Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, October 30, 1907, Image 10

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10 THE ATLANTA mvORGIAX AiSTD KBWS, PROHIBITION BILL WILL BE PRESENTED IN ALA. LEGISLATURE Will Ask Prohibition of Liquor Traffic on July 1. Montgomery, Ala.. Oct. 30.—The flret bill which will be presented to the special session of the legislature next month will be for general prohibition. The bill will name July 1 next as the time for the law to go Into effect. HflSTY_WEDDINGS “Little Church Around Cor ner” Is No Longer Gretna Green. New York, Oct S—The Little Church Around the Corner Is longer to be a Oretna Oreen. It Is agreed by the Rev. Dr. George C. Houghton and the announcement today will dash the hope of many young couples who contemplate eloping. Dr. Houghton declared today that hereafter the sanctuary over which he preside! will not be the place for the performance of Ill-advised marriages, nor of any kind that cannot be con sidered regular In the fullest sense of the term. Perhaps the most Important feature of Dr. Houghton's departure, however, Is hla resolution not to marry any persons who cannot prove to his sat isfaction that they are of the required legal age, or. If they are minors, that they have the consent of their parents ' or guardians. It Is therefore his Arm belief, baaed upon long experience, that this regulation alone will prevent many marriages that should never take place. Free Catarrh Cure Breath, K’Hawkliu and Spitting Quickly Cured-Fill Out Free Coupon Below. BONAPARTE FIGHTS FOR UNION LABOR BEFOREJTIGH COURT Railroads Contend That Erdman 1898 Act Is Unconstitutional. Washington. Oct. 80.—Attorney Gen oral Bonaparte In the United States supreme court today Is defending much that organised labor has gained recent ly by strikes and other contests with capital. In behalf of Its agents, William Adair, of the Southern railway attorneys, Is attacking the constitutionality of the Erdman act of 189S, containing the clause making It criminal for a com mon carrier In Interstate commerce to discriminate or threaten to dismiss an employee because he belongs to a union. The right of workingmen to form unions can not be denied, he says. Bonaparte contends that should the Erdman act be declared unconstitution al the whole system of government mediation In Interstate commerce trou bles would fall. Headaches and Neuralgia from Colds LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, the world-wide Cold and Grip remedy, re moves cause. Call for full name. Look for signature of E. W. Grove. 26c. Substitute articles pay larger proBt. That why the denier tries to change your m' 1 When your mind Is made up, keep It s< Insltslug on getting whnt yon want. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES. Get Whet You Ask For. There are many reaaons why you ask for advertised articles, but abso lutely none why you should let a sub stituting dealer palm off aomethlng which he claims to be "Just as good" better" or "the same thing" as the article you requested. The advertised article roust of ne cessity be of the hlgheet quality, oth erwise It could not be successfully sold and the advertising continued. The buying public recognizes the su perior quality of advertised articles. The substltutor realises that fact and tries to sell Inferior goods on the ad vertiser's reputation. Protact Yourself by Rsfusing Substi tutes. OtXHXHJOOfWOOOOOOOOOOOfHWHW O O O BIRMINGHAM ELECTION O CLOSES 154 SALOONS. O a - Birmingham. Ala., Oct. 80.—The O 0 total vote from the prohibition w O election In the boxes reported to 0 0 yesterday evening was 6.48# for O O prohibition and 3,832 against It. 0 0 It Is expected that the missing O O eight boxes will Increase the pro- O O hlbttlon plurality to 1,800. The O O effect of the election will be to O O clone 110 saloons In Birmingham O <1 January 1. next. 84 In Bessemer O O and about 80 In Pratt City and O O Enaley. O O O OUOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOISOOOOOOOO DR. ALLEN WILSON TALKS OF EXCUSES The mibject announced by Dr. Allen WllBon for hla Tuemlay night's dis count attracted a great crowd to the First Christian church at corner of South Pryor and Trinity avenue. The auditorium of both church and Sunduy school were filled, as were also the galleries. The service of song was excellent. Professor Llntt has recovered the use TutfsPills After eating, persona of a bilious habit will derive great benefit by taking one of these pills. If you have been DRINKING TOO MUCH, they will promptly relieve the nausea, SICK HEADACHE —- andnervousnesswhlch follows,restore the appetite and remove gloomy feel. Inga. Elegantly sugar coated. Take No Substitute. 