Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, April 26, 1907, Image 4

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1 4 THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWa FKIDAT, APRIt,2«, 1957. V Removes The Dangers of Teething Not by curing the pain of the sharp teeth coming: through tne gums—that is natural —but by keeping baby’s stomach and bowels normal. Prevents colic, sour stomach, vomiting, diarrhoea, cholera morbus and cholera in fantum, thus keeping the child strong, vigorous and robust The Pitt's Carmina tive baby enjoys natural sleep and rest plays and eats with a vim. Pitt’s Carminative is as harmless as your baby. Contains no narcotic or injurious drug. Guaranteed under Puro Food and Drug Law. ALL DRUGGISTS 25 CENTS THE UMAR & RANKIN DRUG COMPANY ATLANTA. GEORGIA ROOSEVELT ASKS FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE Shopping Over Our ’Phone IS AN APPRECIATED CONVENIENCE. Private Exchange with operator in Our Store. It it surprising how populsr this ides now is. Seorss upon seorss of fam ilies ring us up every day for drugs and drug store sundrlss. We operate a FREE Mssssngsr Service in tonnectlon with our Telephone Shopping 8ystem. It 1s a well know fact that our prices weaken competitive figures (that Is be cause we enjoy a mastery of the mar ket Buying, as wa do, for this and two other busy .drug stores). Right prioss. Phono us. Our Broad Guarantee On everything we sell we guarantee the price to bo al ways as low, never higher, and In moat cosea lower. JACOBS’ PHARMACY 6, 8, 10 Marietta Street. 23 Witehall Street. Herbert B. Walker, president of the Old Dominion Dine of steamships, was uii offleo boy In the company twenty- four years ago and Is now only SI. Every locality has Its “meanest man, but the man who refuses to support Ills poor old mother Is entitled to the championship.—Chicago News. GIRLS! SOMETHING NEW GIRLS! A Decided Novelty, A Pleasing and Acceptable Present, Highly Appreciated by the Little Maiaens. The Exercise Deemed by Eminent Medical Author ity as Beneficial. thiQUEENWIRE JUMPING ROPE I Ky. - Stand elf,' or else my Jumping Bops Will hit you In tbs ers" -TENNYSON. Made In bright coppered wire collsd over strong cord, with polished hard wood handles. Each Rope placed In pasteboard carton. A Beautiful Toy which Alls the mind of a child with supreme delight, and tha possession of which atones for the discovery that dotla are stuffed with saw duat. Every little girl can be tlie proud possessor of one of these Jumping Ropes by . saving 12 coupons, of differ ent numbers, and bringing them to The Atlanta Geor gian office. Queen Wire Jumping Rope Coupon. | COUPON NUMBER 2 Twelve coupons of different numbers will entitle the holder of same to one Queen Wire Jumping Rope. Name Address The Jumping Rope will be presented FREE to any one paying a month’s subscription to The Atlanta Georgian in advance. Sent by mail to any address for 12 coupons of dif ferent numbers and 5c in stamps to pay postage. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. . n.stown Exposition T button whioh put tho machinery in motion. Welcomes All Nations to Jamestown to As sist in Celebrating America’s Birthday. Jameatown Exposition, April 26.— Prttldent Roosevelt began his address of welcomo -at It o'clock. Ills theme wns International peace, progress of the American nation and a better under standing of all interests. President Roosevelt began his address by welcoming the different nations of 1 the world who sent their representa tives to assist In celebrating the birth-: day of the American notion. He paid a tribute to England and Ireland, as It, was of this stock the country woe first eettled. and who did most In casting^ the mold Into which the national char acter was run. lie also paid special tribute to the' Asiatic nations of the "Newest East," and n hearty welcome was extended to Japan, which In learning from the West, has so very much to teach the West In return. The world has moved so far," said President Roosevelt, “that It Is no long er necessary to believe that one nation can rise only by thrusting another down. All far-sighted statesmen, nil true patriots, n*w earnestly wish that the leading nations of mankind, as In their several ways they struggle con stantly toward u higher civilization, a higher humanity, may advance hand In hand, united only In a generous rivalry to see which can best do Its allotted work In the world. International - Peace. I believe that there Is a rising tldo In human thought which tends for right eotis International peace; a tide which It behooves us to guide through rational channclectn sane conclusions; and all of us here present can well afford to take to heart St. Paul's counsel: ‘If It be possible, ns much as lleth In you, live peaceably with all men.' "Three hundred years ago a handful of English nvonturers, who hod crossed the ocenn In what we