Newspaper Page Text
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■mu ATLANTA 0?;0RQIAN AND NEWS: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1911.
Jackson & Wesson’s
WEDNESDAY SPECIALS
1,00 WLie 4Qn
jrdiii..
$1.00 Wampols’s >[Qp
nnrf I Ivor Ail “ull
69c
Cod Liver Oil
$1.00 Quaker
Herl)
$1,00 2-quart
Foun.ain Syringe
$1.00 2-quart Ho; EQp
Water Bottle uJu
50c
Cold
$1.00
B. B. B
50c J. & W.
greaseless, ■
1-2 pound
25c Holmes’
Frostilla
Cheney’s
Expectorant
25c J. & W. White
Pine and Tar
25c Bell’s Pine
Tar and Honey —
50c Hinds’ Honey
and Almond Cream
25c J. & W. Cold
Cream
$1.00 Syrup
Hypophosphites
25c Mentho-
latum
1 lb. Glycerine and
RoseWater
1 pound
Glycerine
1 pint Witch
Hacel
1 quart Household
Ammonia
1 quart Crude
Carbolic Acid
25c Euthymol
Tooth. Paste
1-4 lb. Peroxide
Hydrogen
50c Syrup
Figs ...,
25c Simmons’
Liver Medicine, —
25c Thedford’s
Black Draught
Buttermilk Soap
(3 cakes)
1 lb. Castile .
Soap
59c
Cream,
24c
17c
17c
15c
17c
33c
13c
69c
14c
29c
34c
15c
...9c
9c
14c
9c
33c
13c
13c
9c
9c
j Commissioner of Labor Will
I Have to Serve Half a Year
or Longer on Credit.
Two candidates who will be voted for in
tho primary election of Thursday are run
ning for an office for which no salary can
bo drawn the first six months of the suc
cessful candidate's incumbency. Of
course, after the six months period is up
he will without doubt draw back pay for,
that period, but ho' will have to serve the 1
state on credit for half a year or longer.
The office In question Is commissioner of
commerce and labor, a new state posi
tion created by the legislature In 1911.
The statute creating the department of
commerce and labor specifics what salary
the commissioner shall draw, but when
the general appropriation bill was passed
by the legislature there was no provision
in it to pay thi* salary and the salary and
expenses of the state game and fish ward
en. another newly created office. A slm
liar condition existed a few years ago
when the court of appeals was created,
the judges of that court having,had to
wait till the ei * ‘ ‘ *
their salaries.
. . . pay, but until that
is done they will have to credit the stat$
for their services. The new commissioner
of labor will go In office in January, fol
lowing the special election of January 10
It will be at least July 10 and maybe i_
month later before the legislature can
pass these salary appropriations. Hence
the commissioner will have been in office
six or seven month* without pay.
TURlFiiiANE
Former Councilman and Al
leged Embezzler Goes to
Milledgeville.
Open All Night
Bell
M. 377
9193
1426
Jackson &
Wessell
Atl.
377
2541
§ 30 Mariel'a St Gor. Broad*
The Mrs. Misses the MIeeee.
from Judge.
If a woman has one daughter who goee
•way, the Mr*, miners tho Miss and the
Mls» misses ths Mrs. If she has two
'iaughters and both ■ are away, ths Mrs.
tnlssM the Misses and the Misses miss th<
Mrs. If she has three daughters and two
•re at one place and one at another, tho
Mrs. missea the Mies and the Misses and
'he Miss misses the Mrs. and the Mieses.
M It Is rour daughters she has and two
•re at one place, while the other two are
"wav from home and separated, the Mrs.
misses the Miss and the Misses and the
Miss and tho Miss and the Misses miss
the Misses and the Mrs., while the Misses
miss the Mrs. and the Miss misses the
Miss and the M'sses and the Mrs. Ho
they would nil better remain at home
with ifie Mr. of the Mrs.
In the custody of Deputy Sheriff
Pennington, M. M. Turner, former At
lanta councilman, who was adjudged
Insane by a Jury In criminal division
of superior court Monday' afternoon,
where he was arraigned upon a charge
of embezzlement, left tho city for the
state sanitarium at Mllledgevlllo Tues
day noon.
Shortly after the trial opene.d, At
torneys Reuben Arnold and Hudson
Moore, acting for the defense, put In a
plea of Insanity, and Drs. Stewart Rob
erts, T. Vi Hubbard and W. P. Nlcol-
son took the stand nnd testified that
Turner was dangerously Insane and
should be kept continually under guard.