'ca^KSPAT. OCTOBER 5*. Deft-f inhered SAT DOCTORS SELL PRESCRIPTIONS FOR DEADLY"DOPE" Case in Recorder’s Court Brings Startling Charge by Negroes. During the trial In police court Wed. needay morning of a white man and two negroes, on the charge of "sniffing" cocaine, Charlie Moore, one of the ne groes, made the declaration that certain physicians are making a practice of Is suing prescriptions for cocaine at 60 cents for each prescription. "Judge," said the negro, “t's just as easy to get cocaine now as It was be fore the cocaine law waa passed. All you have to do la to give certain doc tors 60 cents and they will furnish the necessary prescription." Following this declaration. Chief Jennings Instructed Plain Clothes Of ficer Rowan, the arresting officer, to at once take up the matter with the city attorney, with a view to having It Investigated. City Atorney Mayxon Is out of the city, but Officer Rowan later held a conference with Assistant 'Ity Attorney Hill. Mr. Hill construed the cocaine law for the officer, but eaid he thought the evidence In hand was Insufficient to convict the phyelclans Involved In the hearing before the re corder, aa the three defendants each asserted that the physicians were treat ing them for certain ailments and had prescribed the "dope" Incidentally. Mr. Hill stated, however, that any physician who prescribed cocaine ex cept In cases of necessity was vio lating the law. The three men tried Wednesday were I. Coker, a white man, and Charlie Moore and Arthur Patrick, negroes, all of whom were found In Decatur street ‘doped’’ with cocaine. NICK E. ALLEN CALLED TO REST FRENCH LINGERIE: Nuns and Skillf ul Workers in Sunny France Set Every Tiny Stitch and Every Graceful as hioned Garment tmctive Tkis Lot < Lingerie Dis- if cares The woman who our French hand-made fastidiousness could deman of form and fashioning; it is workmanship. will he tremendously interested in Lingerie. It is all that her most exacting d. It is elegant m its sincere tasteful m its genuine simplicity and perfect Nick Eugene Allen, of College Park, died at hie home Wednesday morning at 8 o'clock at the age of 88 years. Mr. Allen had for mipy years been an In valid. He was a veteran of the Con federate army and a loyal member of Camp Wheeler, II. C. V. The funeral arrangements will be announced later. Mr. Allen Is eurvlved by his wife und nine children, who are: Y. J. Allen. Mrs. T. M. Hamilton, Jr., Miss Estelle E. Alien, William Frank Allen, Miss Louise Allen, Miss Gertrude Allen, Miss Jewel Allen und Nick Cachet Allen. FIERCE STORM AT GALVESTON Galveston, Texas, Oct. 30.—A rain and wind storm Inst night wrecked sev- eral buildings In this rlty und destroyed nil means of cominunlratlon with the Trainsd Nuraea Strongly Racommtnd Gauss' Catarrh Cura to All 8uffarara. The trained nurse la ready for any emergency, Juat aa Gauaa'ls equal to the Task of curing you forever from catarrh. Catarrh la not only dangerous, but It causes bad breath, ulceration, death and decay of bones, lose of thinking and reasoning power, kills ambition and energy, often cauaes lots of appetite. Indigestion, dyspepsia, raw throat and consumption. It needs attention at once. Cure ’ tt with' Gauss' Catarrh Cure. It la a quirk, radical, perma nent cure, because It rids the system of the poisonous germs that cause ca tarrh. ' *. i In order to prove to all who are suffering from this dangerous and loathsome disease that Gauss' Catarrh Cure *111 actually cure any case of catarrh quickly, no matter how long standing or'bow bad, I will send a trial package by. mall free of all cost. Send us your name and address today and the treatment will be sent you by re turn mall. Try it! It will positively cure SO that yn.i wilt h» w-slrnmtal in stead of shunned by your friends. C. K. GAUSS. 218 Main atreet. Marshall, Mich. Fill out coupon below. FREE. Tbit coupon la good for one trial pack age of Gauss' Combined Catarrh cure, mailed free Id plain package. Hlmplj Bll In yonr name and address oa the dotted lioes below sad mall to C. E. GAU88, 212 Main Strest, Marshall, Mich. of hla voice and charmed his listeners outside world. No ioss of life is re- wlth Ills rendering of the sacred solo. That Beautiful Realm." Dr. Allen WIlBon had announced that he would discuss the reasons people give for not becoming Christians, tak ing us Ills text the words. "Almost thou persuadest tne to be a Christian.' 1 He began by drawing a distinction between a reason und an excuse. Peo ple often advanced mere excuses and called them reasons. The preacher reviewed quite a number of such ex causes or reaaons. Home were bewil dered by the multiplicity of creeds and did not know what to believe. Home were afraid of being laughed at and others hesitated for fear of not being able to hold out. Every one of these end other points was handled with skill and lucidity by the preacher, hose Illustrations were apt and nu merous, sustaining the Interest of his hearers from start to finish. Hla sub ject for Wednesday night Is "Hepent er,ce, or Turning Tow ard Jesus Christ." DR. D. CLAY LILLY TO BE HERE MONDAY Next Monday evening, at the Cen tral Presbyterian church, the brother hood of the church will give a reception to Dr. D. Clay Lilly, of Winston, N. C., and It Is expected that a large num ber of the men connected with the Presbyterian churches In the ctly will be present. Dr. Lilly will be In Atlanta over Bun- day, speaking In three of the leading Presbyterian churches on that day. and Ills visit Is the result of an arrange ment made by the executive commit tee of foreign missions at Nashville, Tenn., for him lo deliver In different cities through the South an address given at the Asheville conference last summer, which msdc a very strong Im pression and called forth the warm est commendation. The reception hour Is from T to 8, afler which Dr. Lilly will address the gathering, and it is deemed fortunate that the men of that denomination In this city will have the opportunity of seeing Dr. Lilly and be especially ad dressed by him. LYLES TO AGAIN TACC JURY ON CHARGE OF MURDER. gpeclsl to Tbs Georgian. Waycroso. Ga.. Oct. SO.