should now call cockle-boats, ns clumsy as they were frail, landed In the great wooded wil derness, the Indlun-hiiuntdd waste; which then stretched down to the wa ter's edge along tho entire Atlantic coast. This landing at Jamestown pos sesses for us of tho United States an altogether peculiar significance, and this without regard to our several ori gins. The men who landed at Jnmes- town and those who, thirteen years Inter, landed at Plymouth, all of Eng lish stock, and their fellow-settlers who during tlie next few decades streamed In after fhem. were those who took the lend In shaping the life history of this people In the colonlnl and revolutionary days. It was they tvho bent Into definite shape our na tion while it was still young enough most easily, most readily, to take on the characteristics which were to be come part of Its permanent life habit. "The pioneers of our people who first landed on these shores on thnt event ful day three centuries ago, hod before them a task which during the early years wns of heartbreaking danger and difficulty. The conquest of a new con. tlnerft is Iron work. At last they took root In the land, and were already prospering when Ihe Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, few years a great Inflow of settlers began. Four of the present states of New England were founded. Virginia waxed apace. The Carolines grew up to the south of It and Marylnnd to the north of It. The Dutch colonies between, which hail already absorbed the Swedish, were In their turn ab sorbed by the English. Pennsylvania was founded and, later still. Georgia. Then came the successful struggle for national Independence." The president then recalled Its colo nial period, the expansion of the na tion across the Alleghqnles, the Missis sippi river and to the Pacific. The days of the pioneers fighting fever, pestilence and famine, making smooth the ways for their successors. In the Revolution war.” he contin ued, “it Is but fair to say that the. foremost place was taken by the sol diers and the statesmen of Virginia; and to Virginia was reserved the honor of producing Ihe hero of both move ments. the hero of the war, and of the peace that made good the results of the war—George Washington; while the two great political tendencies of the time can be symbolized by the names of two other great Virginians— Jefferson and Marshall—from one of whom we Inherit the abiding trust In the people which Is the foundation stone of democracy, and from the other the power to develop on behalf of the people a coherent and powerful gov ernment, a genuine and representative nationality. . The Civil War. "Then came tho Civil war, terrible and bitter In Itself and In Its after math, but a struggle from which the nation finally emerged united In fact as well as In name, united forever. Oh, my hearers, my fellow countrymen, great Indeed has been our good for tune; for as time clears away the mists that onco shrouded brother from brother and made each look 'ai through a glass darkly' at the other, we can all feel the same pride In the valor, the devotion and the fealty toward the right as It was given to each to see the right, shown alike by the men who wore the blue and by the men who wore the gray. Rich and prosperous though we are as a people, the proud est heritage that each of us has, no matter where he may dwell. North or South, East or West, Is the Immaterial heritage of feeling, the right to claim as his own all the valor anil all the steadfast devotion to duty shown b'y the men of both the great armies, of the soldiers whose leader was Grant and tho soldiers whose leader was I,es. The men and the women of tho Civil wnr did their duty bravely and well In the days that were dark and terrible and splendid. "We can not nlford to forget the max- Im upon whleh Washington Insisted, that the surezt way to avert war Is to be prepared to meet It. Nevertheless, the duties that most concern us of this generation are not military, but social and Industrial. We of this mighty. Western republic have to grapple with Ihe dangers that rprlng from popular self-government tried on a scale in comparably vaster than ever before In the history of mankind, and from an abounding material prosperity greater also than anything which the world has hitherto seen. "In Industrial matters our enormous prosperity has brought with It certain grave evils. It Is our duty to try to cut out these evils without at the same time destroying our well-being Itself. This Is an era of combination alike in the world of capital and In the world of labor. Each kind of combination can do good, and yet each, however power, ful, must be opposed when It does 111. It Is our business to put a stop to abuses nnd to prevent their recurrence, without showing a spllrt of mere vln- APPENDICITIS Not at all Necessary to Operate in Many Cases. Automobiles and Appendicitis scare some people before