without the use of food. Chew
gum, hold a stick In the mouth, work
so hard you forget all about hunger,
or, best of all, get scared within an
Inch of your life and you won't want
food for ever so long. Swallowing a
small balloon and pulling it up again
by a string also helps.
Dr. A. J. Carlson, assistant profes
sor of.physiology at the University of
Chicago, told all about It in his lec
ture before the National Academy of
Science. And Dr. Carlson knows, for
he has not only made a subject swal
low and electric light and watched
the processes of dl-eetion through a
window cut In the subject's abdomen,
but he has experimented quite as
ruthlessly on himself and his assis
tant, and both of them have gone five
days without food Just to see how it
fgels.
Starving Painless Death.
"There ie really very little pain
about starving," said Dr. Carlson.
"The pangs of hunger are caused by
the contractions of the upper portion
of the stomach, and these contrac
tions are largely psychic—and under
control of the mind. Anything that
will take the mind off the fact that
you have gone for so long without
fond will lessen the contractions and
so lessen the pain.
".My assistant, Mr. Lewis, and X
both went without food for five days
in the course of our experiments. We
suffered very little, for we kept our
minds on our work and went about
just as usual.
I should say that death by starva
tion, if one could keep one's mind oc
cupied, would be about as nearly a
painless death as one can hope to
have."
Dr. Carlson measured the force,
frequency and character of the con
tractions of the stomach with a little
Instrument called a manometer. The
method of procedure Is to connect the
manometer with a small balloon well
Inflated with air, swallow the balloon,
allowing the connecting tube to hang
gracefully down inside the throat like
macaroni hung up to dry. Then the
stomach, deceived Into thinking it had
some food at last, begins to work on
the balloon, and the manometer re
cords what it does to that balloon.
Haul Up Balloon.
When the stomach has been suffi
ciently imposed upon for the purposes
of science, haul up the balloon.
Dr. Carlson discovered that a great
many pet theories of dieticians are
not founded on fact. For one thing,
bitters, olives, cocktails—our most
cherished appetizers, in fact—he calls
fraud. With his little balloon and
manometer Dr. Carlson measured the
antics of the stomach before and aft
er taking. He declares that the con
tractions of the stomach after an "ap*-
petizer" do not Indicate the least In
crease in appetite. The increase is
purely psychic.
Many of Dr. Carlson's most valu
able experiments were made on a
young man who has been under his
observation for the last two years—a
than of perhaps 28 years, who has not
swallowed a bite or drop for twenty
years. All his food is taken through
a tube direct to the stomach.
Woman Lecturer Thinks Great
Studies in Nude Serve to
Suppress Vulgarity.
KANSAS CITY, Dec. 26.—‘‘Children
arc* better judges of pictures than
grown persons,” said Mrs. J. B. Sher
wood, of Chicago, in a lecture before
the Fine Arts Institute on “How to
Enjoy Pictures.”
“As we grow older a film seems to
come over our eyes. Because of our
material interests we no longer see
Clearly. Children, then, should be
trained to keep this power. A love of
art is a protection from evil influ
ences.
"I wish that beautiful picture ‘The
Bathers.’ by William Morris, might
be hung in every boy's room. It would
teach him to respect bis own body as
nothing else could. Place before the
children the lovely undraped figure,
the most beautiful thing God ever
made, and teach them to see its be.au-
ty. They will cease to see suggesLive-
ness and vulgarity In any of God’s
work.”
That is why, says Mrs. Sherwood,
every city should have a permanent
art gallery, where the people may
come to study pictures and learn to
love rtiem. In Chicago this has been
made possible by a group of public-
spirited men, the friends of American
art, who banded together to bring pic
tures to the city. Each promised to
give $200 a year, making $40,000 in all.
As a result Chicago now has a col
lection of beautiful pictures.
Missouri Justice
Eulogizes Mule
j Faithfulness, Sure-Footedness and
Good Sense Outweigh His Bad
Points, Judge Says.
