Newspaper Page Text
8
.
; ans Will Go to
‘ Maka Appeal
{ \,
.
| sstion of Sena
| Members of Eia aelegution of
. » Washington to
| tee to Plan Plig eityrs request
| : relieve the fuel
5 080 'rnmlnoo was ap
—ence Wednesday
; Members of tyamber of (‘:’"t'
| tee in the mm;"‘mm'“ ety o
savings cnrnflc;" Mto arrange
Wednesday 8“(w1th the Federal
} or's Mansion frioßY morning, if
’ Harry M. Lasks
i came down to'dt the committee
é “thrift"” campsm.‘y night. How
: Hosh Richa "Our will be named
the campaign‘elm of word from
nesday his lifi¢erning the date of
are expected learing,
: véstment of is composed of some
: worth of start prom#nem citizens,
sum being # On the coal situa
; by the natihite, Jr, the newly
. . _appointment tof the Chamber of
" !fi"em sta’halrman. The other
; Haynes C ory Kennedy, Atlanta
: pointed cha*tori. W. B, Baker,
; mittee on be <rtlantic Ice and Coal
E place the ulow Campbell, of the
v banks. Comuzy; C. B SBci-
Distr coal dealer and prom- |
Director *anufacturing circles
announced ® State.
men in all Was sent to Dr. Hard
; as follows ™y morning, urging him
First D the committee and use
Meldrim, t© lend more weight to
. Second & Of the delegation.
Bainbrid Ady was busy all day
| Third Iz‘utherinf statistics from
* Amerioutlers of Atlanta relative
; F‘c;urtr‘“o“' The whole gist of
f lumbus. Mr. Kennedy reported,
g Flnh"" is absolutely no coal
: lanta. @ b bought at any fig
’. Slxt)“'t the dealers are “up a
f M;‘:f:’:« of the committee agreed
; Neel h"th statemnent of Senator
¢ . F’l'gl"‘h that the only way At
ensl e will be able to get coal is
Nint delegation present to the
- Tent Personally the vrgent needs
E o unh public and impress upon
E. o Pgle fact that something must
b+ . tey, DOB guiciyy.
T ¥ has made the sugges
: Dublt thoup\fl;llg use t;ateuunlcoal
y yments of domestic coal can
D",{q!. This coal, commonly
i T;flla' the “run of the mine,” can
b - o'clo"‘ from any local dealer, and
‘E and will be sufMicient to tide over
comTßeney. Steam coal is com
; m"m by manufacturing com
. but may be used in the grate
T mfl;d th;t the Ipeoplo of
J ave been using steam
g:‘n‘tm Jast 60 days, that city
£ 1 .a'h Atlanta’s predicament ex
£ B
P L
wl Shortage Send
? wl Shortage Sends
e i . .
- Jrtherners to Dixie
€s eoal shortage in the North is
'” people to the South for the
4 fer, according to a “Gentleman
. ] jan who visited the offices
- gHle Georgia Automobile Assocla-
A Wednesday morning.
- This tourist reported that people
"am the North had been able to rent
~ @rtments and rooms in the towns
§1 88 In Florida, at a figure
& awer than the cost of a winter's sup
¢ Sirank T. Reynolds, of the auto as
~ deiatio stated Wednesday that
SEver before In the history of the
‘have so many automobile par
© jes assed through this State bound
F Florida and other Southern points.
& Mr. Reynolds estimated that fully
LBO parties pass through Atlanta
8y day. And most of them visit
88 offices of the auto assoclation at
i Hotel Ansley for information re
-3 the roads, which keeps the
&8 force pretty busy.
EE, R
verside Graduates
% . .
\ll Get Commissions
1
JAINESVILLE, Nov. 28.—Grad
p8 of Riverside Academy who en-
M the second training school at
f Oglethorpe without exception
Hved commissions of merit. This
ird is a source of deep gratifi
#lon to all the friends of the local
ftitution. Several Riverside grad
gUßtes received commissions at the
't McPherson school. Commissions
hrded «t Fort Oglethorpe are as
owe: Officers’ reserve corps, Class
¢ Captain of infantry, Patrick B,
pes, Gainesville; Class B, first
gtenant, Guy Neman, Gainesville;
ert C. Haltom, Bartow, Fla.; My
} Greentree, Columbus; second lieu
mants, John M. Pearce, Gainesville;
oy A. Newman, Gainesville; Frank
eeteagton, Live Oak Fla. Frank Pa
o9 ry College, former assistant
o ant at Riverside, has suc
g ‘passed examination at Fort
B - vorth and received commis
.U} second lieutenant in Thirty-
L M Infantry, United States regu-
L 'E. J. Hardin, University of
X ia, is another Gainesville boy
BN passed examination at Fort
Legenworth and received commis-
Slon of second lieutenant, United
Stat regulars. Other Gainesville
,m‘“' received commissions at Fort
j& Ogléthorpe are Howard B. Harmon,
Dniversity of Georgia, and Carl B.
