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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: SATURDAY, DECEMBER 0, 1911.
SPORTS HOLD THE DAY
AT THE INDIAN OORBAR
Football and Polo Games the
Program for King George’s
Saturday Amusement.
Delhi, India, Dec. 9.—Sport* figured
la reefy In today** reremonie* or the
durbar, at which King George and
Queen Mary will be invested with the
title, of emperor and empress of India.
Football and polo came, were on the
program for the afternoon, while recep
tions of Indian potentates were contin
ued throughout the morning by their
m The tl »c*c’ne today equaled In brilliance
those of the other ceremonlea which
have gone before. There was the same
gathering of brightly attired natives
and the gorgeously decorated palan
quin. In which the women of the royal
■ harem, were conveyed In the suite, o’
the native princes.
The thousand* of visitors who are a!
ready In Delhi were augmented today
by many others who came from all sec
tions of India. So vast la the crowd o
strangers here at present that accom
modatlona are at a premium. Next
week the problem of securing living
quarters and food will be a serious one.
The scene In the baxaar which Is be
ing held at the same time as the durbar
ceremonies !» a brilliant one. Native
decorations and resplendent garments
of tbs natives blend in a gorgeous mass
of color.
Rheumatism
Will Let Go of You
When you correct the acid condition of
your blood on which It depends. It only
loosens Ita hold for a while when you
apply lollona or liniments to your ach
ing Joint! or stiff muscles. Take
Hood's Sarsaparilla
which haa effected the moat wonderful,
radical and permanent cures
Get It today. In usual liquid form or
chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs.
PILES CURED IN « TO 14 DAYS.
Tour druggist will refund money It PAZO
OINTMENT falls to cure any esse of
Helling. Blind. Bleeding or rrotudlng
Piles in * to 14 dsys. Me *
PRIMARY IS BEING HELD
IN WAYCROSS SATURDAY
Waycross, G*., Dee. 9.—In what Is
considered one of the warmest local
primaries ever held Waycross Is today
selecting a mayor, three aldermen and
three member* of the city board of ed
ucation. For mayor there are three
candidates, John M. Cox, the Incum
bent; Harry D. Reed and Calvin W.
Parker. The race Is believed to be very
close and a second primary will un
doubtedly be necessary to determine the
winner In the mayoralty contest. For
aldermen there are eight candidates.
W. C. Butler. H. Hengevcld and W. K.
Meeks are candidates from the Second
ward; S. T. Beaton. W. E. Chandler and
W. H. Fendt are running In the Fourth,
and C. A. LeCount and K. P. Brown, Sr..
In the Sixth. For members of the board
of education there ore four 'candidates,
with three to be chosen. They are John
W. Bennett. V. I,. Stanton, J. R. Cream-
er and J. L. Walker.
Lodge Chooses Officers.
Elbarton, Ga„ Dec. 9.—Philomath**
lodge No. 25, F. A. M.. at Its regular
communication elected the following of
ficers: R. P. Andrews, worshipful mas
ter: R. A. Ward, senior warden: H. B.
Payne, junior warden: W. T. Arnold,
treasurer; 8. P. Bryan, secretary: T. H.
Verdel, senior deacon; O. R. Walker,
junior deacon: Clifton Arnold, senior
steward; J. Bynum Bell, junior itew
ard; W. I*. Bailey, tyler.
PIMPLY? WjU, DON’T BE!
People Notice It. Drive Them Off
With Olive Tablets.
A pimply face will not ombarraaa you
much longer If you get a package of
Dr. Edwarda' Olive Tablet*. The pim
ples will vanish after you have taken
the tablet* a few nights.
Nothing ever cleansed the blood, the
bowels and the liver like Olive Tablets.
Olive Tablets are the only eucreaefUl
substitute for calomel: there'* never
any sickness or pain after taking them.
Olive Tablet* do all that ealomel does
‘and just as effectively, hut (h* ,r netlon
' entle and safe Instead of severe and
Is gentle at
Irritating.
No one who takes Olive Tablets Is
ever cursed with "a dark brown taste."
a bad breath, a dull, listless, "no g6od”
feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad
disposition or pimply face. .