JEFFERSON CITY, MO., Dec. 26.—-
The Missouri mule has been exon
erated by the Supreme Court of Mis
souri. Judge Lamm wrote the opin
ion in what he termed “the celebrated
caae.” Years ago the suit for $5 dam
ages was brought by B. L. Lyman
against Horace Dale, for damages
done by “aforesaid wild and unruly
mule" to the spokes of Lymann’s
buggy. One Justice of the Peace, one
circuit Judge, three judges of the
Court of Appeals and four Supreme
Court Justices have considered the
case. In exonerating the mule Judge
Lamm discoursed on mules as fol
lows :
"There are sporadic Instances of
mules behaving badly. That one that
Absalom rode which 'went out from
under' him at a crisis in his fate, for
instance. ‘The mule don’t kuk as a
rule,’ saith the American negro. His
voice has been a matter of derision,
and there are those who put their
tongue in their cheek when speaking
of it.
“However, the faithfulness, sure
footedness and good sense of the
mule, all matters of common knowl
edge, may be allowed to stand over
against his faults and create a pre
ponderance in the scale In his favor.”
Discovers Method to
Prove All “Sums”
SHE REFUSED TO
10 YEARS AGO
When He Was 87 and She 55,
However, They Ran Away
and Were Married.
Shows Them Novel Pastimes, and
Is Idolized by Pupils
as a Result.
Were Said To Be Due to the Ex
cellent Care Taken of the
Blood—Stuart’s Calcium
Wafers Banish All
Skin Troubles.
During the reign of Louis XVI. when
Marie Antoinette was surrounded by
such a galaxy of beauties and such fa
mously handsome men, the French court
was known for the exquisite beauty of
complexions seen there.
Anyone can use Stuart’s Calcium
Wafers and restore complexion In an
easy manner.
The secret of those complexions In
that age no doubt was entirely due to
the care taken to keep the blood always
pure. In this rapid-fire age of hustle
and bustle most people pay no attention
to this important feature of life and so
they are given to pimples, liver spots,
blackheads, eczema, etc.
Stuart’s Calcium Wafers are com
posed of Calcium Sulphide in connec
tion with other properties and this in
gredient is the greatest blood purifier
known to science.
Stuart’s Calcium \\ afers will clear
the moat obstinate complexion, because
they go right into the blood and re
move the cause of the trouble. The
A ond Is cleansed of all Impurities and
foreign substances and these are ‘luick-
lv eliminated from the system. ^ ou II
notice a wonderful change in a few
days—you will hardly know yourself In
And Stuart’s Calcium Wafers are ab
solutely harmless to anyone. Their in-
gredients are just what a physician pre-
fer.be” in mbit causes of skin eruptions
and poor blood. These wafers are put
un In a concentrated form, which makes
them act quickly and thoroughly.
You can get Stuarts Calcium Wafers
at any drug store at 50 cents a box
Begin taking them to-day and then look
at yourself fn the mirror In n few days,
and find all those awful pimple.black:
heads acne, boils, liver spots, rash, ec-
zema and that muddy complexion rap-
Jdlv disappearing and your face cleared
lik'p the petal of a flower. A small sam
ple package mafied^ free by addressing
F A Ftuart Co., lia Stuart Blug., .uar
shall, Mich.
Uncle Sam Proves
Postmaster Honest
Official Worries to Death Paying
Shortage Which Experts Show
Never Existed.
SCAMMON, KANS., Dec. 26.—Thomas
B. Evans, late postmaster of Scammon,
found last winter that his books showed
him Indebted to the Government nearly
$1,000. Worry over the discovery made
him 111.
Evans, saying nothing to his family,
began making up the supposed short
age. and at the time of his death, some
months ago, had done so.
Auditors of the department, check
ing through the books, discovered an
error and found that Evans did not
owe the Government anything. Mrs.
Evans has Just received a check for
$920.81 from the department, the amount
Evans made sacrifices to pay.