Strang, Emory College.
o »
Furniture Stores
. To Close Thursday
. Atlanta’s furniture stores will be
| closed all day Thursday, Thanksgiv
ing Day, that employees may spend
" the holiday with their home folks.
- The following dealers have agreed to
- close: |
' American Furnishing Company. °
¢ Bauknight Furniture Company. |
.. Brown & Cochran Furniture Com
= ony, \
. paries 8. Robison Furniture Com- |
‘ * an & Sons. 4
§ Furniture Company. j
» « Purniture Exchange. |
& ' & Furniture Company. |
. eral to ody Furniture Company.
~ Vito-Reiller Purniture Company.
. %old in Wood Furniture Company.
‘,éqffi-m St P aenityre Com-
Bound Avoid et o .
s Boktia: & hottt
: SRR
__THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN %® ® A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes - =® 2 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1917.
A\ ) o ¥ ¥ T N e
i i £ pdin T T u
NG @ Fig
g Bl A T AP 0 T
[ Wit (D cectlogg Plasidl ok T
The police departinent would
‘perhaps find it cheaper {0 put
swing doors in the walls between
its cells and the outside world,
Prisoners pushing the bricks out
every night or two is likely to
weaken the building.
Yes, Geraldine, we know this is
the right time of year for jokes
about the Thanksgiving turkey,
but when the grocer quoted it at
40 cents a pound today it took all
the humor out of our system.
The always conservative Asso
clated Press gives away no ad
vertising in its reports, as we note
in the DeSaulles case story:
«'What kind of a car was it?’
asked her attorney.
The derendnnt'l monosyllable re
ply naming a well known, small
sized American make of automo
bile eaused much loughter, ;
Readers are given one guess.
After viewing the reports and
Gl Fm RENT. [AN H .
& g - " T % .‘5 ' o
AT =S N
%’;fi"‘ oy 5D A R ,;,:':'.__;lii_ L % bR e 'f%‘,_-
Women Meet to Plan Sale
Of Christmas Seals for
Combating White Plague
Practically every woman’'s organi
zatlon in Atlanta was expected to be
represented Wednesday afternoon at
8 o'clock at the meeting of the wom
an’s committee on Red Cross Christ
nas seals, called by Mrs. Beaumont
Davison, appointed chairman by
President Hugh M. Willet, of the
Anti-Tuberculosis Association. The
women are planning to carry on a
tremendous campaign for the sale of
the little seals which adorn Christ
mas packages, the funds going to the
fight on the white plague.
Mrs. Charles J. Haden, chalrman of
the Fulton County Unit, Council of
National Defense, has Joined Mrs.
Davison in asking that the heads of
all women's clubs and organizations
attend the meeting at Kdison Hall,
Peachtree and Ellis streets, Wednes
day afternoon.
The women will be a big factor in
the campaign, which will be waged
with the co-operation of several
men's organizations. The geheral
campaign is again under the direction
of the Retail Merchants’ Association,
the Salesmanship Club, the Real ES§-
tate Board, the Atlanta Chapter of
the Institute of Engineers, the School
of Commerce of Georgla Tech and the
parent college.
Churches on the North Side will
observe Sunday, December 2, as Anti
‘Tuberculosis Day, when the ministers
will discuss the campaign and its ob
jects and urge upon the congrega
tions the liberal purchase of Christ
mas seals. The South Hide churches
tdok up the movement last Sunday.
The fact that “Tuberculosis Sun
Noted Moonshiners
L .
Are Convicted inU. S.
Court at Gainesvill
Ofticials of the internal revenue
department are elated over the
conviction in Galnesville this
week of three of the most notor
fous moonshiners which, they
claim, infest the hills of Georgia.
These men received sentences of
from six months and a fine, to a
year and a day and a fine in the
Federal prison at Atlanta. They
will commence their sentences in
the Atlanta Federal prison at
once. They are:
W. L, Ralston, of Dawson, con
vieted of distributing, removing
and selling whisky, fined SSOO |
and given a vear and a day in ‘
prison. 1‘
Henry McKee, of Lumpkin |
County, sentenced to six months
in prison and given a heavy filne.
John Anderson, of Dawson
~ County, given a heayy fine and
sentenced for six months.
Anderson is the man who was
discovered by agents of E. C. Yel
lowley’s office with a large quan
tity of sugar on his place,
When the places were raided
more than 15,000 pounds of white
sugar were found. This was con
fiscated by the United States Mar
shal and will be sold.
