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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • Page 3

Location:
Atlanta, Georgia
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THIS WOMAN'S CASE GERMANY TO MAKE WAS THE TALK OF! PEACE PROPOSALS "My Women Friends Can All Tell You How Bad Off I Says Mrs. Ratteree in Sincere Statement. our way think about Tanlac and count the houses because everybody la taking all talking' all talking ana tney are about it," know how bad off I medicine has done for i children, who "all the neigh in 1 only trouble. I suffered from severe paina in my stomach and bowels. Sometimes these pains would be so had they I on a.

tiven my Kianeys were I would suffer at times so bad I would almost tret desperate. Nothing in the way of medicine seemed to me any good, and I Just dragged and dragged tlong in this condition for week after 'finally a friend of mine who had used the medicine advised me to try day I got It, for it has acted magic than medicine In my "I gained 5 pounds on tie and there Is hardly any can aee for yourself I don't look yel flve weeks ago, and I In fact. I I began taking it "Tanlac is certainly the grandest oing Its praise as long as I live." Tanlac is sold in Atlanta exclusive the Jacobs Pharmacy Company. RIGHT NOW" "SUPERIOR7 I MOTOR TRUCKS I MANUFACTURED BY I I E.G. Wiilingham's Sons Doctor Knows We fill them just as ho orders them Kead Trie Constitution Want Ads THE CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1915.

Terms Will Be Discussed With Austria and Then Submitted to Allies Conference Wanted at The Hague. Geneva, Switzerland, December 28. (Via A dispatch to The Tribune from Vienna says: "Chancellor von Bethmann Hollweg is expected in Vienna shortly with the full conditions under wmcn tne central powers will accept peace. After discussing the terms with Baron von Rurian. the Austrian minister, the con ditions will be officially communicated to the allies, Germany suggesting that the Itrst conierence FRANCE WANTS WAR, SAYS GENERAL GALLIENI.

Paris, December "Eighteen months ago France wanted peace. To sourees," said General Galllenl, the minister of war. in asking the senate today to approve the action of the chamber of deputies in giving him the General Galllenl'e remarks were greet ed with prolonged applause. word" of peace In In a bad citl continued Che minister of war. 'Mothers are not mourning for lost they want them be avenged.

The 1917 class will leave with the a quenea any suspicions or evil doing, when the automobile's owner arrived Jterwara ne stated that the mber was N. 7800. Eighteen Soldiers Killed. Posen. Prussia Eighteen soldiers wi ed and forty sei (Via turning irom the Bentschen staUon today.

BETTER ROUND TRIP ROUTES TO BE SOUGHT Officials of Southern Travelers' Association Are Visitors to Atlanta. Having met with success in their 2 cent mileage book and split ticket campaigns, the next movement Into which the Southern association proposes to throw its strength win be that of obtaining a round trip ticket fnr commercial travelers OUt Of New fork and throughout the south. This was the statement yesieraay 01 a. a. Cohen, ex president of the association, who with Resident Rudy Gras and ex President James E.

Sanders, is making a tour of the south. These three officials of the association were stopping at the Piedmont hotel Tuesday, Atlanta being the first leg! of their swing around Dixie. Tney win go from here to Birmingham and New Orleans, and thence through Texas be returnine to New York. It is the purpose of these officials to make an investigation of the business conditions of the south and of tne progress the association Is making. The Southern Travelers' association is planning to secure for the travelers ated last June.

Tuesday not be held until Juries received by two of the men can be ascertained. The nine men appearing before Recorder Johnson were M. 8. Dehor, Cllbe Maloof, Mike Dommey, John Jacobs. H.

Abraham, John Aokel, A. F. Maloof, Michael Najour and Mender Maloof. G. S.