Cotton Goes Abroad;
Cash for Other Crops
Savannah Loads Many Steamships
for Europe—Tlfton Offers to
Buy Georgia Syrup.
Lost Hat May Send
Owner to Gallows
PUEBLO, COL., Dec. 26.—A hat. lost
In the battle which resulted in the death
of Pal Parks, figured in the capture of
Alberto Lopez, 21 years old, the second
of the alleged murderers to be taken
into custody.
A hat of a common black type, worn
by practically alkof the Mexicans in the
city, was found at the scene of the kill
ing. Later detectives met a Mexican on
First street who was supplied with
money. In answer he said he was go
ing to buy a friend a new cap. The of
ficers accompanied him to the room of
his friend, where Lopez, who has been
identified by a witness to the battle,
was arrested.
Holds Broken Auto
In Road by Muscle
DURAND, MICH., Dec. 26.—Carry
Atherton, giant fullback of the Durand
High School team, utilized his football
training when the steering gear of his
father's automobile broke. Mr. and Mrs
Atherton and son were on the road sev
enteen miles from home when the acci
dent happened. There was no garage
nearer than Durand.
Young Atherton solved the problem
of getting home without walking. He
lay prone on the running board, grasped
the front axle with his right hand, using
his arm for a steering rod and keeping
the machine In the road by main
strength His father drove. He reached
Durand without further trouble.
SAW TWO PRESIDENTS SLAIN.
CHARLOTTE. MICH., Dec. 26.—A. D.
Baughman, a resident of Charlotte since
1866, an eye-witness to the assassina
tion of President Lincoln at the Ford
Theater and standing within a few
I feet of President McKinley when he was
stricken down by an assassin's bullet, Is
dead here.
SAVANNAH, Dec. 24.—The pros
perity that is bound to be Georgia’s
is reflected in the fact that within
the next month the amount of cotton
which will be shipped from this port
for Europe will be very nearly nor
mal. The loading of the Medina, a
giant Mallory liner, and the Marie di
Giorgici, a Norwegian, both speedy
ships, with cotton for Bremen, and the
fact there are seven tramps in harbor
to follow, have given the local cotton
market a decided tone.
The Georglana, the first Georgia-
owned steamship, bought with four
others by a syndicate of Savannah
business men, has arrived In port and
is loading for Europe. She Is one of
the handsomest steamers which ever
has made this port and one of the
most capable. She belonged to the
Swedish Government and was built
two years ago far a transport
TIFTON, Dec. 24.—Following the
announcement a few weeks ago that
they were prepared to pay cash for
Tift County corn, a local wholesale
grocery firm announces this w eek that
It can pay cash for Georgia cane
syrup in Cyprus barrels.
It Is generally believed that by the
time the 1915 crops are ready for the
market there w ill be a rash market in
Tifton to take care of them all. Local
business men appear to realize that
the farmers must be able to get cash
for something besides cotton and are
making preparations to furnish the
market for other products.
Baby Held for Back
Rent Is Rescued
AURORA, ILL., Dec. 26.—Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Collins decided to move from
Aurora to Quincy with their baby. They
had been rooming with Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Stadel. Times had been hard, and
, they did not have money enough to pay
their rent.
They complained to the police that
they couldn’t move because they couldn't
get their baby. Baby was being held as
hostage for the rent. Policeman Ash
ford rescued the baby and they went
on their way rejoicing. He explained
to the creditors that babies could not
be attached.
Potatoes Offered for
Marriage License
BATTLE CREEK. MICH., Dec. 26.—
A well-dressed couple, evidently from
the country, the man 60 and the‘woman
40, appeared before Municipal Judge
Hart and asked if he would marry them
for 3 1-3 bushels of potatoes, as they
had more spuds’’ than cash. When the
court refused they went away, the wom
an in tears.
It later developed that they tried to
obtain a marriage license from City
Clerk Thorne on the same basis. They
had the potatoes with them. Neither
officials took their names.