. A ey
Lieut. Mathis Sent
To School of Flying
AMERICUS, Nov. 28-—Lieutenant
Evan T. Mathis, a graduate of Geor
gia Tech, who won his commission at
the first officers’ training camp, has
just been ordered to report at the
Wright school of fiying in Dayton,
Ohio. Since leaving the training
camp he has studied machine gun
construction in Connecticut, and now
ranks as an expert in this branch
of the service. His parents are Dr.
and Mrs. E. T. Mathis, of Americus.
Let Elaticura Be
Yourßeauty Doctor
recommendations of the Food and
Fuel Administratious, and com
paring with the price lists on the
home market page, we register
the hope that the Government
won't start in to regulate the
house rents. We are paying a
plenty as it is,
J. M. B.:
Sorry, but we can’t tell you to
day fust when the war will end,
We didn’t have time to stop in at
the soda fountaln this morning.
EDITOR.
Why doesn’'t some enterprising
butcher offer soup bones for rent?
It used to wprk very well in the
old church oyster stew supper
days.
One of the homely hints for
food economy is ralsing hogs in
the backyarde. We're in favor of
that, if it will take them out of
the street cars.
day” is an undenominational and
nonsectarian movement is being em
phasized in order that all possibie re
ligious groups may be reached. Fif
teen hundred State and local anti
tuberculosis associations in every
State in the Union are assisting in
arousing enthuslasm and organizing
the campaign, so that on these days
the subject of tuberculosis will be
presented to the greatest possible
number of people. It is estimated that
lats year over 2,000,000 pieces of lit
erature were distributed during Tu
berculosis Week, a half million of
which were sent out by the national
agsoclation. This year the associa
tion has prepared a sermon on “In
difference to Tuberculosis” and a
pamphlet entitled “Your Tuberculosis
War Problem.” A prayer written ems«
pecially for Tuberculosis Sunday by
Professor Walter I _.uschenbush, of
the Rochester Theological Seminary,
will also be distributed.
The message of the Red Crosa
Christmas seals will be taken direct
to the children of the public schools
of Atlanta by the teachers.
W. C. Wardlaw, superintendent of
gchools, has named December 7 as
@ day upon which the childiren of
the city will be told at school about
the great movement to prevent tuber
culosis, in which movement they are
to take part. /
A bulletin has been sent by Mr.
Wardlaw to principals of the schools
directing them in n»reparing the spe
cial program. The. manager of the
Anti-Tuberculosis Society has sent
them short talks, which the children
can understand and digest.
.
No Longer a Miller;
>
There’s Good Reason
Robert W. Parls, the popular
real estate man at Decatur, has
retired from the milling business.
That is to say, he's quit hauling
grist to the mill in his trusty
| flivver for his neighbors and oth
~er friends. The story runs thus:
i Mr. Paris frequently finds it
necessary to journey to Scottdale
on business, and he makes all
his business trips in his. auto.
His neighbors, when they see him
hitching up his flivver for a trip
down Scottdale way, often ask if
he would mind taking some corn
down to the mill for them, He
doesn't—or didn't. 3
, Tuesday he was bouncing
merrily over the highways of De- 1
Kalb with a sack of corn, bound |
for the Scottdale mill. It was a |
fine morning and he was letting 1
l the flivver have her head. Arrived
l at the mill, he went around to the l
back end of the car to get the .
l corn. It was gone. Back over the
route he went, but no trace of the |
sack could he find, except for a |
trail of vellow grain. And he
hasn't until yet. |
“Never again,” he sald Wed
nesday. *“l'm going to pay that
fellow for that sack of corn and
close up for good and all my
milling business.”
‘Rtlanta Man Gets
' -
| Pleasant Surprise
{ .
{ “About six months ago my father
ywas very sick with his stomach,
‘which had been troubling him for
[several years. Several doctors said
{he had cancer and one said it was
{ gall stones—all agreed an operation
necessry, but on account of his age
i I wag afraid to risk it. I told a friend
| about it, who said his wife had been
| through the same trouble and had
been cured by taking Mayr's Wen
derful Remedy. I at.once bought a
bottle for father, and he is now as
strong as & bear and can eat more
ham and cabbage than any three
men. It is a simple, harmless prep
aration that removes the catarrhal
mucus from the intestinal tract, and
allays the inflammation which causet*
practically all stomach, liver and in- |
testinal ailments, including lppendcl‘u
citis. One dose will convince
refunded. Jacobs’ Ph
Alee Temple Ceremonial To Be
Big Event in South Georgia
; Thanksgiving Day.
