Newspaper Page Text
THE BANNER, TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 29, 1912.
More Donations
to the Campaign
atest soda of them all. Pure. Fr<
Economical. Guaranteed.
Best for biscuit. Sanitary package.
16 full ounces to the pound—
and costs no more.
58c. Please •end me, all chargtt
“There’s a Reason” for Postum
Instant Perfum is sold by grocers. 50-cup tin, 30c; 100-cup tin, 50c.
8end 2c stpmp (to cover postage) for 5-cup free sample.
Min (or) Mri._
State
The Wilson-Marsball campaign fond
grows a little each day. Already the
Banner has secured $138, and on yes
terday twelve dollars mono was sub
scribed to the fund.
Messrs. E. R. Hodgson, Sr., E. R.
Hodgson, Jr., and Harry Hodgson
have forwarded to national headquar
ters through Mr. Gratin Colvin ten
dollars.
The time is short, but it is not too
late to subscribe. Every dollar is
needed to defray expenses at the
headquarters and those citizens who
are interested in the success of the
party should not delay in making sub
scriptions.
. The following amounts were re
ceived yesterday: .
Col. T. W. Rucker $ 5.00
W. L. Erwin 1.00
Cash 1.00
Previously acknowledged .... 138.00
THE MATHIESON ALKALI WORKS, SsttvBIs, V».
I enclose the tops cat from 6 Eagle-Thistle
Total $145.00
OUT GOES ALL
RHEUMATIC POISON
Plated Teaspoon*. These spoons bear no
advertising and their retail value is $2 per dos.
Greatest Hoke Smith Victory
Was Capture of Athens Girl
(Special to the Banner.)
Atlanta, Oct. 28.—“Hoke Smith ot
Georgia” is the title of an illustrated
article by John Temple Graves ’n
the November issue of Hearst’s Mag
azine. The pictures show the Hoko
Smith who is familiar to all Geor
gians—snap-shots of him as he walks
along the street, as he stands before
a campaign crowd, as he sits at his
desk in his study. There is also a
picture of Mrs. Hoke Smith, to whom
the writer pays this beautiful tribute:
"Gentlest and yet proudest of Hoke
Smith’s achievements was the win
ning of ‘the Daughter of the Cobbs.
Thomas R. R. Cobb, of Athens, is tho
knightliest and most chivalrous fig
ure in Georgia history. It was the
second daughter of Tom Cobb who
brought to Hoke Smith’s home all the
dowered gifts and graces of the gen
tlest and loveliest womanhood of the
old south. An aristocrat, a gentle
woman, a philanthropist, and the no
ble mother of four accomplished chil
dren, she is always the crowning
ornament of the Georgia senator’s
home and the crowning glory of his
life.”
Rheuma Acts on Kidneys, Liver and
Bladder the Very First Day.
Get a 50-cent bottle of RHEUMA to
day and wear a satisfied smile on
your face tomorrow.
It’s a remedy that is astonishing the
whole country, and it’s Just as good
for Gout, Sciatica, Lumbago and Kid
ney misery as for Rheumatism.
It drives the poisonous waste from
the joints and muscles—that’s the se
cret of RHEUMA’S success.
But we don’t ask you to take our
word for it: go to H. R. Palmer &
Sons and get a bottle, and if it doesn’t
do as we promise get your money
back. It will be there waiting for
you. - (Advt.)
CANADA’S DAY OF
THANKSGIVING.
♦ 44444 4' 4444444
♦ FIGHTS SCHEDULED ♦
♦ FOR TONIGHT. 4
444444 4' 4444444
Ray Bronson vs. Clarence English,
8 rounds, at St Louis.
Tony Capon! vs. Ray Marshall, 15
rounds, at SL Joseph, Mo.
• /*>
CASE
(Special to the Banner.)
The Hague, OcL 28—The Hague
international court of arbitration to
day took np for consideration and
settlement a dispute between Russia
and Turkey of more than thirty years’
standing. The point at issue con
cerns the payment of interest on the
indemnity due to Russia by Turkey
as a result of the war of 1877-78.
J. W. Copeland; of Dayton, Ohio,
purchased a bottle of Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy for his hoy who. had a
cold, and before the' bottle was all
used the boy's cold was gone. Is
that not better than to pay a five
dollar doctor’s bill? For sale by all
dealers.
(Advertisement).
(Special to the Banner.)
Toronto, Ont., Oct. 28.-—Toronto, to
gether with all other cities and towns
throughout Canada, today observed
Thanksgiving Day. Business was
largely suspended, and a holiday as
pect was generally in evidence. Num
erous athletic and sporting events
featured the celebration in the larger
cities.
KENTUCKY SUNDAY SCHOOLS.
(Special to the Banner.)