Solcltor General Dorsey slgnlQed his
willingness to accept the testimony and
the Jury was Instructed to bring In-a
verdict of Insanity. Judge Roan sign
ed, the order for his commitment to the
state sanitarium late Monday after
noon.
The Indictment under which Turner
was arraigned was found by the Fulton
county grand Jury some five years ago
nnd grew out of charges made against
him ns president of n building and loan
company that went to the wall. Tho
defense has b-. n successful In post
poning the case each time It was called
to trial upon the grounds fit Tumor’s
mental and physical Incapacity.
MUCHLY TRAVELED LAO
IS IN DETENTION HOME
Wanderlust Has Lured George
Korycki Far From the Pa
. rental Roof.
Photo by Mathewson.
This picture, shows how fast work is progressing on the foundation of
Trinity church at the corner of Trinity-ave. and Washington-st,
HANDSOME EXHIBITS
AT THE CORN SHOW
Among the handsome exhibits at the
Southern Com show arc the ten. ears
of com from Cobb county that took
flrsj prize of $100 at the state fair In
Macon recently. It Is said there are
two other exhibits here that will push
this prize winner close for first place.
•There are 26 varieties erf glorious
Georgia apples In the Habersham coun
ty plate exhibit of apples. They are
certainly good to look at, and are - the
prize winning beauties that swept all
before them at tho Macon state fair.
Fred Benham brought the exhibit In
in. in— ... i
Tuesday morning from the National
Horticultural congress at St. Joseph,
Mo., where It captured several prizes,
The cotton exhibit would make any
Georgian’s Heart swell with pride.
Thore are four of these, two from j
Milton, one each from Cobb and Troup
counties; regular cotton trees loaded
with bolls of lleocy whltoness.
Besides the 600 exhibits of tho Boys
corn clubs of Georgia, there are some
prize winning com exhibits from the
various Southern states which are wor
thy of entering In competition at any
show.
YOUNG WOMAN'S THROAT
Piece of Razor Blade Removed
From Wound at Hospital.
•Assailant Escapes.
As Mamlo Smith, a young woman
living at 644 1-2 Marletta-st., discov
ered an Intruder In her room Monday
shortly before midnight, and with a
scream, leaped from bed, the Intruder
slashed her throat with a razor, jumped
out of a secoqd-story window, and es
caped.
Jo vicious was the blow that the ra
zor was broken, a small section of the
blade, about an Inch long, being re
moved from tho wound at Grady hos
pital. While the throat was badly
gashed, hospital physicians say tho
woman’s condition Is not serious. She
says the assailant Is a negro. Several
theories are advanced by the police os
to the cutting.
--"-T " '■
Reflections of a Bachelor.
From The Sew York Preis. . —
The baby can’t even have the eolld near by In \Vhlteha!l-st„
Escaping Gas From Heater
Was the Cause of As
phyxiation.
When C. D. Buran, familiarly known
as Doss Buran, a former deputy sheriff
under the late Sheriff Nelms, failed to
appear In Justice Orr’s court Tuesday
morning to prosecute James T. Purcell,
whom Buran accused of robbing him.
Dan Perkerson, also a former deputy
sheriff and close friend of Buran, re
paired to the latter’s room, J32 1-2
Whltehall-st., to ascertain the cause
of his absence. Buran and Purcell
were formerly partners In the llsh and
oyster business.
Finding the door locked, Mr. Perker
son, aided by Dr. Johnson, a dentist In
the building, climbed up on the door
and peered thru the transom, discover
ing Mr. Buran stretched out on the bed
fully dressed. Shoving open the tran
som. Mr. Perkerson Instantly detected
strong fumes of gas.
Pbllee Sergeant Connally, who was
•*“ '* ‘ ‘ ‘ “ “ was then
„ . New Breed of Sheep.
ban Bernardino (Cal.) Dispatch to Cbi-
easo Inter-Ocean.
After striving for more than ten years
to wrest nature’s secret, William Frankes,
"reeluse of. Bullion mountain, at last has
•iwcovered the alchemy that transforms a
•Hu mountain sheep Into a highly devel
oped wool-bearing- untinat.
Irankes la an accredited collector for
'Pe Smithsonian Institution. Ills secret
rpnsists of crossing the mountain slieep
•m> those of the Leicester strain.
. "he sheep-are large, nimble and pro
duce wool of an exceedingly line quality.