'Even the Price of
Marrying Is Soaring
MADISON, W1S., Dec. 26.—The price
of getting married has gone up twenty
j cents since December 1. Following an
inquiry received from a County Clerk,
Burt Williams, Collector of Internal
Revenue, announced that all doctors'
certificates under the eugenic law must
contain war tax stamps of the denomi
nation of ten cents.
All marriage certificates presented to
newlyweds by the officiating clergyman
or magistrate must also bear ten-cent
stamps.
Asking Divorce, Says
Wife Hid Nationality
PITTSBURG. Dec. 26?—That his wife
deceived him as to her parentage, line
age and nationality Is the complaint of
George Luther Ayres, in a petition ask
ing that his marriage be annulled. He
says his wife told him her name was
Harriet Beatrice Brown, and that her
parents, both of whom she said were
dead, were of English and Irish de
scent.
They were married September 16.
Since then he says he has learned that
her name was Adviga Gojthofzki, that
she was born In Austria, of Slav par
ents. and that her father is confined in
M&rshalsea.
Letter Mailed 57
Years Ago Delivered
COLORADO SPRINGS. Dec. 26.—
Nearly fifty-eight years after it was
written and posted to him, a letter has |
just been delivered here to Professor
James Hutchison Kerr. The missive
was written by Professor E. F. M.
Faehts. Professor Kerr's former in
structor in civil engineering in an East
ern school at New London, Pa., March
20. 1857, when Professor Kerr was not
quite twenty years old. He is now in
his seventy-eighth year.
Professor Kerr believes the missive
was sent to one of the colleges which
he attended and mislaid until It was
forwarded here.
Pictures Promote
Harvard Friendships
CAMBRIDGE Dec. 26.—Harvard Law
School professors and first year students
aie getting acquainted through photo
graphs. The school has started a pic
ture gallery of the first year men. and
the faculty expects to 1 >* ■',,me acquainted
with the freshmen by means of the pho
tographs. The school has posted this
notice:
“All first year students are requested
to leave their photographs at the sec
retary’s office as soon as possible. These
photographs are of real assistance to
the faculty in becoming acquainted witn
men in the school and in recommend
ing them for positions after graduation.’’
Reno Divorce Judge
Sued by Young Wife
RENO, Dec. 26.—Chief Justice Sween
ey, of the Nevada Supreme Court, who
has favored the maintenance of the so-
called “easy divorce’’ law. is to figure
in a far lers pleasant way In a divorce
case. Mrs. Mabel Trembath Sweeney,
iiis young wife, has just filed suit for
divorce, alleging cruelty. She says she
has been a dutiful wife and has given
him no cause for mistreatment.
The couple were married in 1902. the
affair being an event of social magni
tude. For years nothing disturbed the
harmony of the domestic circle.
Tango-Hesitation
Bar Old Hoop Skirt
CHICAGO, Dec. 23.—The hoop skirt
can’t come back, though the trend of
the 1916 sctyles is toward “grandmoth
er’’ styles of 1830. the Fashion Art
League announces in a bulletin.
The tango and other gay dances of to
day make the hoop skirt positively im-
possible, gay tfie modistes. The result
ing exposures, they assert, would be em
barrassing. to say the least. While ad
mitting that considerable exposure is
popular just now. they say the league
would draw’ the line some place below
the hoopskirt.
Illinois Soon to
Have State Flag
CHICAGO, Dec. 26.—The ninety-sixth
anniversary of the State of Illinois will
prove a memorial one if the plans of the
Chicago Association of Commerce are
realized. On that day a design for a
State flag will be chosen, and the next
Legislature will be asked to adopt it as
the official emblem.
The Illinois committee of the com
merce body requested the student body
of the Art Institute to submit designs
for the flag. The erne accepted will be
on exhibition on “Illinois Day.’’
CINCINNATI, Dec. 26.—Of course, you
know how to prove a subtraction, a mul
tiplication or a division. But who can
prove the computation of a square or
cube root or of cancellation or of h mul
tiplication and division of fractions?
There arises only one response to this
appeal.