Paducah. Ky„ Oct. 28.—Paducah is
preparing to entertain a large num
ber ot visitors during the next four
days, .on the occasion of the annual
convention ot the Kenucky Sunday
School association. Final arrange
ments for the convention were com
pleted today. A number of noted
Sunday school workers from Louis
ville, Chicago and other points will
be here to address the association.
£71
| No Boiling \
Charming
Flavor |
Avoids Coffee Bis
-’.'T kstsseess
nstant Postum
This new food-drink is taking the place of coffee In thousands of homes the country over.
“There’s a Reason”
Many persons realize vaguely that coffee Is Injurious, but think they cannot give It up.
Such will find the breakfast cup just as hot, snappy and comforting when they shift to
Instant Postum
It is regular Postum in concentrated form—nothing added.
No Roiling Required
Made by stirring a level teaspoonful of the powder (more or less for strength desired) In a cup of
hot water and adding sugar and cream to taste.
If coffee has affected you unpleasantly, wouldn’t common sense suggest quitting it. The return to
health can bo hastened by taking on Instant Postum, which Is absolutely free from caffeine, the harm-
Cottolene
food is never greasy
All RailroadsAdvised
Against Bringing
in Infected Cot
ton Seed.
LOUIS MANN AND EMILY ANN WELLMAN,
“Elevating a Husband,” Colonial, Wednesday, October 30.
The eagerly awaited local engage
ment of Louis Mann is definitely an
nounced, arrangements just having
been successfully concluded whereby
the distinguished character actor is
to be seen at the Colonial Theater,
for one performance, Wednesday eve
ning, Oct. 30. Inquiries as to Mr.
Mann’s visit have been numerous and
there is little doubt of the strong hold
this delightful player has on local
play goers. He is to be seen in “Ele
vating a Husband,” the dramatic
comedy by Clara Lipman and Samuel
Shipman in which for six successive
months he appeared in New York
City. During this remarkable en
gagement so great was the demand
for seats that Mr. Mann occupied in
succession four theaters, the Liberty,
the Criterion, the Garrick and the
Grand Opera House. J
In hii present vehicle Mr.-Mane is
said to "have a role fitting him to a
nicety and supplying him with splen
did opportunities for the display oi
all those remarkable talents which
have made him so immensely popular
among discerning theater-goers. The
present role, too, will present him in
a new light to his admirers for he is
seen as a young flve-cent-store mer
chant, a character far removed from
the eccentric and lovable old man he
lias portrayed here in the past in
numerous plays. The new character,
Charlie Sample, is an unpolished but
ambitious young man who marries a
charming girl of a much finer Intel
lectual fiber. Loving Sample, the
young wife determines to “elevate”
him to her point. It is In the method
she pursues that the humor and in
terest of Mr. Mann’s play lies.
Mr. Mann will be supported by the
same company intact seen with him
during the New York engagement
and the production is identically the
elaborate one that aroused so much
favorable comment during the Broad
way run. Emily Ann Wellman, an
actress who has won numerous
friends through previous appearances
here as Mr. Mann’s leading woman,
is seen in the role of the *wife, and
the surrounding company includes
Charles Miller, Percy Denton, Charles
Hatton, Edmond Roth, Laura Walker,
‘ Marion Holcombe and Petra Folk-
man.
f
(Special to the Banner.)
Atlanta, Oct. 28.—Warnings are be
ing sent out to all railroads entering
Georgia against the transportation of
cotton, seed cotton or cotton seed
from those sections of' the United
States known to be infected with the
boll weevil.
Dr. Worsham, who is In charge of
this work of quarantine, is holding
the roads strictly to account and is
daily in receipt of importunities from
various roads to permit these ship
ments, but is refusing all unless there
is a certificate attached to the cot
ton from the state entomogist, certi
fying to the fact that the shipment
did not originate in the infected dis
trict.
In speaking of this matter Dr. Wor
sham said, “It now looks as though
Georgia will be visited by the boll
weevil in due course of time which is
all too short, and we are going to use
every precaution to prevent a pre
mature arrival of this pest which is
doing so much to ruin the south.”
“We are holding those sections In
fected with the boll weevil in strict
quarantine.”
The oil mills of Georgia are co
operating with the state department
in declining to buy cotton seed from
infected points because it is to the
interest of all concerned that nothing
be permitted which will curtail the
cotton crop in this state and at the
same time cut short the supply of cot
ton seed, which are now so valuable
part of the cotton crop.
Oil mills are now in active opera
tion and the farmers are being paid
good price for their cotton seed,
which, a few years ago, were an ab
solute waste product.