Stricture
THKRB is .too.,much rough work, cut
ting and gouging In handling cases of
juncture. My 36 years of experience with
— h a*, discasea of men,
|jg chronic diseases,
nervous disorders,
have shown roc.
among other things,
that many cases of
stricture may bo
cured with less
harsh treatment
•than they gener
ally receive. Intelli
gent, careful and
scientific treatment
by a physician of
experience cures
without pain. The
fake violet ray
treatment simply
separates tho pa-
| tlent from hlsmon.
1 'S&
Ga "trie?utear e o nVy*n n
i ».i condition of the urethra nnd
’<■ tnte strictures. My office hotini are
j,.!* *■ bunday* and holidays, 1ft to 1.
ftil3 0l ™S»£5? “re free b/mall In plain
• 1 wrapper, examination free.
Wanderlust that has made him
much traveled person for hi* ago has
landed Georgo Korycki, a blue-eyed
Pole of twelve years, or thereabouts, In
the custody of Probation Officer Gloer.
George, who Is held upon tho techni
cal charge of purloining newspapers, Is
housed at thr n*w detention home In
Central-ave., wbero ho Is regaling his
fellows’ endurance with his cosmopoll
tan conversation.
George hails from Baltimore, or at
least that Is what he says, but from
the polyglot character of his lingo he
might Just as quickly and with as good
grace claim Warsaw. His lost stop, ac.
cording to the tale he tells, was Annis
ton, Ala., where he ditched a circus that
ho Joined In Biloxi, Miss.
The boy, who! speaks of Moscow,
Mexico, and Montgomery’ with famil
iarity and In the same tiyeath, will be
held at tho detention home. until his
father, who Is said to be John Korycki,
of 624 South Broad-at„ Baltimore, a car
repairer. Is communicated with and for
wards a railroad ticket George says
he can get to Baltimore without one.
The Shooting of Does.
From The Bangor Commercial.
The very considerable diminution in
the amount of game that Is being brought
down from the Maine woods In compari
son with the returns of other years has
led to the suggestion In, a number of
quarters that It may soon he necessary
to place a continual closed time on does.
Not only are the receipts very small In
comparison, up to date, but the deer
that have been brought down are. most
ly does, and very small ones at that, an
Indication that the number of deer Is be
ing greatly lessened In the Maine for-
* 3 lfiiere Is also another argument that Is
used In advocating a continued closed
time on does, and that Is that such tends
to lessen the number of accidents. The
reason Is not far to seek. The hunter,
who Is compelled to determine whether
hls quarry tit a buck or a doe. can not
fire his gun at a sound In the bushes.
The momentary pause that he must make
and the glimpse that he mint have of
the game prevents the carelessness that
often costs human life.
The President Takes a Chance.
From Popular Magazine.
It wan in the afternoon, only a few
hours before the time set for the big
reception given by the preeldent and Mrs.
Taft In honor of their sliver wedding.
Charles D. .Hllles, taking a last look at
a sky flecked with clouds, sought out ths
president and gave voice to this sepul-
C ’’"Mr"'President. It’s going to rain.to
night, and I think we had better aban
don the man to have tho reception on the
lawn. Willis Moore, the chief of the
weather bureau, has Just telephoned me
that there Isn’t one chance In a hundred
for dear weather tonight. ’
If WON* Moore eaya there * only one
. .utni-c In a hundred." saTd the president,
•T prefer to take that -me. Go on with
the preparations for the lawn party." ■
IVS.—It didn't rain a drop.
without Its being In a wonderfully smart, hastily summoned and the door forced
’’'Every time anybody wants to do a good ! 3 n „ f ™ nd
act something comes along to make It hnA h * nn A ** A
look more like a Jail offense.
A girl haa two great ambitions—first to
get her hair up aa a finality, and then to
get a beau as a starter.
A boy gets thru having hls mother
pack him off to school only to become a
man and have hls wife drag him off tc
church.
If a .
to take away from
away hls reputation, so as to make some
sort of score.
’FRESH’
Recandled Storage
EGGS
22!
5 dozen .
10 dozen
Ooz.
22c
.211-20
15 dozen 21c
Case, 30 dozen. .201-2c
5 cases 20c
Mail Orders Filled and
Dealers Supplied.
No Better Storage EGGS Sbld in
Atlanta at Any Price.
FRESH COUNTRY EGGS, guar
anteed fresh, sweet 44C
new laid Doz.
5 cases at 30c
Case, 30 dozen, at. .31c
15 dozen at 32c
10 dozen at 321-2c
Mail Orders Filled and
Dealers Supplied.