Olive Tablets are made of pure vege
table compounds mixed with olive oil.
Dr. Edward* spent year* among pa
tient* afflicted with liver and bowel
complaints, and Olive Tablets are the
Immensely effective result.
Try them. Take one nightly for a
week. Then look at youractf In the
glass and see how you feel.
"Every little Olive Tablet ha* a
movement all Its own."
10c and 25c per box.
The Olive Tablet Company of Co
lumbus, Ohio. Dr. F. M. Edwards,
President. (TO)
Mrs. W. 0. Scott and Little
Daughter Are Critically III.
Baby Boy Is Dead.
Augusts, Ga, Dec. fle-Mr?. W. O.
Scott, wife of an Auguata cotton man,
lies critically 111 of ptomaine poisoning
caused by eating stewed oysters. Her
little two.year-old son Is dead from the
same cause and her. little daughter la
desperately III. It Is -believed that the
oysters were not fresh when purchased.
The physicians entertain little hope for
Mr*. Scott’s recovery.
THAT MYSTERIOUS LAW
IS EXPLAINED AT LAST
Framed to Put Negro Ceme
tery Out of Business in
South Bend.
It take* more than a supreme court
decision to sidetrack the resident*, of
the South Bend district of Fulton coun
ty, and the people of the Mills district,
of DeKalb county, from their efforts
to put out of business the Chestnut
Hill cemetery, a negro burying ground,
near Atlanta.
Thru Charles S. Reid, solicitor gener
al of the Stone Mountain circuit, suit
was tiled In superior court Saturday
morning to enjoin the cemetery cor
poration on the ground that It la a pub
lic nuisance under a law passed by the
last scaalon of the legislature.
In the tiling of the suit, the bill pre
sented to the last session of the gen
eral assembly by Hooper Alexander,
and subsequently made a law, no long,
er remains the mystery It once was. .
The bill, altho general In Its applica
tion, waa plainly Introduced to do away
with the Chestnut Hill Cemetery Com
pany. an organisation which thru a
supreme court decision successfully
blocked all effort* of the people of the
district. Incorporated as the town of
"Constitution, to put them out of
business. *
The flghhon the Chestnut Hill ceme
tery began as toon at It was evident
that the property was to be used for
a negro burying ground. People In Do
lt alb county close to.the cemetery In
corporated the town of Constitution,
and passed an ordinance against cem
eteries.
The Chestnut. Hill promoters coun
tered with Hn Injunction suit against
the ordinance, and were Anally upheld
In a supreme court decision handed
down last.spring, holding the town to
be Imperfectly Incorporated.
Silently, tho residents of the section
went. to work on the legislature, and
Alexander’s "cemetery" bill wat the re
sult. . Pusxlcd, the legislator* passed It,
but somehow every one of them won
dered why?
The. bill as passed required every
commercial cemetery lying outside of
an Incorporated town to secure per
mission from the county commission
ers or the court of ordinary.
It I* easy to ace how this gave the
people of the Mills district. DeKalb
county, and the Houth Bend district,
Fulton county, the edge on tho Cheat-
nut Hill Company. The chestnut *1111
Company has no permission from the
DeKalb county commlaalonera to op
erate. and there are those In the Mills
district who say that they would hava
difficulty In getting such permission.
Tho suit Bled by Solicitor General
Retd Saturday 1* In the name of the
stale of Georgia anil Injuetlon Is asked
against Chestnut Hill cemetery on the
grounds that It Is, operating without a
permit and Is therefore a public nul-
H.ince and should be abated as such.
The Instigators of the prosecution are
M, Clark, J. TV. Hornsby. H. I,.
Allen, TV. H. Young, Joseph Jackson,
J. It. Dodge. J. B. Dodge, Jr„ O. E.
Jackson. Ray Almand and B. I,. Al-
mand, all residents of the section,
tJudge Pendleton Is asked In the suit
On the afternoon of November 20, two
nlneteen-year-old boys—James Young
snd Oscar Collier—arrived In Atlanta
from Bedford, Ind. They had but JX.25
between them when they alighted from
tho train, but this did not daunt them,
for they were at the end of their long
ourney In quest of work and health,
t waa mainly the latter In search of
which tho boy* had come to Atlanta,
for Young had contracted tuberculosis,
and hearing of the health-giving prop
erties of Atlanta’s location, had pre
vailed upon his chum to accompany him
to this city.