Cottolene is a vegetable fat
—made from the purest and
choicest cotton oiL It con
tains not an ounce of hog fat
Cottolene makes delicious
pastry—crisp and flaky. For
frying, it can he heated to a
much higher temperature
than butter or lard, and forms
a coating which prevents the
absorption of the fat
Cottolene is every hit as
good as, and much cheaper
than butter for cooking. It is
far better
than lard; itis
richer, an
will go
third
than
is the
economical
cooking fat
on the market
THE N. R. FAXRBANK COMPANY
Looks Now Like Bill Will be
\Urged to Abolish the State
Court of Appeals of Georgia
(Special to the Banner.) | Notwithstanding this, it is pretty
Atlanta, Oct. 28.—Now that the certain that the next legislature will
grand jury of Whitfield county has ] witness efforts to abolish the court
returned presentments endorsing the Such an act would require an amend-
suggestion of Judge A. W. Fite of the ment to the constitution which neces-
Cherokee circuit, that t-he state court sitates a two-thirds vote of the mem
of appeals should be abolished, it j bers of both houses followed by a ma-
would not be surprising to see a bill
introduced in the next session from
that or some other county of Judge
Fite’s circuit, having that object in
view.
The action of the Whitfield grand
jury followed Judge Fite’s, scathing
criticism of the court of appeals in
his charge to that body, follow
ed the action of the court of appeals
in sentencing him to pay a fine of
$500 or serve ten days in jail for con
tempt, which followed the publication
in the newspapers of some cards
signed by Judge Fite reflecting upon
the honor and integrity of the court
The court of appeals silently ig
nored Judge Fite’s charge to the grand
jury which was, If anything worse
than his cards, because it cannot hold
him accountable for what he says in
a charge to the grand jury or from the
bench, unless of course It should sur
pass all bounds of decency. That is
said to have been the reason why the
court took no further action following
Judge Fite's charge.
The truth of the matter seems to
be that Judge Fite’s attitude has rath
er popularized the court of appeals, at
least in those sections not immediate
ly attached to his circuit.
Plan to Segregate
Now Instead of
Abolish
SURELY SETTLES
UPSET STOMACHS
“PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN’’ ENDS INDI
GESTION, GAS, SOURNESS IN
FIVE MINUTES.
jority vote of the people. If the court
of appeals should ! ,be abolished,
would unquestionably be necessary to
make material increase in the
preme court, and in addition to pro
vide for division of its labors—that
is the hearing of many appeals by
other than a full bench.
Judge Fite has until Monday, Octo
ber 28 to decide whether he will pay
his fine or serve ten days in jail. He
is said to have been much pleased
over the action of the Whitfield coun
ty grand jury, and when asked In
that connection what he proposed to
do with reference to the sentence
of the court of appeals in the case
against him for contempt, he replied:
“I -have not yet decided and will
not until the day arrives to make an
swer to the court. But whatever I
do, the step. I take will be within the
law and within legal rights.”
In making its recommendation the
Whitfield grand jury specifically en
joins upon the representative from
that county in the general assembly,
the duty of introducing a bill for the
abolition of the court As a rule
representatives seek to stand in at
home, as It may be taken for granted
the bill will come from that county.
a ——- ~ -
“Really does” -put bad stomachs in
order—"really does” overcome indi
gestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and
sourness in five minutes—tnat—just
that—makes Pape's Diapepsii
largest selling stomach regulator in
the world. If what you eat ferments
into stubborn lumps, you belch gas
and eructate sour, undigested food
and acid; head is dizzy and aches;
breath foul, tongue coated; your in
sides filled with bilei and indigesti
ble waste, remember the moment Dia-
pepsin comes in contact with the
stomach all such distress vanishes.
It’s truly astonishing—amost marvel
ous, and the joy is its harmlessness.
A large fifty-cent case of Pape’s
Diapepsin will give you a hundred dol
lars’ worth of satisfaction or your
druggist hands you your money back.
It’s worth its weight in gold to men
and .women who can’t get their stom-
aches regulated. It belongs in your
home—should aways be kept handy
in case of a sick, sour upset stomach
during the day or at night. It’s the
quickest, surest and most harmless
stomach doctor in the world.
(Advertisement.)
(Special to the Banner.)
Atlanta, Oct. 28.—A plan whereby
the segregated district can ba
brought back to Atlanta, in the event
such action is ever deemed advisable
from a standpoint of expediency, has
been suggested by members of tho
city council. One of the principal
objections to the old system, from
the municipal standpoint, was that
the council and police were forced to
wink at and in a sense connive in
an open violation of the law. It has
been suggested as a remedy for this,
in the event that Atlanta finds the
abolition of the district 1b working
harm to the community rather than
good, that the state can be asked to
confer on the city the power to reg
ulate such segregated spots. IQ that
e4ent, the city could handle the situa
tion at least without the hypocracy
that was necessary before. The same
suggestions are being worked out in
Chicago, where a similar reform
movement has just taken place. It is
agreed by all that a complete wiping
out ot thedistrict as has been done
Is the ideal solution, it it will keep
the women out of the Oity, but it it
only results in scattering them, a
strong effort will be made to go bach
to the old system.