It comes from Louise Traub. stenog
rapher, accountant and bowler. He an
nounces he has discovered a method for
proving all mathematical calculations,
the very thing mathematicians have
been trying to find out for ever so long.
Traub says his system will make life
easier for bookkeepers, accountants,
civil engineers and other persons who
deal in figures.
Silk Underwear for
Work Girls Banned
OLYMPIA, WASH.. Dec. 26.—A mini
mum weekly wage of $10 for girls em
ployed in offices has been recommended
to the State Industrial Welfare Com
mission by a conference representing
employers, employees und the disinter
ested public here.
Silk underwear for office girls was put
under the ban. and this blow fell on the
girls from within their own camp, the
three w’omen representing the employ
ees declaring that silk hose .and silk pet
ticoats are not a necessary adjunct to a
working girl’s wardrobe.
Physician Sees His |
Own Appendix Taken
I AURORA, ILL., Dec. 26.—Dr. W. F.
Sherman has conducted many little ay- j
pendix parties in his time, and consid- j
I ered that he knew all there was to know
about that particular organ. But he ,
just learned what it is to have one cut 1
out. He watched the operation thD '
lime not from the point of the surgeon |
but from that of the patient.
Dr. J. \Y. McDonald, his friend, was
the man with the knife. He begged Dr
Sherman to take an anesthetic, but the
latter would not.
“It was painful.’’ said Dr. Sherman,
“but it was a valuable lesson to me."
ST. LOUIS, Dec. 26.—After the
death of her husband, Louis Hoffman,
aged 01 years, in Vicksburg Thursday,
It was revealed that Mrs. Katherine
Hoffman, aged 59, a former St. Louis
an, who is chief heir to Hoffman’s es
tate of nearly $1,000,000, was forced by
her parents to refuse his offer of mar
riage 35 years ago.
Huffman was married twice. Mrs.
Hoffman formerly was Miss Kather
ine Falkenheiner, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Melchor Falkenheiner, of No.
6116 Elizabeth street, Clifton Heights,
and was only 24 years old When Hoff
man first proposed marriage to her.
Her parents objected to the disparity
in their ages.
Four years ago, however, Hoffman
returned, and the couple eloped to
Cincinnati and were married. They
lived at Vicksburg after that, where
Hoffman was president of the Louis
Hoffman Hardware Company. He
was interested in several banks, and
held valuable real estate.
Wisconsin Town Has
A Civic Secretary
MADISON, Dec. 26.—Neilsville. Wls.,
probably is the first small town in
America to establish on a full-time basis
the office of civic secretary. Kauk City
und Ossea have established this oftice,
making it a part of the function of the
school prircijtttl. But in Neillsville the
school board has voted to engage a man:
as associate to the school principal who
will devote his whole energy to this
work.
Convicts Plan to
Aid Their Families
CHICAGO, Dec. 26.—Convicts In the
Joliet penitentiary have just put into
operation a plan to raise a fund for the
support of families of the men serving
terms in the prison.
The 1,336 inmates have agreed to
spend their spare time, at their crafts
and turn their product over to an agent
through whom sales will be made. The
plan was proposed by “English Eddie,’’
a skillful mechanic, and one of the most
notorious safe blowers in the country.
GRAND RAPIDS, Dec. 26.—Miss
Eva H. Reynier has more friends
among the school children of Grand
Rapids than any other person in the
city. She is a former teacher, but
now devotes her entire time to mak
ing the kiddies happy by teaching:
them lots and lots of games they
never heard of before.
When she assumed charge of this
work, they were playing such games
as “ticky-ticky-tasket, a green and
yellow basket,” and "farmer in the
dell." They had been “higho-the-
dairy-o-ing,’’ the old-time games ever
since they were old enough to toddle,
but Miss Rynier is idolized because
she showed them new games, for chil
dren love novelties quite as well as
grown-ups.
They took to the new forms of
amusement like the proverbial duck
to the proverbial water, and the play
grounds in connection with the
schools are now alive with children
of all ages dancing and playing the
new games which have been selected
and introduced from almost every for
eign country.