They had scrimped and saved enough
money to take them front their home
to Roland, Ky., and working there for
several days had secured enough to buy
tickets to Chattanooga. At that city
a kind-hearted freight conductor had
taken pity’on them and brought them
to Atlanta In the caboose of his train.
Immediately upon their arrival here
they started out to And work. Young
Is a clgarmaker; Collier a butcher’s
helper. From place to place they went.
In the J>est of spirits, desplts the repeat,
ed answers of “full up.” Half-past 6
o'clock found them In the center of the
city, and, approaching a crowd of men
standing on a comer, they started to
ask for directions to the nearest butcher
shop or clgar-maklng establishment.
Then something happened that, like a
bolt from a clear sky, blasted all their
hopes and turned happiness Into direct
misery.
Arrested as Vagrants.
Two policemen approached, and
singling out the two friendless boys,
placed them under arrest. Their ques
tions a* to why they were wanted were
not answered and tho next morning
they were arraigned before Recorder
Broyles on charges of vagrancy. Their
protestations that they were not va
grants fell on deaf ears and they were
both bound over and sent to the Fulton
county Jail.
In conAnement Young's health rap
idly gave way., Tho tubercular con
ditions, relief for which he had hoped
to And In Atlanta, rapidly became worse
and on the morning of November 28,
after an Incarceration of eight days,
he was seised with a hemorrhage which
nearly resulted In hla death.
The authorities at the Jail became
frightened and reported the boy’s con
dition. with the result that he was or
dered released, and J. T. Golden, Jailer
at the Instltuton, sent him to the As
sociated Charities, with a letter ex
plaining hls'case.
Charities Care For Him.
_ } Secretary Logan, of the Associat
ed Charities, Young told hi* story. He
toid of the great ambitions that were
his; of the health and fortune that ha
had hoped to And In Atlanta. All am
bition, he said, had now been crushed
out, and nil he wanted was to return
home to die, Secretary Logan sent the
boy to the Christian Helpers league and
I
A FATHER'S PRIVILEGE AND DUTY
My Dear Son—I am proud to leant that you
have been promoted and that your salary will
be raised. And now that your income will be
increased, do not increase your expenses or try
to appear better off than you really are. Be
sensible and pnt your spare money in a bank
where it will draw interest. Let me suggest that
you deposit with the TRAVELERS’ BANK AND
TRUST COMPANY; this is a new bank doing
business at 56 Peachtree street. I know the
Officers, alt of them. They are gentlemen of
honor whose sound business judgment has been
proven by the success which has marked the
career of eacti one. And being a new hank,
and exerting ever}’ effort to gain and hold new
accounts, they will give your needs the very
best of attention. ’
You have always said you had the greatest
confidence in my business judgment, now you
have the opportunity to profit by it.
Affectionately,
FATHER.
BOY IN SEARCH OF HEALTH
SENT TO JAIL AS VAGRANT
Associated Charities Find Aid
for Young Traveler Who
Was Seriously III.
JAME8 YOUNG.
communicated with Ills mother in Bed
ford. At the gamo time Secretary Rob
ert B. McCord began an Investigation
of the boy's story, which he found to
l>e true In every detail.
Several days later a Setter came from
his mother. In a pained, cramped
scrawl It read:
"We are going to send you by tele
graph tonight all the money we can
raise. We think If will be ns much as
120. This Is the most we can possibly
get. We want you to send Jimmie
homo with this, and at next pay day
or within the next few days we may be
able to send you tho balance of It. Do
everything you can for him. Yours,
"MRS. MARY O. YOUNG.
That night the money came, plenty
for "Jimmie's" transportation, and tho
next morning lie was placed aboard a
train for Bedford. Tho happy light
that glowed on his face when ho had
arrived was gone and tears tilled hla
DM nr he said good-bye to Secretary
Logan.
Collier Still in Jail.
This was December 1, and Saturday
morning Secretary Logan received
letter of thanks from the boy. He said
that he was still very sick: too sick. In
fact, to try to get his old position back.
He thanked those who had helped him
In Atlanta, and In a plaintive little plea
asked them to try to secure the freedom
of his friend.
For In the Fulton county Jail Collier
still awaits the session, of court, when
he will be tried for a ’’crime" which
grew out of his having been In At
lanta for three hours.
Tho case ot these two boys Is much
like that of George Davies, the Knox
ville man, who, despite the fact that he
liad boon In the city but a few hours,
was arraigned for vagrancy and sen
tenced td 30 days In tho stockade. While
he was serving his sentence his wife
and children In Knoxville suffered un
told privation and hardships.
MEMPHIS MAN HAS BEARD
GROWING INSIDE OF MOUTH
emphla, Tenn., Dec. 9.—After having
his chin hacked off and being saved by
surgeons when they "grafted" a new one,
made from flesh of his arm, .lumen Hart,
the young farmer, at tho Meinplha city
hospital, now faces a new problem, or
rather hla chin faces one.
Ingrowing beard
flth Hart. —
using
ition a
trouble
chin proper extending a little way under,
ncath waa out so that It could be turned
back and upward, tha other surface on
tho Inside of the new chin and lip. To
this new raw surface was grafted _
square of flesh out of the arm,' in order
to do which tho patient's right arm was
bound over hla faoo for two. weeks that
grafting might take place. Then the
pleco from hla arm was Cut away. The
two Inner surfaces neatly grew together
and the new lip presented a smooth outer
,4c*.'
ipnearai
JSut there was a smooth surface' on the
to grant a temporary restraining order
and act the hearing on the suit for
December II.
Just What I Wanted.
That la what any member of the
.jtmlly would say upon receipt of a pair
dt I.etnalre Opera Glasses. Let US show
you our stock. Price* that will aston
ish you. Jno. L. Moore A Sons, 42
North Broad St.
SCHOOL, BURNED OUT,
IS IN NEED OF FI
Reinhardt College, Institution
for Mountain Boys and Girls,
Makes Hard Struggle.
Since the Are which
the chapel and
hart college for
which recently destroyed
college buildings of Rein-
mountain children at Wa-
....... ...J student* hare kept up
their studies by meeting In the homes of
people living In the town. Many spare
room* have Ywen turned Into class rooms
for the present In order that the chil
dren may not lose a part of their year s
work, and they ar* keeplngup their du
ties with cheerful face* despite the disad
vantage* under which they are working.
It Is the intention or the committee In
-large to rebuild the school at once and
replace the obi buildings with modern
flreproof structures as far a* possible.
\V. 8. Witham haa b*en appointed
chairman of th* new building committee.
Tb* committee estimates that ft1.000 will
be needl’d In donation*. Of this amount.
It haa about 15.000 from the Insurance
fund. The trustees want to put up a fire
proof college and chap*l building and ror
a small aunt they can harness a water
power within a half mile of the campus
that will furnish ample power for elec
tric lights, water work* snd for run
ning the laundry, dairy and th* machin
ery In th* Industrial department.
All who want to keep Christmas by
lending a helping band to there poor and
dependent student* tn Cherokee county
may send thalr contribution* to Mr. V Ilh
am. Tb* committee pledgee you that
every dollar will b* expended with great
relit to the school and satisfaction to th*
ionors. Mr. Witham Is contributing rev-
.rml thousand dollar* toward this work.
In addition to th* 54,000 he gave to th*
school last year.
SON 0F~F0RMER SHERIFF
MYSTERIOUSLY KILLED
Montgomery, Ala., Dec. 9.—Mlllard
Pate, son of former Sheriff B. F. Pate,
of Geneva county, was murdered mys
teriously at Oeneva last night while he
and two companions. Bad Jacobs and
Sam Keith, were at the school house
trying to determine the winner of a de.
bate. While the young men were talk
ing, It appear*, some one from the out
side fired a bullet thru the window,
striking young Pate dead. The sheriff
I* making *n Investigation.
SALESMEN’S SERMON
AT CENTRAL CHURCH
Thanksgiving service* for the City
Salesmen's association will be held Sun
day morning at 11 o’clock In the Con
tra! Presbyterian church. • .
A special sermon for the salesmen
will bo preached by the pastor. Dr.
Dunbar H. Ogden. Splendid music will
also ba a feature of the service.
All salesmen, their wives and friends
are Invited, and It Is expected that a
large congregation will be on hand.
MINSTRELS FOR CHURCH
IN C0LLEGEPARK SOON
On Monday night, December 15, n
minstrel show will be presented In the
auditorium of Cox college at College
Park, for thb beneflt of St, Johns Epis
copal rhurcb, to which an admission
fee of 25 cents will be charged.
Musle for the evening will be fur
nished by the Georgia 51 Hilary academy
hand. In addition to piano renditions by
Professor Kuhrt Mueller, Professor I. B,
Stafford and Professor George Fr. Lind
ner, violinist.
Mr. \V. P. Hunter will act as Inter
locutor, assisted by the following well
known artists of Atlanta and College
Park, who will make a merry evening's
entertainment with their Joke*, coon
songs, dance*, *olo*. monologues and
quartets: James M. Wilson, W, J. Hub
bard, John M. Cooper. C. E. Pollard, L.
E. Berger, J. W. Marahbank, John H.
Mullln, Frank Cundell, Elmer Green,
P. K. Harwell. George Watts, L. D.
Scott, James Wardwell. Turner Allens-
1559
The Atlanta National Bank
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
Statement of Condition, Condensed, Dec. 5,1911
RESOURCES
Loans and Discounts.. .$5,935,382,64
United States Bonds... 625,000,00
Other Bonds and Stocks. 352,243,70
Banking House 800,000.00
Due from United States
Treasurer, $25,000.00
Gash on
Hand.... 394,715.79
Due from
Banks. 1,230,809.60 1,650,525,39
‘ $9,363,151.73
" LIABILITIES
Capital Stock. $1,000,000.00
Surplus and Undivided
Profits ... 1,150,442.48
Circulation 492,500,00
DEPOSITS:
Individual $5,560,114.56
United
States 118,988.86
Banks.. 641,095:83 6,320,209,25
Bills Payable 400,000.00
$9,363,151.73
You Are Invited to Call or Correspond With Us
worth. E. C. Lycett. L. M. Schoeller. W.
F. Wardlaw, Alfred Broome. W. J.
Mills and Leslie Hubbard.
Officers Ar* Elected.
Elbarton, G».. Dec. 9.—The Wood
men of the World, White Oak camp No.
34, haa elected the following officers:
J. H. Orr. council commander; W. H.
Hunt, adviser lieutenant: Dr. W. B.
Nethery, banker; F. B. Thornton,
watchman: J. H. Wood, sentinel; T. M.
McLanaban. manager,
If vou are suffering from biliousness,
constipation, lndlgeatlon, chronic head
ache, Invest one cent In a posatl card,
send to Chamberlain Medicine Co.. Des
Moines, Iowa, with your name and ad
dress plainly on the back, and they will
forward you a free sample of Chamber,
tain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. Sold
by all dealers.
Largest Southern music
house and largest stock
from which to make selec
tion.
CABLE PIANO CO.,-
84 North Broad St.
CONFESSED JUROR
WHO RECEIVED BRIBE
Mrs. George Kaupp
3tates That Parisian Sage is Best
Hair Tonic.
"I had a bad case of dandruff. M>
scalp waa full of dandruff and it cam.
out thick and acaiy. .My hair came oul
badly: often I nearly cried on account
of losing my pretty head of hair.
"I heard of PARISIAN SAGE and
only had to use two bottles before the
hair stopped coming out, the scalp be
came clean, and all • the dandruff dis
appeared. Tb* hair became silky and
one big reason that I liked PARISIAN
SAGE waa that it kept th* hair smooth,
silky and clean, with no trace* of stick.
I nets.
"I believe this tonic to be the beat on
the market, as there ha* been no return
of dandruff, or hair falling out what
ever. I am clad to publicly Indorse the
use of PARISIAN SAGE. I have often
Indorsed Its use and am glad to do It"
ts E. Bond-*t.. Corry, Pa.
P. e. COLEMAN. Mgr.
New York Dental Parlors
28% AND 32% PEACHTREE STREET
22k Gold Crowns.. $3,00
All Otter Work at Reasonably
Low Prices Guaranteed
PHONE 3207 M.
Work Train and Passenger Car
on Electric Railway Meet in
Collision on Saturday.
Washington, Dee. 9.—Forty persons
were Injured, three seriously, when a
passenger car and a work train collided
on the WashIngton-VIrgInIa electric
railway near Clarks Station, Va., to
day.
The let man ts popular only In certain
seasons or on special occasions. In this
he Is unlike The Georgian Want Ad
I ' pages, which have all seasons and times
tor their own—always doing something
worth while—doing everything well—
I quickly—with very little expense. Tha
i ■ ;■ nrglan prints more want ads than any
| other Southern newspaper.
Tha Christmas Dinner 1 ,
i In spite of the fact that the word dys
pepsia means literally bad cook, It will
not be fair for many to lay the blame
on the cook If they begin the Christmas
Dinner with little appetite and end It
with distress or nausea. It may not be
fair for any to do that—let ua hope so
for the sake of the cook I The disease
dyspepsia Indicates a bad stomach, that
la a weak stomach, rather than a bad
cook, arid tor a weak stomach there Is
nothing else equal to Hood's Sarsapa
rilla. It gives the stomach vigor and
tone, cures dyspepsia, creates appetite
and makes eating the pleasure it should
CHRISTMAS
HOLIDAY RATES
Central of Georgia Ry.
Tickets on Sale Dec. 15-16-17-
29-21-22-23-24-25-30-31-1911,and
Jan. 1, 1912.
Final Limit Jan. 8,1912.
For Rates, and Schedules
Apply to Nearest Ticket Agent
W. H. FOGG, Gist. Pass. JpL
ATLANTA, GA.
Very Important pages of rewspsjgJ
are the Want Ad pages. bec*““
contain live and up-to-the-minuts
Iness of the day. This Is an »*« ®‘ .5
live up-to-the-minute business men
women. Georgian want ads cost one ere
As a classified advertising nttdlumj*
Georgia gives quick and profltnble resm (
Ita readers are of the class that m*«
pay to advertise.
Real estate of *11 11 1 ridaca n b« d
of thru Tha Georgian. The Georgian
estat* columns can be proflt*t'l> ' , .J u _
people who wish to sell, rent or exonsw
property of any kind.
□asp Thought Here.
From Puck. , .. olm0 *
If a man were aa cheap as*, „
any woman can make hint teei.
woman could resist him merely
bargain. ,
Had Heard About It
From Life. . ,
Cy—Come on. Hannah: let* ***
look at old Wall Street ebln5|
' Hannah (nervoualy)-Don t you
we’d better do our ahoppln first-
-«**
dressing and beautlfler,
cobs’ Pharmacy and dr
where. Guaranteed fm
dandruff and scalp itch.
50 cent*.
ROBERT F. BAIN.
A white-haired veteran of the Civil
war. on* of th# accepted Jurors to try
the McNamara brothers, who con
fessed to District Attorney Fredericks,
of Lot Angeles, that he had accepted
a bribe of 1400. and had been promised
54.000 If he should hold out for tb* ac
quittal of the dynamiters. Bain made
an affidavit, together with his wife, tell
ing of the Incidents leading up to his
accepting the bribe money, and It waa
made public the day the McNamara
by Ja- brothers pleaded guilty In court. Bain
> every- will not be prosecuted criminally, but
lUnc hair, will appear aa a wltneaa before tb*
Largs bottle grand Jury against Bert Franklin, now
under arrest on other bribery charges.
Therm le Only One
“Bromo Quinine 99
That le
Laxative Bromo Quinine
Otcn THE WORLD OVER TO OURE A BOLD IH ORE OAT.
Always remember the lull name. Look
1or this signature on ertrj box. 25c.