Newspaper Page Text
6
\
When that tightness appears In your
¢hest and the sharp pains signify an in- |
flammatgion, you need yellow mustard. i
Mustard plasters are all right—in faot
they're fine—but Begy's Mustarine, made
of yellow mustard and other pain m»mrny-]
ers, is cleaner, quicker and much more
effective. .
The minute [
you rub 1t on P 1
tte strengih Q, \ A
will surprise W 3
you Heat \. I
sages pain, re- o
member, and /.
there is more \ l——f
soncentrat e d '
non - blister- {
ing heat in a \ ( 1
Box of Mus- 4 » ‘
tarine thaup ’ e |
in anything (
else you can ]
buy. —— . P 1
Use it for sore throat, tonsiilitis, pleu- |
risy, neuralgia and headache or when dis
tressed with lumbago, rheumatism, gout |
solatica because heat eases patn, Of course
it can not blister—3o and 60 cents ati
druggists or by mall. 8 C. Wells & Co.
Leßoy, N. Y, 1
BEGY'S
7 YN S
w THE YELLOW BoX
Druggist Says Ladies Are
Using Recipe of Sage Tea
and Sulphur.
Hair that loses its color and lustre,
or wher. it fades, turns gray, dullund
Jifeless, is caused by a lack of sulphur
in the hair. Our grandmother made
:fi o mixture of Sage Tea and Sul
ur to keep her loeks dark and beau
tiful, and thousands of women and
men who value that even color, that
Peautiful dark shade of hair which is
#0 attractive, use only this old-time
IQC?JB
owadays we get this famous mix
ture improved by the addition of
other ingredients by asking at any
+drug store for a bottle of “Wyeth's
Sage and Sulpbur Compound,” which
darkens the hair so naturally, so
evenly, that nobody can possibly tell
it hase been applied. You just damp
en a sponge or soft brush with it
end draw this through your hair, tak
ing one small strand at a time By
morning the gray hair disappears;
but what delights the ladies with
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com
pound is that, besides beautifully
darkening the hair after a few appli
cations, it also brings back the gloss
and lustre and gives it an appearance
of abundance.—Adv.
Biliousness
Relieved In a
Third the Ti
Treating the Liver Alone Is Not
Sufficient—To Get the Quick
est Results Treat the Kidneys
and Blood Also. ;
Dr. Hitchcock’s Liver, Kidney
and Blood Powders Tone Up
the Liver, Stimulate the Kid
neys to Healthy Action, Thus
Purifying the Blood.
A VEGETABLE COMPOUND,
WILL NOT MAKE YOU SICK
When bilious, suffering with indi
gestion, headaches, rheumatism, ete.,
your liver alone is not to blame, This
upset condition may be caused by
elther the kidneys or blood, and the
liver simply refuses to function out
of sympathy.
What affects the liver also affects
the kidneys and blood; therefore the
obply way to speedily put the entire
system back to its normal healthy
egondition is to right the liver and |
kidneys and purify the blood with
Dr. Hitchcock’s Liver, Kidney &
Biood Powders 4
25 cents will bay a large tin hoxl
Take as directed topight and it will
straighten you out by morning.
Guaranteed to please or money re
funded —Adyv
MUSTARD PLASTERS!
Musterole Works Without the
Blister—Easier, Quicker
‘There's no sense in mixing a mess
of mustard, flour and water when you
can easily relieve pain, soreness or stiff
ness with alittle c’ean, white Musterole.
“Justerole is made of pure oil of
suustard and other helpful ingredients,
combined in the form of the present
white ointment. It takes the place of
mustard plasters, will not blister,
Musterole usually gives prompt relief
from sore throat, b:.o&chit‘s, tonsil‘itlis,
croup, stiff neck! ma, neuralgia,
headache, umg:;&n. pleurisy,rheuma
tism, lumbago, pains and aches of the
back or joints, sprains, sore muscles,
bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of
the chest (it often prevents pneumonia).
80c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50,
MSTEROLE
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ! v
ATLANTA GEORGIAN g " 8 A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes rew WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1920.
AATIFICATION OF
JUFFRAGE [N
1970 DOUBTFUL
Intervention by a Party Is Hope
of Women to Vote in Elec
» . .
tions This Year.