Where there is a preponderance of
one nationality in a school Miss Rey
nier has obtained the best results by
teaching them the games their fa
thers and mothers used to play when
they were children in the Old Coun
try.
The teachers of the various grades
co-operate with Miss Reynier as we*l
as the children. In fact, the games
are first communicated to the teach
ers and then to the children. But
Miss Reynier has personally overseen
the work.
Miss Reynier enjoys here work im
mensely. She is a born leader of chil
dren, and is able to take the elderly
boys, the eighth grade “seniors” and
control them like an army officer.
TO ARREST CHICAGO FLIRTS.
CHICAGO, Dec. 26.—Six detectives
have been assigned to ride on Chicago's
street cars to protect women patrons
from flirts. Leonard A. Busby, president
of the Chicago Surface Lines, says that
reports reached him that certain men
had made a practice recently of annoy
ing women.
THE TRIPOD PAINT COMPANY
HAS TEMPORARY QUARTERS AT
302 Foote & Davies Bldg.
(Just Opposite Burned Store.)
Orders will receive the usual prompt attention. Fac
tory and warehouse at 1C9 South Forsyth Street not dam
aged by fire.
’JC
■iBMi
‘Ls * ■ - -
I u
Americas Message to the World
ON A BEAUTIFUL FIVE-COLOR POST CARD.
Read the estimate placed upon the card entitled Peace by J. J. Hall,
D. D., Director South Atlantic States Department the American Peace Society:
Fear of Rattlesnakes
Leads to Divorce
RAN DIEGO, Dec. 26— Because of thf
difficulty of determining whether a
woman was Justified in deserting her ‘
husband because she was afraid of rat
tlesnakes, which she believed to abound
near her husband’s residence in Impe
rial Valley. .luge Guy continued the .
application of Mrs. Hattie M. Scott for ,
a divorce from Charles It. Scott.
GRANDFATHER USED IT50YEARS AGO
CUTS CHECKS
COLD )il COUCH
SHORT ATONCE
&I>£
4
DR BULL S
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PURE-QUICK SURE
Senator T. E. Burton, President.
Dr. B. F. Trueblood, Secretary.
Arthur D. Call, Executive Director
William H. Taft
W. J. Bryan
Andrew Carnegie,
:}
Vise Preeldents.
The American Peace Society
Home Office,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
SOUTH ATLANTIC STATES DEPT
J. J. Hall, D.D., Director,
148 Forrest Avenue,
Atlanta, Ga,
Atlanta, Ga., December 7, 1914.
CUTS FAMILY OFF FOR NEGRO.
NEW ORLEANS. Dec. 26—In the will
of Judge Charles E. Gauthreaux, the
deceased jurist declares that because
his family “had done nothing for him ‘ 1
he left all of his property, amounting!
to several thousand dollars, to his negro |
nurse.
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• TO 6
Dr.E.G. Griffin’s
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Ov.r Brown ft Allen’s Now Store.
ENTRANCE:
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Phone M, 17013 - Lad Attendant \ j
I have seen the postal card, “Peace,” as designed. It is splendid in conception and beautiful In
execution. The design is full of fine suggestions for the World's Peace—each letter is made symbolic:
our noble flag boars its good will to all mankind: the Statue of Liberty throws light upon the way;
while the dove bearing the olive branch would bring peace to every nation.
This is America’s message: Peace on earth! May the day hasten! The sending forth of this card
by the tens of thousands will bear a part in the bringing of that golden era. J. J. HALL
Secretary Georgia Peace Society.
This post card is printed in five colors A magnificent Christmas or New Year greeting. It can
and should be used at ail times, but is exceedingly appropriate now.
When you mail one to your friend, you help to carry the message of Universal Peace
Designed in Atlanta! Drawing and plates made in Atlantal
Printed and for sale by
Webb & Vary Company
Telephone Main 2405
38 1-2 We*t Alabama St.