WHITEHAD WINS RHODES SCHOLARSHIP December 28. (Special.) George Stevens Whitehead, of Carleton, son of former state senator wai E. Whitehead, has been named ai hodes scholarship from Georgia. He Jtotoer, and will remain three yean fng special work. He made one of the Rothschild's Yeai End Shoe Sale Truly the Sensation of Atlanta We broke all selling records Monday and Tuesday.

Hundreds were away disappointed Decause tney couldn't get All sizes if you come auwu viu Bvuio. we iegieb uus occurrence, ana suggest that they TODAY CLEARANCI prices have startled those who know what good shoes usually cost. We are selling shoes iar oeiow tueir wnoiesaie vaiue. we always ao bo at tne ena oi eacn year, and tnavs why you should attend this sale $3d2 new styles by other stores for $4, $5, $6, $7, in grays, bronxe, blues, Havana brown, black, dull French and patent kid, button, lace and side button. Any style you want is here at $2.65 and $3.40.

I Peachtree 52 Peachtree Street Corner Walton Street Cotton Crop Sold, Planters Invest Money inM orphine Drug Is Purchased for Use of Aged Mother of South Georgia Cotton Growers. Names Withheld. 1 i ui v'by government officials commercial travelers may come south left in cruel over one route ana return Dy anotner. This would allow sucn travelers fflclals In the eai have found them very favorable Dlan. The Western Travelers' of thP nation.

It demands that tlon already has such a ticket tnose cnargea wxn tne amy receive end befoi with her allies, obtained what I work of peacel' with shouts of wanted! I resume my lause. Interspersed isterial seat. General Galllenl received the congratulations of his colleagues. The unner houaa immaHiititlv nui. ed the bill and authorised the public BOLD AUTOMOBILE THIEF STEALS CAR FROM PEACHTREE The Atlanta police department, which has been troubled from time to time with the peculiar boldness with which local thieves have possessed themselves of automobiles along the city's streets, were aroused yesterday by another free hand robbery of a machine standing in front of the AragOD hotel Several men discussing their after supper cigars at the front windows of this Peachtree hostlery noticed a well passenger car standing by the curbing and drive away.

A few noticed that he was not the same person who had left it a short time previous, but the thief's businesslike deliberatenese How an amount of morphine equal in quantity to that usually carried by many wholesale drug companies was bought up by two cotton planters south Georgia, so that their aged mother might never be without the dope, was revealed by a Christmas ln TestlgaUon made by Special Revenue Agent Claud Rountree. He has returned with 295 dram bottles of the drug, upon which government officials place a value of $300, in view of the rapidly increasing orice of morphine. The aged mother of the two cotton planters, it is said, has become a firmed fiend throueh many yeai addiction to Its use. When the Harrison anti narcotic act became and the state wide crusade against the 295 dram bottle nducted last summer esiaonsnment oi tne ram straits. To relieve her condition and south alone the Atlantic seaboard to provide aa alnst her future neces towns, i or instance, auu uiano the two sons, according to their story, diverted the entire proceeds of tne years cotton crop, nearly the purchase of morphine.

Three hundred dram bottles of the drug were bought through various physicians and druggists of devious wno naa escapes tne vigilance 01 get this ticket," said Mr. the government will mean that eastern which is six tim that eastern which is six times houses will send lines south. It will mean cheaper tne soutn and a Digger dusi protest agai Atlanta and New York in the flght for the This Quantity. the amount sold by strong factor cent mileage CASES AGAINST NINE SYRIANS POSTPONED Cases against the nine Syrians who were arrested Sunday night for participation in a free for all fight on Decatur street were postponed in po lice matin I many druggists in tnirty rive years. was conveyed, box at a time, to the old noose on tne farm and tied up in large sack.

There It remained at tl disposal of the aged mother until oi of the sons, too, fell a victim of the habit. His brother, fearing for the fate of the other and concerned lest the news of the quantity of the purchase should get abroad in the country, conveyed druggist This physician, familiar with the Harrison law, called for a revenue agent, and the secret of the planters. withholding the OFFICERS PREPARING FOR WAR TAX RETURNS The Jamiarv six months of the fiscal year and the thousand Oeorsrlana kmlniui come within Its demands are being anticipated the large office force of Collector of Internal Revenue A. O. Blalock.