TIFTON, Nov: 28.—A1l Tifton is
ready to join in the welcome to the
Shriners of Alee Temple for the big
ceremonial to be held here Thursday,
Thanksgiving Day. The official dec
orator and his assistants have been
busy all the week, and they have
dressed Tifton up in the Shriners’
colors and Old Glory. The streets are
resplendent with colors, and the
stores are all decorated in honor of
the big eveat.
There will be 76 candidates to cross
|the hot sands, and at least 1,000
Shriners from all sections of South
Georgia are expected. Many cities
will send large delegations. The offi
clal divan will arrive at an early hour
with the means of torture for the
candidates.
More than 1,200 pounds cfyturkeys
'have been killed and prepared for the
big dinner to be given the Shriners.
Thera will be 900 pounds of barbecued
pork, 200 pounds of barbecued mutton
and 100 pounds of barbecued kid to
help out the meat end, with basket
dinners prepared in Tifton homes.
It will be a turkey walk, turkey talk
and turkey eat for the Shriners.
The big day's program will open at
10 o'clock with a concert by Alee
Temple’s band, which will make its
first officilal appearance in the new
Shriners’ uniforms. A union Thanks
giving service with an address by
Grand Prelate Guyton Fisher will fol
low. The barbceue and turkey din
ner will be spread at noon, with the
big parade starting at 3:30 o’clock,
the business and ceremonial session
at the High School Auditorfum fol
lowing.
Football fans of (Georgia will miss
the annual Georgia-Tech game, but
those attending the Shriners’ cere
monial will see the annual Thanks
giving game between Tifton Agricul
tural and Mechanical Scheol and Nor
man Institute. e
et s —————
LA
TRER § #Bl
At the Atlanta. |
‘‘Have a Heart,” Henry W. Savage's
offering that was the musical comedy
hit of Jast winter at the Liberty The
ater, New York, will be given at the
Atlanta Theater for the three days com
mencing with a matinee tomorrow,
Thanksgiving Day. A rare treat is as
sured, for ‘“Have a Heart,' with its
sparkling humor and tingling melodies
—already whistled, sung and danced to
throughout the whole country—is a con
stantly shifting kaleldoscope of beauty.
Mr, Savage promises a caut, groducuon
and chorus in full keeping with his put‘
standard of excellent achievement.
Saelats for all performances are now on
e.
At the Lyric. l
Four shows will bfimflvm at B, F.i
Keith’'s Lyric on Thu Yy, Thanksgiv
ing Day. nl addition to the usual
night shows at 7:30 and 9:15 and the
customary daily matinee at 2:30 there
wil be an extra matinee at 4:15. Thurs
day ushers in a new supreme vaudeville“
program of exceptional merit with Bil
lie Richmond in the Cabaret De Luxe, a
song and whirlwind dance offering In
which Miss Richmond is assisted by the
Moyer Sisters, Maurice L?Mar and the
Tennessee Five Jazz band. Other new
acts will be the Betting Bettys, a racy,
pacy musical comedy with Percy Chap
man, Johnny Morris and a chorus of
Rrett girls; ¥ddie Weber and Marion
idnor, youthful frodlclel: Ruth Bel
mar, novelty equilibrist; the musical
comedy favorites, Homer Dickinson and
Gracle Deason. : 1
At the Rialto.
The new continuous show which is
being offered by the Rialto management
is catching on, and it bids falr to be
come a huge success. Under the new
schedule which was put into effect on
Monday, there is a continuous perform
ance from 1:30 until 11, in which a com
edy, a new Paramount serial, a minia
ture musical comedy and a five-reel
special photoplay are alternated, mak
ing In J)l four complete shows ggr day.
The comedy today is “The inning
Widow.” The feature film is Ann Mur
dock, in “Please Help Emily.” The pro
gram will be changed completely on
Thursday.
At the Grand,
The headline feature of the new bill of
vaudeville which Dbegins at Loew's
Grand Theater with the Thurldnr mati
nee performance will be “An Heir for a
Night,” a big musical comedy novelty,
witfix lots of nntgpr sonfis, clever danc
ing and a sparkling chorus of Zeig
tafilin.n be.;:tltehs. The act cimrrées la:c:lnl |
seenery e company is beautifully
costumed, Other acts wIY! be Jim Bur:fif
and Ralph Harris, a pair of English.
comedians, in a new song novelty, en
titled “Stories From Life in Song.”’ Bert
Collins and Marle Lee, in new songs
and dances, and Frank Jerome and
Emily Carson, acrobatic dancers, and
The i{avelocks. clever entertainers. The
photoplay offering is a new Po,x ro
duction, ‘“The Scarlet Pimpernel,’ lgn.r-‘
ring Dustin Farnum. |
ADVERTISEMENT. ADVERTISEMENT.
TAKE ORDINARY NATURAL IRON
IF STOMACH OR DIGESTION IS BAD
May Be Secured in HT;l;ly Concentrated Form, Easily As
similated and Not Mixed With Alcohol or
Injurious Drugs.