—The regular tall term of Ware superior court will open on the ilrst Monday In November, with a heavy docket, both in the civil and criminal caaea. There are nineteen suits for divorce out of a total number of fifty-four civil cases. The criminal docket haa several mur der rasea two-, that are probable be cause of motions filed and argued be fore the supreme court for new trials. They are the cases of Harry E. Lyles, convicted of murdering his wife and baby, and Dan Styles, a negro, con victed for the murder of a negro at a restaurant in ibis city last December. Food Poisons, 90 Per Cent of All Diseases the Re sult of Undigested Pu trefying Poods. Men of affairs, women of society and children with arrive brains are too often sedentary In their habits, giving little time to exercise. To this evil Is added that of high and Irregular liv ing—aa a result, the stomach cannot stand the demands made upon tt. The abused and overtaxed stomach does not properly do the work of digestion, food taken In ferments and the poison permeates the whole system. The body loses In weight and becomes a prey for the attack of whatever disease It may encounter. Did It ever occur to you how busy that stomach of yours is? It only holds three pints, but In one year you force It to take In 2.400 pounds of material, digest It ami prepare It fur assimilation Into tile blood. No wonder It rebels when overworked. We crowd It with steaks and pastry. Irritate Its Juices with spices and acids, and expect the stomach to do Its work. It can't do It. All over the Inner layer of the stom ach are-glands which secrete the juices necessary to digestion. The entrance of food Into the stomach Is the signal for these glands to do their work. The more the food, and the more Indigesti ble, the greater the demand upon them and upon the muscles of the wall ad joining. Think of the tons of high-seasoned game, sweetmeats and appetizers crammed Into this little four-ounce mill, and then wonder. If you will, why you are dltxy or nauseated or constl- pnted. Don't blame your stomach or curse your fate that you should be born so unfortunate. Blame yourself and apply the remedy. First, get a small package of Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets, taking one after each meal and at bed lime. They are not a medicine, but a digestive. "Tour stomach Is worn out and needs help, not medicine. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab lets will do the work that the stomach falls to do. There's enough power In one grain of Stuart's Dys|>epsia Tablets to digest 3,000 grains of ordinary food, so you needn't fear that anything you eat will remain In your stomach undi gested. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will rout the poison because they remove the cauec—food fermentation. They are nature's own cure for dyspepsia. The host of troubles dyspepsia Is father of cannot be numbered, for a healthy stomach Is the source of all health. • Belie your opportunity before worse conditions confront you. Send today for a free trial package of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. They will bring your stomach relief. F. A. Stuart Co., 164 Stuart Bldg.. Marshall. Mich. The 50 cent size fur sale at your druggist's. Bought m Pans unmistakable “lines embroidery upon them, now by our and cut own buyer, these garments have the that make them distinctive. The so exquisitely fine and delicate—a mere lace-like tracery of leaf or vine—-now so splendidly effective in great bursts of snowy blossom-—this was wrought by the gifted and untiring fingers of cloistered nuns, chiefly. And deft workers have fashioned the flounces, the bands, the yokes and tucks and gussets millions of tiny stitches evidencing their inimitable skill What have we? Night D esses Long, full and graceful, with low neck, quantities of tucks hand-run, embroidered yoke. $5.50 to $25.00 (High neck—$2.40 upward.) Corset Covers , Simply shaped and of perfect fit ting $2.50 to $4.69 Skirts "With deep flounces, scalloped and richly embroidered with flower- sprays, rolling and whipping of the daintiest kind. Perfect fitting. $7.50 to $35.00 Chemise These in exquisite cut and finish. patterns as to $1.50 to $4.95 Drawers: $1.50 to $4.95. Bridal Sets These consist of Go wn. Chemise and Corset-cover, effective design and form a splendid number in any smart trousseau, the brides-elect especially to give these a critical inspection. 112.50 to &35.00 Second Floor. They are of particularly It will pay