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Feb, 11,—The fed
eral suffrage amendmentg giving
women the right to vote in national,
ielectionu is trembling in the balance,
needing for ratification purposes
’uevon more States out of a total of
ten yet to be heard from-—and many
of these doubtful. It is beginning to
look as though only the heroic inter
vention of one or both of the big
parties can save the measure from
defeat in so far as the 1920 presiden~
tial election is concerned.
This intervention, it is ‘believed
here, may ultimately come about, for
with women's suffrage generally con
sidered eventually inevitable and
with some 16,000,000 votes dependent
thereon, male politicilans here are pre
pared to resort to drastic measures
to prevent the particular party from
having to bear the blame of defeat~
ing the mok'ement. .
Today Idaho will east her vote for
or against national woman’s suffrages
Tomorrow Arizona’s Legislature, In
‘speclal session, will do likewise. On
‘Mnnday New Mexico will followisuig
and though none of these States is
considered a certainty, the National
Woman's party here is hopeful, ¢
Oklahoma probably will vote next,
Governor Robertson of that State
having been urged to call a special
gession of the Leglslature for Feb
ruary 23. As Oklahoma has already
adopted woman's suffrage, it is be
lieved she will ratify the federal
amendment,
Maryland’'s Legislature, it is an
nounced, is in regular session thils
month and ig expected to ratify, but
as to the remaining States, Connec
ticut, Vermont, Delaware, West Vir
ginla and Washington, the future is
very hazy.
In some of these States the gover
nors ‘are opposed to the amendment
and refuse to call the special session
necessary to pass upon it
Better Than
|
£y
l Whiskey for
y
!New Elixir, Called Aspironal,
Medicated With Latest Scien
tific Remedies, Used and In
dorsed by European and Amer
ican Army Surgeons to Cut
Short a Cold and Prevent Com
plications.
. . . w
Every Druggist in U. S. Instruct
ed to Refund Price While You
Wait at Counter if Relief Does
Not Come Within Two Minutes.
DELIGHTFUL TASTE, IMMEDI
ATE RELIEF, QUICK WARM-UP
The sensation of the year In the
drug trade is Aspironal, the Two-
Minute cold and cough rellevei, au
thoritatively guaranteed py the (Ab
| oratorios; tested, approved and must
enthusiastically endorsed by the
highest authorities, and proclaimed
by the common #wople as ten times
‘aß quick and effective as whisky,
rock and rye, or any other cold and
cough remedy they have ever tried.
~ All drug stores are now supplied
with the wonderful new elixir, go all
you have to do to get rid of that coll
is to step into the nearest drug store,
hand the clerk half a dollar for a
bottle of Aspironal and tell him to
gerve you two teaspoonsful with four
teaspoonsful of water In a glass,
With your watch in your hand, tmke
the drink at one swallow and call
for your money back in two minutes
if you can not’feel your cold fading
away like a dream witain the time
limit. Don't be bashful, for all drug
gists invite you and expect you to
try it. Everybody's doing it.
When your cold or cough Is re
lleved take the remainder of the
bottle home to your wife and babies,
foe Aspironal is by far the safest and
mose effective, the easlest to take
and mds! agreeabis " Oux
rémedy for infants and children.—
Advertisement.
R R
e HAIR BALSAM
RS ' 8 Removes Dandrufl S topstairFalling
N Restores Color and
YRS Beautyte Gray and Faded Hair
N 500 _and SI.OO at drugyista,
/7 AHlsco>, Chem, Wis, P'atobo o
For two years my stomach trou
was very bad. My doctor had to
inject morphine on several occasions
when 1 was stricken with these at
tacks Since taking 4 bottles of
Mayr's Wonderful Remedy 1 have
been entirely well and am serving in
the artilJery, having been pronounced
n perfect health by government phy
sicians,” It is a simple, "harmless
preparation that removes the ea
tarrhal mucus from the intestinal
ract and allays the inflammation
‘ ch causes practically all stomach,
r and intestinal ailments, includ
ing appendicits One dose will con
vince or money refunded. Jacobs'
Pharmaey »nd druggists everywhore.
A dvertigsement.
R T R o Co G
47, AT e 7 AR Ay RN S =) ?‘ »-?,_'r:.;
s A A NN DY T 7 ViE ’
% @ V! LI i~ {3 B ol A
é4 : ,MA ". ’ ';.4-.':.,:% ’ : . “"3;--"’
OMEHOW, on a day like thig (it
S is 1:18 p. m, on Tuesday) one
~gets a down-hearted and gen
erally disgusted attitude toward life
in general amd Georgia weather in
‘mrflcular. It starts running through
one’s subconscious mind a slow and
melancholy air, its cadence fitted to
the drip of the drizzly rain on the
window sills, but with the staccato
melody of the telegraph instruments
running through it as a thread. And
one wonders why the dusky but melo
dlous Professor Handy of Memphis |
didn’t start his series of plaintive and
weird compositions with the “Rainy
Day Blues” instead of reflecting the
melancholy of the cornfield hand with
'the melon season over and the pos
sum season still waftning upon the!
‘flrst frost. Perhaps it was because
'the weather in Memphis was better—
'but that is impossible. There is no
' ehill quite so penetrating as that
which blows off a . big river, its
waters xvousn by the melted ice of
the uplahd streams. It may be that“
Professor Handy knew,_of a panacea
m a rainy winter day. 1 recall a
oction the bald headed dispenser
at Doc filottum's place used to mix. It
was called a Mamie Taylor, and it
would make one oblivious to mm,'
'snow, rain, debts or unrequited af
fection. But the dispenser and his
balm have gone to the land of de-‘
parted spirits. I read Mike's obituary
lln the Commercial Appeal two years
ago, and the headlines in all the pa
pers from Puget Sound to Panasofkee
called attention to the demise of his
favorite prescription. ;
Ah, well, what is there to do with
a rainy day but put up with it and
hope for the best tomorrow? But you
do not really hope, if the Rainy Day
Blues, like an influenza germ, is run
ning through your system, You know
that things will be worse tomorrow;
that if it does pot rain it will turn
colder, with a north wind that chilis
the house amnd keeps you busily
shoveling black nuggets into the
crimson throat of the black ogre who
lives down cellar. A week ago, on
one sunny afternoon, we took stock
of our supply of lamp carbon crystals
and felt assured it would last until
April 1. Today we know that it will
do well to last through February, and
we feel bitter resentment at the cal
endar printers’ running in an extra
day before Spring. If Leap Year must
have an extra day, why not have it
in midsummer, in the vacation sea
son, where we could use it to some
advantage? And yet we prate about
Twentieth Century efficiency!
Not for hundreds and hundreds of
years has the slightest move beeen
made toward changing that extra day
Girl Gives Life t
€ 10
.
Save Baby Neice
From Death by Fire
A story of herolc self sacrifice in
which a 16-year-old girl gave her
oY\ life to save that of a y»ung
chlld was revealed in the death Mon
day in Atlanta of Miss Isabelle Her
rera of Key West: Miss Herrera died
as the result of burns received when
she rescued the baby of her sister,
Mrs, (¢, Evans of Camp Gordon, from
the flames of an open grate,
Miss Herrera was injured on
Christmas day. Since then she has
been a patient in an Atlanta sanita
riumy succumbing to the injuries she
received after the doctors had made
a determined fight to save her life.
Migs Herrera had come to Atlanta
to spend the holidays with her sister,
and for a while on Christmas day was
left alone in the house at Camp Gor
don with the child. The chlfii was
playing about the room and got dan
gerously near the fire in the open
grate. In snatching the baby away
fro mthe flames, Miss Herrera's dress
caught fire and before she could ex
tinguish the flames, she was serfously
burned, She received emergency
treatment at the hospital at the camp
and was then taken to the private
sanitarlum where the surgeons bat
tled to save her life.
The body of Miss Herrera was
taken to the Greenberg and Bond
chapel, and will be sent to Key West
for burial. DBesides her sister, Mrs.
iivans, she is survived by two other
sigters, Miss Antonio Herrera and
Mrs. William Soto, and one brother,
Oestein Herrera,
.
Mrs. Sallie Cox Stanton
Dead at Ann Arbor
Announcement of the death of Mrs.
Sallle Cox Stanton, member of a
widely known Georgia family, in Ann
Arbor, Mich., has heen received by
relatives in Atlanta. The body will
arrive in Atlanta early Thursday
morning and will be taken to the
chapel of H. M. P#tterson and Son.
Funeral services will be held Thurs
day afternoon at 8 o'clock from the
chu{)el. Rev. 8. C. McConnell offi
ciating, and burial will be in West
view Cemetery.
Mrs. Stanton was a member of the
Cox family, who have owned and op
erated Cox College, in College T‘a&,
for two generations., She made her
home in California for a number of
years, but after the death of her hus
band returned to College Park and
remained until 1918, She then went
to Ann Arbor to be with her son. Sur
viving her are two sons, Frank C.
Stanton of Detroit, Mich,, and Lieut.
W. L. Stanton of Aan Arbor; three
daughters, Mrs, Maloy Henry of
Cleveland, Ohio.; Mrs., Walter T.
Forbes of Athens, and Miss Lucy
Stanton of Wellesley © College; one
gister, Mrs. Willlam . Crenshaw of
College Park: one brgfiwr, Wwilllam
8. Cox of Collee Park;%one sister-in
law, Mrs. Mamie Cox of Dublin.
Funeral of Mrs. Fluker
To Be Held Thursday
Funeral services for Mril. Julia
Muker, 71, ploneer Atlanth woman,
who died Tuesday afternoon at the
residence of her daughter, Mrs, W. R.
Branham 825 BKast North avenue,
will be held Thursday afternoon at
2:30 o'clock from the residence, hurial
in Oakland Cemetery.
Mrs. Fluker was the wife of the
late Jesse M. Fluker. She was born
in Penfield, Greene County, in 1848
and had been a resident of Atlanta
for thirty-five years. Surviving her
are three daughters, Mrs. George J.
Cdrey of San Francisco and Mrs, W,
R Branham and Mrs. W. Hunter
Adams of Atlanta; two sons, Julian
M. and Eugene R. Fluker of Atlanta:
one sister, Mrs. R. V. Forrester of
Hurtsboro, Ala.
into the summer time, We are too
prone to follow In the footsteps of
our ancestors. Old Alex W. Coper
nicus or Julius H. Caesar or whoever
it was who prepared the copy for the
calendar had a rent note due on
March 1 and his wife had just pur
chased a dancing frock, and he had to
do something and do it quick, so he
stuck in that I.eap Year day and
stalled the landlord long enough to
g 0 out and touch a friend. Four years
later, I suppose, he got up against it
again and once more called upon the
little Leap Year joker, and then it
became a babit and then a tradition
and then it became a constitutional
amendment, I suppose, ‘
Bus moping over the futility of
Leap Year hasn’t done anything to
ward improving the weather. We
could put up with conditions better,
maybe, if it were not for two or three
immigrants from Southern California
who gather about my desk and read
the papers from home and recite the
alleged fact that the total rainfall in
Los Angeles in twelve months has
been five and three-tenths inches, or
some such figure, and that they
never owned an overcoat out there
except for aeroplaning and such
winter sports. They make me won
der why they left there, but when [
suggest that the sheriff might know,
they become peeved and switch the
subject to the eight million miles of
concrete highways on the Pacific
coast as compared to the Georgia
weather man’s daily report, which de
clares another strip of the Dixle
Highway is “impassible.”
Oh, well, Congress hasn’t adopted
an amendment prohibiting sleep,
though it probably will when it gets
round to it, and then they’'ll have to
quit making speeches in public and
circulating the Congressional Record.
I've succeeded in getting to the end
of another column without going out
into the weather after facts to adorn
it, and I think I'll go home and take
a nap.
Has Grip LeftY '
, f‘t-:i , /1,//fi/ —
Rim Badßack?
W w 2 SURTNY HERE'S surely good
-AN % //////// > T surely some good reason
, //,/i/}/ég%\\(//;‘\\ ;g;//// ,%%%%% for that lame, aching back. Likely
//‘ AR :}.’» e ’f’%’«“\ i R / //% PAis
’/(7l}',/’:*,- /}}m}\"\j\t Y //,j/ /// //4(@" | it’s your kidneys. Your kidneys need
“ s’%///’)\ ”)‘;fi']‘ fi\\\’/f "/ B //// 2 ///@”w ‘ ;j help occasionally just as your bowels
z%’h I ."’i /// ‘ /’/ " \\\\ ¢ need help. And it’s mighty poor policy
////%/ i\ \\ (7 ////// W 7 >\§W to neglect the slightest kidney weak-
WK A cold, chill in oftti
7// i WS %// 2 ness. A cold, chill or strain ofttimes
// / | ’,{ WKI : 7/// congests the kidneys and slows them
/ 1 /// ' ,{f’f/} “Every P.-cmn/é'/n up. Poisons accumulate in the system
I & AWV TellsaSteryt ond many mysterious aches and pains
result. That may be the reason for that dull, naoging backache, those sharp, sudden pains
and that tired, worn-out feeling. You may have headaches and dizzy spells, too, with per
haps, some annoying bladder irregularity. You owe it to yourself to get well and to stay
well. Neglect may lead to gravel, dropsy or Bright'’s disease. Use Doan’s Kidney Pills.
They have helped many Atlanta people and should help you. Ask your neighbor!
These Are Atlanta Cases:
W
- SIMPSON S:[:ET
W. B. Swanson, 364 Simpson street, says: “About
four years ago I started to use Doan’s Kidney Pills
for my back and I wouldn’t be without them, for they
proved to be just as represented. Now, if I don't
feel right or am tired and languid and my kidneys
get sluggish, 1 take a few doses of Doan’s Kidney
Pills and they always give me wonderful relief. It is
a pleasure to recommend this medicine.”
WEST PEACHTREE PLACE
Mrs. B. F. Hughes, 86 W. Peachtree place, says:
“I was troubled with smart pains across the small
of my back, had terrible headaches and sometimes
I could hardly stand the pain. My nerves were all
unstrung and they jumped from the least noise. T
was so dizzy that the room felt as if it were going
around. The worst trouble was the swelling of my |
feet. I could hardly put my shoes on. I was always
tired and I knew I needed something for my kidneys.
As Doan's Kidney Pills were so highly recommend
»d, I got a box and began taking them. They en
tirely rid me of all the trouble and soon made me
trong and well.”
D ; K‘ d I :ll
Every Druggist Has Doan’s, 60c a Box. Foster-Milburn Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Buffalo, N, Y,
|
|
; Building permits aggregating near
’ly $600,000 have been taken out by
the Massell Realty Company for the
‘erection of.a number of apartment
houses and store buildings, plans for
which have been announced from
time to time in The Georgian. The
two most important structures will
be apartment houses, one to be built
at 400 North Boulevard and the other
to be built at Ponce de Leon and
Moreland avenues,
Work on several buildings has been
in progress for several weeks. Among
the structures to be built by the Mas
gell Construction Company for the
Massell Realty Company are the two
apartments, six stores at 513 Peach
tree street, a building for the Goldin
Harness Manufacturing Company at
129 South Forsyth street and a build
ing for the Munn Sign Company at
103 Luckie Street.
Ben J. Massell, head of the com
pany, says that the total operations
of the company now amount to more
than $1,000,000, represented in build
ings now being erected or to be con
structed soon.
ARMY RECRUITS.,
Applicants accepted for the United
States army at the Atlanta recruiting
station are William C. Cullifer, Ge
neva, Ala., medical department; Hil
lary H. Culliver, Elba, Ala. infantry;
Charlie E. Silvers, Dorchester, Tex.,
infantry; John F. Mann, Phenix City,
Ala.; William H. Harbuck, Butts,
Ga., schemical warfare; Mannon
H. Stonecypher, Martin, Ga.,
signal corps; Lee R, Blackwell,
Maryville, Tenn., chemical warfare;
William FEvans, Millen, Ga., infantry;
Lemmie W, Keen, Dublin, Ga., infan
try, and Cleveland Cofield, Vidalia,
Ga., infantry.
4
The police have thrown out the
dragnet for a gang of burglars oper
ating in Atlanta and reaping a rich
harvest from homes and apartment
houges. Bix or eight entries were
reported to headquarters Tuesday,
the majority of them being on the‘
North Side. |
Several articles of jewelry were
taken from the home of J. V. Logun.'
15 West Twelfth street; a SSO Lib
erty bond was stolen from the resi
dence of Frank Irons, at 382 Spring
street; a gold watch disappeared
ix?
Out of Fix?
"Phone Your Groecer or
Druggist for a Dozen Bottles
of this delicious digestant—a
glass with meals gives delightful
relief, or no charge for tne first
dozen used.
Shivar Ale
PURE DIGESTIVC AROMATICS WITH
SHIVAR MINERAL WATER AND GINGER
Nothing like it for renovating ola
worn-out stomachs, converting
food into rich blood and sound
flesh.
Bottled and guaranteed by the
celebrated Shivar Mineral Spring,
Shelton, S. C. If your regular
dealer can not supply you, tele
‘DhOHß
McCORD-STEWART CO.
Distributors for Atlanta.
B R RA——
POWELL STREET
Mrs. E. C. Thompson, 113 Powell street, says:
“About three years ago, from doing my housework
and overlifting, I strained my back. It started with
a pain over my kidneys. I had severe headaches
and sometimes I could hardly stand the pain. My
nerves were all to pieces and dizzy spells came over
me when specks would float before my eyes and blur
my sight., My kidneys didn't act as they should,
either, and I was certainly in bad shape. Doan’s
Kidney Pills were recommended to me, and I bought
a supply. They soon put my kidneys in good con
dition, and I gladly give this indorsement.”
; 4(, el :u:.’r;;:“v:’; g %.’fif::'7" .’ -\
-~ R OB | STPWRRERS AT, G\
| O [ e |
L | AALTIYATTE Ql. N ‘r.j“ PR
W | P RSN Y R
A\ AR rS T R\
R San iR AN ELIER S e
NU package of Doan's Kidney Pills is
genuine unless it bears the maple
leaf trade-mark and the signature—
“Jas, Doan.”
from 55 Luckie street, and more jew
elry was removed from the home of
I. W. Lawhorn, 20 Laßose Terrace,
Oakland City.
Burglars also entered three apart
ments at 627 Piedmont avenue occu
pied bysMrs. Alice Hodnett, Benja-
HOLLYWOOD
The “Silent City’” Beautifnl
River Car Line
Office: Candler Annex
=)
A
BAYER
! ‘
At the first ‘chilll Take Genuine Aspirin marked with tha
““Bayer Cross’’ to break up your Cold and relieve the Headache,
Fever, Stuffiness.
Warning! To get Genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for
over 19 years, you must ask for ‘‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,’’ and
look for the name ‘‘Bayer’’ on the package and on each tablet.
Always say ‘‘Bayer.””
Each ‘‘Bayer package’’ contains safe and proper directions for
the relief of Colds—aiso for Headache, Neuralgia, Toothache,
Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis and for Pain generally.
of irt
I-id Spirin
Boxes of 12—Bottles of 24—Bottles of 100—Also Capsules—All druggists
Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of )}oqogggtiffl@uter of Sallcyllcaeid
SUNSET AVENUE
J. E. Jackson, Prop. of grocery, 244 Sunset Ave.,
says: “Some years ago I used Doan’s Kidney Pills
when I suffered from pain and weakness in my back.
They gave me such relief that I am glad to give this
indorsgment. Doan’s are just as represented.”
Mr. Jackson gave the above statement on January
28, 1914, and on April 5, 1918, he added: “I ean
say the same now of Doan’s Kidney Pills as I did
in my last statement, for they have done me a whole
lot of good. I have great faith in Doan's.”
e
HUNNICUTT STREET
W. L. Thateh, 129 Hunnicutt street, says: *“I was
troubled a lot by the kidney secretions. Sometimes
the secretions were scanty and then again I had to
get up seven or eight times at night to pass them:
hat broke my rest. I felt drowsy and langufd all the
time. Doan’s Kidney Pills relieved me of the trouble,
and I believe if I had taken more of them I would
have been cured.” y
'min Head and J. C. Wilson. They
broke in during the absence of the
‘negro porter on an errand. He re
turned before they left, discovered
their presence and opened fire®on
them.
I E. A. MORGAN’S
: 18, Gold
' WEDDING RINGS
ARE THE BEST
10 and 12 E. HUNTER ST,
First door from Keely's, Cer. Whitehall,