Commencing with the first of the month they will be In the federal building taking in the returns of those who must pay before Collector Blalock Is already sending and the payment. These letters all firms being sen' government rolls and to those whose Last vear there w. 14.000 Georgians, according government, who paid pay the 60 par penalty The banking returns will be the same in amount and the same tax as those made for the six month, feoted will make out i cept as to dates, if the returns for the first half of the fiscal year was cor rectly made. Tax payers of the emor rency tax aor, wnicn naa lust bean ax. by eongrese, are Proprietors of heaters, billiard halls and bowling ai eys, brokers, pawn brokers, tobaooo returns at the time their taxes i I MORTUARY (AO Fuaerai Appear Last Page.

A. J. Clark, Macon. Macon, December (Special.) lews has reached Macon of Oglethorpe of Professor A. J.

Clark, home of his daughter, Mrs. W. R. Battle. Professor Clark was 77 years of age.

Four eons. Dr. M. A. Clark, of Rev.

C. P. Clark, of two daughters, Mrs, W. Battle, of Oglethorpe, and Mrs. E.

R. Orr? of G. IV. Hudgins, Macon. December (Special.) on for fifty died at 1 ospital this morning at the ore of 84 vein.

Mr confederate veteran, having enlisted In which he served throughout the war He leaves his widow, one daughter C. W. G. and B. a Hudgins.

The and interment will be In side cemetery. J. D. Stewart, Waycrosa. Waycross, December (8pe the home of his daughter.

Mrs. W. health for some time. Mr. Stewart is survived by five children, C.

Stewart, of Bradley Junction. Fentress Wade, of Tifton: Mrs. W. H. Hill, and Miss Cora Bell Stewart of Waycross.

The funeral services will be conducted here tomorrow afternoon, Mrs. Margaret Fuller Allen. Marsraret Vnllar a hospiUL She lived at if McLendon avenue. Besides ner ouioano. Allen, she Is survived by her father, J.

T. Fuller, Villa Rica, three sisters, Mrs. G. brothers Brown, Hartwell cUU atra. Janle Brown died here yesterday morning at o'cloek.

She leaves her Jusband j. Brown: on" daughter, besides father, mother, four sisters and four brothers. Mrs. Brown was a young matron and was very popular. Her husband fs a prosperous young business man.

Miss L. L. Cochlear, Rome. Rome, December St. (Special 1 Miss Llnnle UockJear.

aged XI years, died at her home on Spring Creek, after a lengthy Illness. Mis! Lockyear was a. member of a prominent Floyd county ranifly. and fs survived by her father and mother, four brothers and four sisters, MACON IS SELECTED BY Chosen for 1916 Convention City by Bankers' Executive Committee. Macon, December (Special.) The Georgia Bankers' association was so well pleased with the entertainment given them when they met here in.

1814 that they have decided to hold their annual convention here again In Kit, This decision was reached at a meeting of the executive committee of the association, held at the Hotel Dempsey this morning, and it la estimated that the convention will bring at least 800 people to the city, including some of the most noted financiers in the country. While the exact dates for the meeting have not been fixed it is understood that the latter part of May. probably May 26 and 27, will be determined on. The Hotel Dempsey audi torium win oe tne place or meeting. Attending the session of the execu idge, of Jackson, president of the state association: C.

B. Lewis, of Macon, vice president: E. Smith, of Brunswick, treasurer; J. L. Shelton, of Douglas, secretary of group S.

Radford, of Winder, chairman of group J. T. Duncan, of DouglaavUle, chairman of group H. Arnold, of Teuallle; Haynes McFadden. of Atlanta, secretary of the state association; O.

A. Park, of Macon, counsel for the state The state association i the next annual meeting. Arrangements for the convention will be made by a local committee composed of C. B. Lewis, chairman; Jesse B.

Hart, L. P. Hlllyer and John Boas. HALF HUNDRED SHOTS FIRED INTO POLICEMAN to enforce the speed laws In Athens, is at his home with birdahot holes to Che number of half a hundred in his back and legs. Meeting two drunken warned them and one shot at him with a pistol, clipping off a button from his coat He pursued the shooter, firing How Sanatogen Relieves Poor Digestion and Nerve Strain and the nervous II system are interdependent.

For while the products of digestion nourish the nerve cells, the nerves in turn control digestion. Thus if aught wrongly effects either the nerves or the digestive the other also When, for instance, worry, overwork or shock interferes with digestion, the resultant lack of nourishment weakens the nervous system, causing nerve strain. This nerve weakness then reacts and still further disturbs the multy dlgestion. At such times Sanatogen is specifically first, because it is so easily assimilated by even) an enfeebled digestion, and, second, because chemical union of purest protein and organic phosphorus fu rnishe precisely the two elements moot needed to raatore nor only the weakened digestion but the impoverished nerve cells aa well. This explains why Col.

Watterson, the famous American editor, was able to write "I do not think I could have recovered my vitality, a. 1 have done, without this Sanate operating equally upon the dig and nerve And why Hon. Wm, E. Chandler, former Secretary of the Navy, wrote: "Sanatogen Is a pleasant nutriment for eaaee of Impaired digestion. It atrengthena without irritating and promote, vitality in feeble folks." It also explains the striking endorsement of the medical profession as expressed in signed letters from over 21,000 physicians who have watched the work of Sanatogen in countless And it gives you the reason why we are sa connoent mat sanatogen can help you whoa you give Sanatotfan mold by goo, Grand Prize, Intel by teed Prize, him.

and the other negro opened on him from the rear with a shotgun, filling his body full of small holes. Three miles from Athena later In i unknown negro called at emptied a load of shot in Raid's legs. Police believe that the same man who shot the policeman shot Reid. Page Three Tktrt It COAL Safe fatties Emy PeeteUf COAL Just tell us what you want It for and we will get the best coal to you quickly. We not only have the best coals on the market Monte vallo, Acton, and Peerless Jelllco for grates, Blue Gem for Cooking, Dixie Nut.

XL Smokeless, and Anthracite for furnaces, but WE HAVE THE BEST SERVICE WE KUVER PtOHPTlY Randall Bros. 5 Yards One Near You drutfiit. in from 00 IntamAtionti Congnta of Medicine, London US ATSI ATH BY OVER 21.000 PHYSICIANS for BlUri Hubbard' a new la the Written la hi. Ma philosophy, togsthw fltl I (rill oa Sanatogen, bFREK. TesrtWa off reminder to addrass THE BAUER CHEMICAL COvS? Place, New York A very special proposition on Stttdebaker cars for December only If you would call and inquire about our special buying plan for December you would certainly get your Studebaker now rather than wait until Spring.

In effect, this plan gives you the use of a Studebaker all winter, without any running cost. This special proposition is made because December is the closing month of our sales year; and it means a great deal to us to break last year's record. If we thought you didn't fully understand the merits and unquestioned extra value of the 1916 Studebaker, we wouldn't make this special proposition at all. The Studebaker Pour is the Power Car of the only 40 h. 7 passenger car in the world at less than $1,000.

TjUtt WAAlr'a UfOUiUg UBl WU tains doable page advertisement fully describing this car. Our December plan will allow you to give the Studebaker for Christmas, without feeling that yon have invested anything in the use of ear between now and Spring. Let us tell you what this Special December Offer is call at STUDEBAKER CORPORATION OF AMERICA Atlanta Branch: 245 Peachtree St. "More Studebaker cars registered in Atlanta than any other car costing over $500..

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Pages Available:
4,101,800
Years Available:
1868-2024