Being Concentrated and Powerful a I:’ew Drops Is a Dose.
Makes It Cheapest, Strongest Tonic.
ONE USER TELLS HOW TO TAKE
IT FOR STOMACH.
“‘l'm so sure Acid Iron Mineral will
help others troubled with stomach
trouble I want to recommend it“
writes Mr. W. C. Harplip, a well
known granite cutter of Memphis,
Tenn, residing at No. 823 Brunswick.
“l 1 suffered myself from stomach
trouble of the worst sort for five
years and was a complete wreck. My
work was interfered with, but now I
am relieved and I have found it such
a good remedy I recommend it,” con
tinued -Mr. Harplip.
Nine out of ten men and women
are troubled with indigestion. Their
food does them very little good. It
becomes clogged in their systems and
al sorts of troubles occur. To really
get strength and nourishment re
vived we know of ncthing that will
accomplish it as iron will. Acid Iron
Mineral is just the plln. highly econ
centrated product of @ natural iron
deposit, testing ten degrees sic
\ ¥l T
WITA ;%’\ff" T
THAR § WtV |
| f AN ;
Wednesday and Thursday.
STRAND—"“The Auction Biock.”
ODEON—Winifred Allen, in *“For
Valor.”
CRITERION — Wednesday, Elaine
Hammerstein, in ‘“The Co-respondent.”
Thursday, “The Man Without a Coun
try.” '
FORSYTH--Marguerite Clark, in
‘“Bab’s Matinee Idol.” l
ALAMO, No., 2—-Wednesday, ‘‘Wom
anhood, the Glory of the Nation.”™
Thursday, Jack Gardner, in “Men of
the Desert.”” 1
SAVOY-—~Wednesday, Besie Barriscale,
in “The Green Swamp.” Thursday,
William 8. Hart, in “Jim Griggs' De
cision.” \
ALPHA—Wednesday, Neva Gerber, in
“The Mysterious Ship.”” Thursday,
Charlie Chaplin, in ‘By the Sea;” “The
Lure of the Circus.”
VAUDETTE--Wednesday, Ethel Bar
;ymore. in “The FEternal Mother.”
hursday, Geraldine Farrar, in “The
‘Woman CGod Forgot.”
At the Alamo No. 2.
Jack Gardner makes his initial At
lanta appeararnce at the Alamo No. 2
Thursday and Friday in “Men of the
Desert.” The story was written from
acecounts handed down of the Gaylor-
Norris feud, one of the most notorious
of its kind in the West, The picture
wag staged actually on the locations of
this desperate blood-spilling conflict.
Ed Gaylor, a son of the leader of one
faction, supplied the salient details for
the story and asisted in making the
picture.
At the Strand.
Rex Beach’s “The Auction Block”™ is
Indeed the real thing at the Strand this
week., lorelei Knight, the heroine,
isn’t “a character out of a b00k.,” She's
from life. There are scores and hun
dreds of her—an exceptionally beauti
ful daughter of small sown parents in
moderate circumstances who resolve to
turn her beauty to financial profit for
themselves. They bring her to the
great city with the avowedbPurmse of
putting her on the auction block, to be
knocked down to the highest bidder.
l At the Odeon.
That the women of this countrg can
do their bit, even while staying at home,
can be gleaned from the Triangle play,
‘“For Valor” at the Odeon Theater on
today and Thursday,
'Melia Nobbs’ brother was a slacker.
When Canada called for its best men to
volunteer, Henry Nobbs did not come
forward. To ’'Melia, who loved her
brother more than anything else in the
world, this was a crushing blow. She
looked upon Henry as sort of a Greek
grod and felt sure he would be among the
st to offer his services.
At the Forsyth.
The Forsyth is drawing crowds this
‘week to see Marguerite Clark. As a
‘stage-struck girl in ‘Bab’s Matine 1dol,”
the Paramount picture from Mary Rob
erts Rinehart’s well-known Saturday
Evening Post story, Margwrite Clark is
‘her best and most adoring self from the
first foot of film that slides across the
screen to the last.
At the Criterlon.
Beginning Thursday, “The Man With
out a Country,” will be shown at the
Criterion for the last three days of the
week. This is a gresent day version
of Edward Everett Hale's famous story
written in 1863, and is as atlrrinf as al
military march. Florence Laßadle and
H. E. Herbert are featured. From start
to fintsh the flay is full of patriotism
and in theme is right up to the minute,
“The Co-Respondent,” with Elaine
Hammerstein in the stella role, will be
%g'ven final showing at the Criterion on
ednesday.
At the Vaudette.
A change in the program for the Vau
dette for today and for tomorrow was
announced yesterday by the manage
ment, and as a result “The FEternal
Mother,” in which Ethel Barrymore ap
peared on Monday and Tu,sday glvu
way to Louise Glaum in ‘““The Idola
ters,” one of the most daring and most
interesting of the plays presented by
the famous “wolf womsan.” In addition
there will be offered a Triangle eomedy,
‘“His Foothill Folly,” and the combina
tion promises to be a popular and an
entetalning one for all patrons of the
house. On Friday and Saturday Geral
dine Farrar will come in ‘““The Woman
God Forgot,” the most pretentious of
fering of this great singer and actress.
Eldridge Will Case
He %d in Americus
AMERICUS, Nov. 28.-~The FEld
redge will case, involving the distrib
ution of an estate valued at SIOO,OOO,
is belng heard today in Sumter Su
perior Court. The case was appealed
from the Ordinary’s Court after par
ties interested had brought suit to
set aside the will and remove J. J.
Wilson et al. as executors of the
estate,
Hunter Accidentally
Killed by Brother
JESUP, Nov. 28.—While out hunt
ing yesterday, Dan Lane was acci
dentally shot and instantly killed by
his brother. The Lake boys were in
the Altamaha Swamp when the acei
dent happened. They are sons of a
progressive farmer and business man
of Gardi, a small place about seven
‘miles from Jesup. Dan Lane was a
;broter of Osgood Lane, of Jesup.
ounce bottles for family use under a
trade-mark “A-I-M,” which is the
user's guarantee of gquality and
strength. For hospital use and
physicians, it is put up in larger and
smaller sizes, and has been for over
thirty years. Doctors and users in
dorse it as a tonic, appetizer and ByS
tem regulator,
Everyone knows the value of iron.
This is the natural iron itself in
liquid form, easily assimilated and
without the addition of a single drop
of alcohol or other elements injurious
to the kidneys, nerves or health. Be
ing highly concentrated, a few drops
in a glass of water makes a dose.
This makes it a cheaper, stronger and
better medicine for people needing
iron. Whole families take it. A few
drops in each glass of water during
or after meals.
Take it a few days-and note the
difference this iron makes in your
bloed, appetite, digestion and
strength.
Get a bottle today at any good drug
Southern Wholesalers, in Session
Here, Say Company Would
Shift War Tax,
~ Resolutions protesting against the
increase of 10 per cent in express
rates which the Southern FExpress
‘Company has asked of the Interstate
Commerce Commission were adopted
;Tuesday afternoon by the Southern
Wholesale Dry Goods Association in
‘sesslon in Atlanta.
Norman Johnson, secretary and
counsel, declared the express com
‘pa.ny was merely trying to force the
public to shoulder the war tax on its
profits.
“This isn’t an expense, but a charga
which every business must expect to
pay,” said Mr. Johnson. ‘“The express
company already is making the publie
pay 5 per cent on everything shipped,
a charge the Government intended the
company to pay.”
Mr. Johnson took up the record of
the company showing that only 150,
000 had ever been invested in the
Southern Express Company, which
hag paid enormous dividends.
The third division of the dry goods
organization,’' consisting of dealers
from South Carolina, Georgia and
Florida, met at the Chamber of Com
merce to discuss market conditions
and tax questions. An advance in
prices was predicted by them as a
certainty.
City Physicians Explain Why
They Prescribe Nuxated Iron
To Make Beautiful, Healthy Women and Strong, Vigorous Men
NOW BEING USED BY OVER THREE MILLION PEOPLE ANNUALLY.
Quickly Transforms the Flabby Flesh, Tone_lc—ss_Tissues, and Pallid Cheeks of Weak, Anaemic Men and Women
into a Perfect Glow of Health and Beauty—Often Increases the Strength of Delicate, Nervous, Run-
Down Folks 100 Per Cent In Two Weeks Time.
New. York, N. Y.—lt is conservatively
estimated that over three million people
annually in this country alone are taking
' Nuxated Iron. Such astonishing results
shave been reported from its use both by
| doctors and laymen, that a“number of
jphyiclam in various parts of the coun
’try have been asked to explain why they
prescribe it so extensively, and why it
apparently produces so much better re
sults than were obtained from the old
forms of inorganic iron.
Extracts from some of the letters re
ceived are given below:
Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York phy
sician and medical author, says:
‘‘There can be no sturdy iron men
without iron. Pallor means anaemia.
Anaemia means iron deficlency. The skin
of anaemic men and women is pale; the
flesh flabby; the muscles lack tone, the
brain fags and the mem:w fails and
they often become weak, nervous, irrita
ble, despondent and melancholy. When
}the iron goes from the blood of women,
the roses go from their cheeks.
In the most common foods of America,
the starches, st;fars, table syrups, can
dies, polished rice, white bread, soda
crackers, biscuits, macaroni, spaghetti,
tapioca, sago, farina, degerminated corn
‘meal, no longer is iron to be found. Re
fining processes have removed the iron
of Mother Earth from these impoverish
ed foods, and silly methods of home
cookery, by throwing down the waste
pipe the water In which our vegetables
are cooked are responsible for another
‘grave iron loss.
- Therefore, if you wish to preserve your
youthful vim and vigor to a ripe old age,
you must supply the iron deficiency in
your food by using some form of organic
iron, just as you would use salt when
your food has not enough salt.
~ Dr. A. J. Newman, late police surgeon
of the city of Chicago and former house
surgeon, Jefferson Park Hospital, Chi
cago, in commenting on Nuxated Iron,
says: “It has been my particular duty
during the past six years to assist in
keeping Chicago’s five thousand blue
coats in good health and perfect fighting
trim, so that they would be physically
equipped to withstand all manner of
storms and the ravages of nature's ele
ments. 3
“Recently 1 was prompted through an
indorsement of Nuxated Iron by Dr,
Schuyler C. Jaques, visiting su;geon of
St. Elizabeth's Hospital, New York, to
give it a trial. This remedy has proven
through my own tests of it to_excel any
preparation I have ever used for cre
ating red blood, bulld(nfi up the nerves,
strengthening the muscles and correct
ing digestive disorders.”
Dr. f; Sauer, a Boston physician who
has studied widely both in this country
and In great European medical institu
tions, says: “As I have said a hundred
times over, organic iron is the greatest
of all strenxg,th builders. If people would
only take Nuxated Iron when theg feel
weak or rundown, instead of osing
themselves with habit-forming drugs,
stimulants and alcoholic beverages, I am
convinced that in this way they could
ward off disease, preventing it becoming
organic in thousands of cases and there
by the lives of thousands might be
saved who now die every year from
pneumonia, grigpe. kidney, liver, heart
trouble and other dangerous maladies.
The real and true cause which started
their diseases was nothh;f more nor less |
than a weakened condition brought on
by lack of iron in the blood. 1
The easiest way to
relieve office congestion is
to consult The Georgian
and American’s “Offices
for Rent” column. The
quickest way to rent of
fices is by advertising them
in the same columns.
The Georgian and American
Atlanta’s Want Ad Directory
Read for Profit—Use for Results
« N
$3,000 Awarded for
Trolley Car Injuries
Mrs. W. F. Black Wednesday had
been awarded a verdict of $3,000 in
her suit against the Georgia Railway
and Power Company for injuries re
ceived in a stampede on a Central
avenue trolley car last September.
The ‘case had been on trial for two
days in Judge George L. Bell's divi
sion of Superior Court.
Attorney Thomas J. Lewis, who had
just received a commission as lieuten
ant at the officers’ training camp at
Fort Oglethorpe, aided in the fight for
Mrs. Black. He was associated in the
case with Westmoreland & Smith.
Mrs. Black told the jury that she was
trampled by otheér passengers in try
ing to get out of the car when the
controller box caught fire. She sued
for $30,000.
CIGARMAKERS STRIKE.
BOSTON, Nov. 28—To enforce
their demands for a 5 per cent in
crease in wages 2,500 members of the
Cigarmakers’ Union refused to return
to work today. The walk-out will
result in a sympathetic strike of 500
members of the Cigar Factory Strip
pers’ Union,
seurnson g Carter’s Little Liver Pills
"c’*,:..“ i?.“ ._..‘_.‘_. Make you feel the joy of living, It is impossible
g::er‘y ‘ e CARTER‘S te be happy or feel good when you are
Way P IITVTEL& CONSTIPATED
PILLS. This old remedy will set you right over night.
, R
it W Gcioly W
PALLID PEOPLE CARTER'S IRON PILLS
y & Dr. Schuyler €. Jaques,
= visiting surgeon of St. Eliz
abeth’s Hospital, New York
OFFEICE MOURS DR.FERU City, said: “I have never be-
G fore given out any medical
RS '.::: 4% WES NS 4 ‘] information or advice for
RO e publication, as I ordinarily
" do not believe in it. But in |
the case of Nuxated Iron [ §
feel T would be remiss in my 4
duty not to mention it. I
have taken it myself and
“?‘ given it to my patients with
most sur-
Vb < prising
QZ 5 { and sat
e A \ ‘A’
3 ; ‘ \
\ " <
o 0] DY
A
.\‘. \\ '
0
‘““Not long ago a man came to me who
was nearly half a century old and asked
me to give him a preliminary examina
tion for life insurance. I was aston.shed
to find him with a blood pressure of a
boy of 20 and as full of vigor, vim and
vitality as a young man; in fuact, a
young man he really was, notwithstand
ing his age. The secret, he said, was
taking iron—Nuxated Iron had fi'led him
with renewed life. At 30 he was in bad
health; at 46 he was careworn and near
ly all in—now at 50, after taking Nux
ated Iron a miracle of vitality and his
face beaming with the buoyancy of
youth,
“Iron is absolutely necessary to enable
your blood to change food into living
’tlssue. Without it, no matter how much
or what you eat, your food raerely pass
es through you without doing you any
good, and as a_consequence you become
weak, pale and sickly-looking, just like
a plant trying to grow in a soil deficient
in iron. If you are not strong or well
you owe it to yourself to make the fol
lowing test: See how long you can work
or how far you can walk without be
coming tired. Next take two five-grain
tablets of ordinary Nuxatgd Iron three
times per day after meals for two weeks.
Then test your strength again and see
how much you have gained. I have seen
dozens of nervous, rur-down people who
were ailing all the while double thelr
strength and endurance and entirely rid
themselves of all symptoms of dyspep
sia, liver and other troubles in from ten
to fourteen days’ time simply bK taking
iron in the proper {orm. And this after
they had in some cases been doctoring
for months without obtaining any ben
efit. But don't take the oid forms of
reduced iron, iror acetate or tincture of
iron simply to save a few cents. The
iron demanded by Mother Nature for the
red coloring matter in the blood of her
children is, alas! not that kind of iron.
You must take iron in a form that can
be easily absorbed and assimilated to do
you any good, otherwise it may prove
worse than useless. Many an athlete
and prize-fighier has won the day sim
ply because he knew the secret of great
strength and endurance and filled his
blood with ircn before he went into the
affray; while many another has gone
down to inglcrious defeat simply for the
lack of iron.” \
Dublin Churches to
Hold Union Servi
DUBLIN, Nov. 28.—Thanksgiving
in Dublin will be celebrated genera)-
ly. Stores and warehouses, ginneries
and almost every other business housa
will close for the day, hunting parties
galore will spend the day in the ficldg
and swamps, and a unien Thanksgiva
ing service will be held at the Henry
Meémorial Presbyterian Church.
Each Thanksgiving Day all the con<
gregations of the ¢ity unite in a
service at one of the churches and
some one of the ministers delivers a
special sermon. This year Rev. W. i,
Budd, pastor of the First Methodisg
Church, will preach the sermon, at
‘the Presbyterian Chureh. There will
‘be special music.
MOTHER®S FRIERD
FOR {
Expectant Mothers
. g |
istac- /s \ ’ 4
tory re- '
suits, And
those who wish R
quickly to increase
thelr strength, power
and endurance will find
it. a most remarkable and
wonderfully effective remedy.”
Dr. H. B. Vail, a medical examinery
late of the Baltimore and Columbus Hos~
pitals, .says: “Time and again, I have
prescribed organic iron—Nuxated Iron—
and surprised patients at the rapidity
with which the weakness and general
debility were replaced by a renewed feel
ing of strength and vitality. One man
47 years old who had praectically worn
himself out with stimulating medicines
and nausebus concoctions came to me
recently after a month’s course of Nux>.
ated Iron and declared, ‘Doctor, I feel as
full of life and energy as when a boy of,
21.' When you compare a_product like
Nuxated Iron, which is easily assimilat.
ed and does not injure the teeth, with
the older forms of inorganic iron, which
upset the stomach, ruined the teeth
and passed through the body without
doing any good, it is not surprising that
illions of people annually are now tak
ing Nuxated Iron and physicians every=
where are prescribing it.”’
NOTE—Nuxated Iron, wheh is preseribed and
recommended above by physicians in sueh a great
varlety of cases, 1S not & patent medicine nor
secret remedy, but one which i 3 well known to
druggists and whose iron constitugnts zre
\widaly prescribed by eminent physicians both
in Europe and America. Unlike the older in
organic iron products it is easily assimilated,
does not injure the teeth, make them black,
‘nor upset the stomach; on the eoutrary, it is &
most potent remedy in mearly all forms of in
digestion as well as for neryous, run-down con~
ditions. The manufacturers have such great
confidence in nuxated iron, that they offer to
forfeit SIOO.OO to any charitable institution lif
they cannot take any man or woman under 60
who lacks iron, and inerease their strength 100
per _cent or over in four weeks’ time, provided
they have ‘no serious organic trouble. Tgey also
offer to refund’ your money if it does not at least
double your strength and endurance in ten days’
time. It is dispensed in this clty by Jacots
‘thg and all good druggists.
The Uncle Remus
Stories Appear
Exclusively in
The
ATLANTA
GEORGIAN
You and the
children will en
joy reading
them