PARK8DALE
BUTTER
33 c
FRESH COUNTRY BUTTER, the
kind that tastes 9CC
good Lb.
Good Coffee—19c Lb.
FULL CREAM CHEESE We say
full cream and ZEC .
mean it 1 d Lb.
FANCY GOLDEN BLOATERS,
SWIFT’8OXFORD BREAKFA8T
BACON, thin, 1dl?C
lean and aw«et ."^4 Lb.
CASH GROCERY CO.,
118 and 120 Whitehall Street.
NOT IN THE GROCERY TRUST
had apparently been dead for 3omo
time.
Gas, escaping In great volume from
a small heater In the room, told the
story of Ills death. He had died by
asphyxiation.
Whether Buran committed suicide
a matter of speculation. There was no
note nor other evidence to Indicate that
he died Intentionally. Ono theory Is
advanced that possibly the light In the
stove waa extinguished In some man
ner while Buran slept, the fames of gi
overcoming him whllo he was in th
condition.
The gas heaver was connected with
gas Jet overhead by means of a rubber
tube, the gas being '.urned on at tho Jet,
escaping thru the stove. The ,1et Is
said to have been very hard to turn.
Buran had not been seen by hls
friends since Saturday. Fumes of es
caping gas were noticed In the building
Monday and an Investigation wns
made. The leak, however, could not be
found, no one nuapecting that the gus
came from Buran’s room. This • leads
to the theory that Buran died either
Sunday or Monday.
When Buran failed to appear In court
to prosecute Purcell, Judge Bloodworth
dismissed the warrant for want of pros
ecution.
Coroner Paul Donehoo made an In
vestigation of the death and decided to
hold an Inquest Tuesday afternoon In
Harry O. Poole's undertaking parlors.
Buran Is survived by a daughter. Miss
Wllllo Buran, who Is away at school.
He also has a nephew, W, W. Buran.
an employee In the store of Daniel Bros.
Buran and Purcell, It Is said, dis
solved partnership In the fish and oys
ter business about three weeks ago and
It was following the dissolution that
Buran accused Purcell of robbing him.
Buran was a prominent figure about
the court house and Jail- for a long
whllo.
JOE BROWN MEETiNG
HERE TUESDAY NIGHT
The Sixth Ward Joe Brown club
members have made arrangements for
holding a rally nt Cable hall at
o’clock Tuesday night.
Among the speakers for this meeting
are Walter P. Andrews. V. A. Batch
elor, H. H. Cabanlss. J. B. Smith. Gov
ernor Brown's campaign manager, and
Frank Flint.
All of these speakers are men of
wide reputation and the committee
having charge of the rally has done
everything possible to make the event
one of the most Interesting and suc
cessful of the entire campaign.
The officers of the Sixth Ward Joe
Brown club, who have been most active
In arranging this rally for Tuesday
night, are: D. E. Shumaker, presi-
ident; 8. P. Cronhelm, O. W. Seales
and Charles W. Bernhardt, vice presi
dents; T. B. Higdon, secretary, and
W. A. Stovall, chairman of the execu
tive committee.
The lee man Is popular only In certain
seasons or on special occasions. In this
he is unlike The Georgian Want Ad
pages, which have all seasons and times
for their own—always doing something
worth while-doing everything well—
nuiekly—with very little expense. The
Holiday Suggestions
When In Doubt, Buy Furniture""
Oak, Mahogany'and Clrc*°...n Com- Morris Chairs, including Royal Push
fort Rockers. t 7 1/1 Button Chair. This 47 llQ
.. strong pattern Is
priced ns low
Arts and-Crafts Library Chairs and
Rockers. Prices th Of)
begin at #T. OU
Largest Stock of
Brass Beds in
the Oily and
Prices the Low
est.
Complete stock of Children’s Rock
ers in all woods and 41
finishes. Priced from Jti.JV
guaranteed
$10.00 %x ao :. $1.49 up
guaranteed 1 Pullmim
Davenport..;.....
$39.75
A full line of Hey wood's. Art Reed
Rockers and
Choirs
$8.00 up
Library Tables In all woods; prlc
to suit all purses.
Goldsmith=Acton=W itherspoon Company
Formerly American Furniture Company ,
62 Peachtree “Life.Time Furniture” 61 North Broad
CHIEF BEAVERS WANTS
TWENTY-F1NEW MEN
Head of Police Department Is
Anxious to Improve Force in
Many Ways.
other Southern newspaper.