Georgia Boy in Porto Rico
Writes About Engineering Annual
Among a number of appreciative
letters from various parts of the Uni
ted States and its possessions com
mending the last number of the En
gineering Annual, which was devoted
especially to the subject of good
roads, the following one received by
Prof. Koch, of the Good Roads De
partment of the University of Geor
gia, shows how this publication of
the engineering students Is regarded
by practicing engineers. The letter
was written by Mr. E. S. Wheeler, as
sistant commissioner-. Department of
the Interior, Porto Rico, an engineer
of wide experience In various tropical
countries as well as in this country.
San Juan, P, R., Oct 17, 1912.
Engineering Annual received. Same
has had my careful consideration,
and herewith gets the big red Beal
and the bine ribbon in the lower left
hand corner. I am particularly inter
ested in the papers on road construc
tion Inasmuch as they deal directly
with the subject In hand, in real,
easily-understood English,’ so that the
reading public may be able to un
derstand It You will agree with me
that tho many of the reports and pa-
peers which are from time to time
published by our colleges and depart
ments of the government, are clothed
in such a haze of mystery and blaze
Major Harris Is
Home from'P. I
NEEDS A PHYSIC
IF CROSS, FEVERISH, TONGUE
COATED GIVE .“SYRUP OF FIGS”
TO CLEAN THE STOMACH, LIV
ER AND BOWELS.
(Special to the Banner.)
Atlanta, Oct. 28.—Major P. Charles
Harris, who has been visiting his
brother, Senator W. J. Harris, chair
man of the state democratic execu
tive committee, has left for his regi
ment in the Philippines. Major Har
ris has hosts of Georgia friends who
have followed his brilliant career
with interest. Major Harris is a
West Pointer, and has recently com
pleted four years duty on the general
staff at Washington, where he ranks
high in military circles. He has seen
actual service, and was breveted for
signal bravery while under fire in the
battle of San Juan in the Spanish-
American War.
$100 Reward, $100
The readers of this paper will be
pleased to learn that there is at least one
dreaded disease that science has been
able to cure in all Its stages, and that is
Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only
positive cure now known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional
disease, requires a constitutional treat
ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken in
ternally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system, there
by destroying the foundation of the dis
ease, and giving the patient strength by
building up the constitution and assisting
nature In doing its work. The proprietors
have so much faith in Its curative pow
ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that It fails to cure.. Send
?id&L°$. CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by all Druggists, 73c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
(Advertisement).
Look at the tongue, Mother! If
coated, it is a sure sign that your
little one’s insides, the stomach, liver
and 30 feet of bowels are clogged up
with putri-fying waste matter and need
a gentle, thorough cleansing at once.
When your child is listless, droop
ing, pale, doesn’t sleep soundly or eat
heartily or is coss, irritable, feverish,
stomach 90ur, breath bad; has sum
ach-ache, diarrhoea, Sore Throat, or
is full of cold, give a teaspoonful of
Syrup of Figs, and in a few hours
all the foul, constipated waste, un
digested food and sour bile will gently
move on and out of its little bowels
without nausea, griping or weakness,
and you surely wil have a well, happy
and smiling child again shortly.
With. Syrup of Figs you are not
drugging your children, being compos
ed entirely of luscious figs, senna and
aromatics it cannot he harmful, be
sides they dearly love Its delicious
taste.
Mothers should always keep Syrup
of Figs handy. It is the only stomach,
liver and bowel cleanser and regula
tor needed. A little given today will
save a sick child tomorrow.
Full directions for children of all
ages and for grown-ups plainly print
ed on the package.
Ask your druggist for the full name,
“Syrup at Figs and Elixir of Senna,”
prepared by the California Big Syrup
Co. This is fhe delicious tasting,
genuine old reliable. Refuse anything
else offered. (Advt)
of unpropounceable words that the
layman sticks the danger flag in it,
and gives two bells so the car can
go. The methods we are using here
on bituminous if oads agree very close
ly with the paper written by Mr. R.
T. Goodwyn, and we all believe that
it is the best solution of the road
problem in Porto Rico.
VENEZUELA REMEMBERS
SIMON BOLIVAR
(Special to the Banner.)
Caracas, Venezuela, OcL 28.—The
129th anniversary ot the birth of
Simon Bolivar, who liberated Vene
zuela from the domination of Spain,
was observed throughout the repub
lic today. Bolivar’s birthday is the
only national holiday In Venezeula
and is as generally observed as is
the fourth of July In the United
States,
Matinee Today, Colonial
4 P. M. 10 Cents.
Theater
&