they are hit. Appendicitis Is often caused by too much starch In the bowels. Starch Is hard to digest and clogs up the diges tive machinery—also tends to form cakes In the cecum. (That's the blind pouch at fntrance to the appendix.) . N. H. girl had appendicitis, but lived on milk for a while—then Grape- Nuts—and got well without an opera tion. She says: “Five years ago, while at school, I suffered terribly with consti pation and Indigestion." (Too much starch, white bread, potatoes, etc., whleh she did not digest.) "Soon after I left school I had an attack of appendicitis and for thirteen weeks llvsd on milk und water. When I recovered enough to eat solid food there was nothing -that would agree with me, until a friend recommended Qrape-Nute. "When I began to eat Grape-Nuts I weighed 66 lbs., but I. soon grew to 115 lbs. The distress' after eating left me entirely and now 1 am like a new per son." (A little arape-Nuts dissolved In hot water or milk would have been much better for this case than milk alone, for the starchy part of the wheat and barley Is changed Into a form of digest, able, sugar In making Grape-Nuts.) Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, “The lloa'd to Wellvllle," in pkgx. "There'e a Reason.” JL “They say that money is an evil root, but here it buys a n Splendid Suit” i\m • at Imm $10.00, $12.50, l|E> $15.00, $16.50, $18,011, $20.00, $22.50, New Hats, 50c to $2. Shirts, 50c io $2, Underwear, 25c to $1.50 Vests, $1,50 to $4. Boys’ and Children’s Units, $2 to $7.50 THE GLOBE CLOTHING COMPANY 89 and 91 Whitehall Street dlctlvenoss for what has been done In A’f^wrongdocr. the men who swindles cl chests, whether on a ldff scsle or a little nue, shall receive at our 'hands mercy ns scant as If he committed crimes of vio lence nr brutality. We are unalterably de« tcrmlncd to prevent wrongdoing In the fu ture; we have no Intention of trying to wreak such an Indlscrlmlnsts vengeance for wrongs done In the nnst as would confound the Innocent with the guilty. Our purpose ’ to build up rather than to tear down. » show ourselves the truest friends of property when we make It evident that w will not tolerate the abuses of proper!: W« are steadily bent on preserving the li ttltutlnn of private property; we combs every tendency toward reducing the poopl to economic servitude; and we cars uc vhetber tha tendency la dun to a sinister glutton directed against all property, or .vbether It Is due to the actions of tboso members of the predntory classes whose nntf-aoclsl Dower Is Immeasurably Increased because of tin very fact thnt they poa- •ess wealth. "Tho eorneratone of tho republic lies In our treating each man on hla worth aa a innit, paying no heed to his creed, his birthplace, or hla occupation, asking tint whether he la rich or poor, whether he Inliors with head or hand; asking only whether he acta de- ■tnte. family, to bis neighbors, to the We bass oar regard for each man on the esaenttals and uot the accidents. X\e bulge him not by his profession, but by hla deeds; by hla oenduet, not by what he baa icqulred of this world's good*. "This great republic of oura shall nevor become tne government of a plutocracy, and It shall never become the government of n mob. Und willing. It shall remain what our fathers who founded It meant it to be— a government In which each mau stands on its worth as a mao, where each Is given the nrgest |M*rsonnl lllK»rty consistent wltu se curing the well-being of the whole, nnd where, so far as In us Ilea, we strive con tinually to secure for each man such equal- ijr of opportunity that Jn the strife of .re he may haw a fair chance to show the stuff thnt Is In him. Wo ore proud of our schools and of the trained Intelli gence they give our children the oppor tunity to a coal re. But wliat we core for most Is the character of the average nmn; for we iMdleve thnt of the average of character In the individual dtlaeu Is suffi ciently high. If he possesses those qualities which make him worthy of respect lu hla family life and In his work onfsfdc as well as the qualities which flt aim for suc cess In the bntd struggle of actual existence -that If such la the character of our In- dividual eltlaenshlp, there Is literally no height of triumph unattainable In this vast expertment of government by, of and for a free people.” PURE FOOD BOARD TO ADMINISTER LAW Washington, April 26.—Secretary Wilson yesterday created the board of food and drug Inspection, whose duty it shall be to administer the national puro food laws. The board consists of Dr. Harvey Wiley, chief of the bureau of chemistry, chairman; Dr. Frederick U Dunlap nnd George R. McCabe. Justice W. F. Wakefield, of Fortcbes- tsr, N. Y„ recently sentenced ■ man to -rve three mouths In the Kings county penitentiary for Infiuraclag a 17-year-old Imy to tske hie first drink of liquor. The good temperance sisters will profisblr vote the Justice s tablet lu the "Hall of Fame.’ BRIDE TO BE DIDN'T WANT GIRL'S LOVER; Tl DOMESTIC WATER SUPPLY for COUNTRY HOU6ES. INSTALLED 1 IN ALL PART8 OF THE WORLD. DUNN MACHINERY COMPANY, 54 Marietta St., Atlanta, Cs. Says Groom-elect Should Have Married Miss Stroup. Tntt’sPifls This popular remedy never fells to effectually cure Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick Headache, Biliousness And ALL DISEASES arising from a Torpid Livgr and Bad Digestion The natural result Is food appetite and solid flesh. Doze small; elegant ly sugar coated and easy to swallow, lake No Substitute. Oil City, Pa., April'2«.—"I did not know Miss Stroup," said Miss Edith Sampsell, the bride-to-be of Thaddeui E. Roee, whtTWaa ehot dead yesterday by Mlee Belle Stroup, the girl he had Jilted, and wbo In turn killed hereelf. Mlee Sampell la recovering from the ebock. * Had Mlaa Stroun come to me Wed neaday when ihe arrived In Oil City, or at any time after ehe first heard of the announcement of our proposed mar riage, and told her.etory, which hae every appearance of being true, I should never have permitted tho marriage ceremony to have been performed. If Thad had promised to marry this girl, she ought to have been hla wire." Although living with his parents, Roes, It Is learned, had a furnished room In a business block In the heart of the city, whore he sometimes slept and entertained gueeta. Both bodies were burled today. CLASS OF 1907 ATT Graduating Exercises Take Place on 20th of June. ' To The date for the commencement exercise* of the Georgia School of Technology baa l>een act for June 20. The exercises will be held nt either the Grand or the Bijou theater. It la not kqoWu whether or not the former can .be secured on that date. Arrangements for the exer cises are still in a formative state. There are tjitrty-alx graduate* at Tech this year, the largest lu the history of the In- atltutlou. Twqnty-aevcn nre from Georgia, eleven of whom are from Atlanta. Following Is a Hat of the members: It. M. Angaa, Jacksonville, Fla.; J. J. Ap ple, Havannnh, Ga.; 1* It. 8. Brown, At lanta, Go.; C. Corley, Marietta, Ga.; II. M. Cone, Jacksonville, Fla.; \V. If. Cowan, Porterdalc, Ga.: F. C. Davie*, Chattanooga, Tenn.; W. K. buPrc, Atlanta, Ga.; I*. A. Emerson. Charleston, 8. C.; M. Epstein, At- IsDtd, Ga.; C. Hnln**, Savannuh. Ua.j XV. O. liodnon, Jacksonville, Fla.; J. G. Holtz- claw. Perry, Ga.; L. It. Jackson. Forsyth, Ga.; XV. II. Johnson, Atlanta, Ga.: E. It. Kenner, Spring Place, Oa.;*A. C. Knight, Cartersrtlle, Oa.; II. II. Leech, Atlanta, Ga.; E. F. Murray. Columbus, Ga.; J. XV. McUrtr. Villa lUca. Ga.: K. L. Pierre, Key West, Fla.: C. W. Pittard, Wlatervllle. Ga.; T. E. Halit. Chattanooga, Tenn.; K. A. HI ley. Atlanta, Ga.; J. £ Hints, Kirkwood. <**,:. A. If. Mnarka, KaadersvIKe, tin.; G. M. Stour, Atlanta. Ua.; C. W. Thornton, At lanta. Ga.; J. M. Trapnell, Matter, Oa.; A. F. Wlllatuwskl, Atlanta, Ga.; W. E. Wood, Aiken, Ik C. NOTICE! The mayor nnd general council of the city of Atlanta Invite blda for Mghting the streets and public places of said city for terms of one year, two yean, three years and five years, os per zpecl- flcatlone contained In a resolution at sold mayor and general council ap proved April 22, 1607, a copy of which resolution win be furnished upon app'l. cation'to the clerk of council. Bidders shall specify the maximum price to be charged by such bidder to any person, firm or corporation, within tho city of Atlanta, during the term of contract with said city, for electric cur rent or electricity, for light, hoot, power or other purposes for which electric current may be used. Bids addressed to tho mayor and gen eral council should be filed with the clerk of council and will be opened on May 6. 1807, at 3 o'clock p. m, the council chamber. The right tq reject any or all blda I* reserved. W. J. CAMPBELL, Clerk of Council. BAINBRIDGE TO ENTERTAIN KNIGHT8 OF PYTHIAS. Special to The Georgian, Balnbrtdge, Oa., April 26.—The local lodge of Knights of Pythias Is making extensive preparations for the coming of the grand lodgo on May 20. About 806 visiting Knights are expected to be here, amongthem being several compa nies of the Uniform Rank. Homes have already been secured for the visitors during their stay, and other prepara tions are being made for their enter tainment A boat trip down the river and a trip to Cohn A Co.'s tobareo plantations at Amsterdam have been arranged. Turn Over A New Leaf Begin by opening an account in our Savings Department, « nd spending a little leds than yon earn. When you have filled a in your pnss book with deposits, and start on the next, you wiu hnvo turned over one of the most important leaves of your life- We pay on savings deposits 4 °|t Interest compounded twice a y* 4 *' Drop us a postal for inform*' tion about Banking by Mail Central Bank & Trust Corporation, Candler Building. Branch cor. Mitchell and Forsjt