On account of the large home circula
tion of The Georgian. Us want ads attract
greater attention and bring more results.
get fop nothing!
Chief Beavers, of the" police depart
ment, Is formulating recommendations to
be Incorporated In hls annual report which ■
he believes will materially Improve the
police servlco of the olty for 1(12. |
First and foremost In importance Is a
.request for an appropriation sufficient
to add twenty-five new policemen to the
force. In addition, the chief will ask
that the police signal system be extended
so as to cover all of the new territory
that has been, annexed to the city, and
will also ssk that an additional matron
be provided for the police elation and for
an automobile for general use In the de
partment—to traneport posies of officers
m emergency calls and for other like pur-
P< W?th the proposed Increase In the force:
and the addition of the emergency auto-,
mobile, Chief Beavers says the need of
sub-pollco stations, which has been so!
apparent for several years but which has
never been'realised, will be eliminated to;
a great extern. The department already.
has two automobile patrols and eight mo
torcycles, and, with still another automo-1
bile, "speed” will be the motto. |
If the twenty-five new men are provided
for In the January apportionment, the
present force of supernumeraries—twenty-
two In number—will be elected to regular
places and another force of supes will be |
other matron to aid Sira. Miry \
Bohnefeld, the present matron. In tho care
of women prisoners Is regarded as a I
necessity, and Chief Beavers will make a I
strong bid for the creation of this place. I
At present Mrs. Bohnefeld Is required
to remain at the police station. In charge
of the matron's ward, both duy and night,
frequently being uroused at unseemly
hours of the night to loqk after drunken
women and other women prisoners. Chief
Beavers feels that the work Is too stren
uous for one woman and that It should be
divided. This Is the only feature of tho
police work not divided.
"The addition of mot
force Is the present greates — ---.
lanta's police department.” said Chief
Beavers Tuesday. "If we can get twen
ty.nre new men the first of the year, and
an extension of the signal service, adding
signal boxes to the new. territory, the
whole service will be greatly Improved.
At present the police force Is Inadequate
to properly protect the city, especially
the outskirts. More men is an absolute
necessity."
Xmas Pictures
and Frames
Southern Book Concern
71 Whitehall St.
The
Evening
Newspaper
A canvass of 135 department stores in cities
of more than 75,000 population elicited from
102 the unequivocal opinion that the evening
newspaper is a better advertising medium
than the newspaper published in the morning.
The reason is plain to see.
Six days of every week the morning paper
is read by people on their way to their offices,
and either left in the street car or tossed to
one side in the office. The evening paper is
carried home. The family reads it. Its con
tents are likely to be the subject of dinner-
table discussion. When her day's household
"labor is ended, the wife sits down with the
evening paper to read the news and search
the advertisements for bargains.
The morning paper is a sort of casual caller.
The evening paper is a visitor, a friend, coun
selor and companion. Its influence is far
stronger with its readers than the influence
of the hastily-scanned morning paper. That
is why it produces so much better results for
the. advertiser.
Get the new game, But
ton , Button. Roars of
laughter. Interesting to
young and old. 50c. South
ern Book Concern, 71
Whitehall-st. (Gavan’s).
Trying to Save the Elk.
Livingston (Mont.)'Dlepatch to New York
American.
Soldi*** ere lined up along the northern
boundary of Yellowstone park continually
firing their rifles to keep the thousands of
th.’
Dick llandal, the well-
■ spr _
known hunting guide, eaya the park or
ficlals have been instructed to keep the
animals In the perk until the .hunting
season clone.*.
Crazed Russian Shot by Police.
San Francisco.—Stephen Yelaski, a
drink-crazed Russian, was shot and To
tally wounded early today by John
Sheehan, a retired police officer. Knife
In hand, Yelaski was pursuing two
girls.
FUNERAL NOTICE.
COLLINS—Tho friends of Mr. and Mrs.
J. D. Collins. Mr. J. D. Collins, Jr.,
Mrs. M. I'\ O’Connor. Mrs. Henry M.
Smith, Miss Doris Collins and Mrs.
riamuei Hall, nro Invited r«» attend ths
funeral of Mr. J. D. Collins Wednes
day morning at 10:30 o'clock, at his
late residence, 144 Windsor-st. in
terment at Weetview. The following
named gentlemen will act as pall-
t>earers
M. Pattersi
Mr. T. O.
Mr. L 8. S
Kenan. Mr
X. J. Wood
rill
at office of H.
ut 10 o’clock: