Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, October 22, 1907, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1907. IN ATLANTA THIS WEEK ARE THE GEORGIA STATE FAIR AND THERE ARE REASONS FOR VISITORS MAKING THIS HOTEL HOME Reasonable prices always prevail at the New Kimball, whether Atlanta is crowded or not. The Palm Garden Cafe-a cafe with a prestige and Rep utation. FAIR LIMERICKS I took In the Horse Show, I say. The place where Society stay, And after the classes, The lads and the lasses Made a rush for the Kimball Cafe. I went to the Georgia State Fair, Both fieauty and beast were there. While In town I did dwell At the Kimball Hotel And saw sights there, Jovely and rare. The slght-seors came every day Gaily dressed In blue, black and gray. The crowds they were line Out of ten there were nine Who at the New Kimball did stay. Everything good can be found here. in season We operate a popular price cafe, serving a special club breakfast and 50c luncheon daily. Of all the good places to go And of all the smart sights to show The best to be found Around this old town Are at the New Kimball, y' know. Good-Looking, surroundings. Concerts during meal hours, attractive MEET YOUR FRIENDS, VISIT THE NEW KIMBALL WISH TO CARMACK, ELOQUENT ORATOR, STATESMAN AND EDITOR, AT THE TABERNACLE NEXT WEEK , Edward W. Carmack, the red-polled I orator from Tenneimee, will come to \ - Atlanta on next Tuesday evening to . ' apeak In the Baptist Tabernacle In the • Interest of the police fund. To those who have never heard this . brilliant man and statesman It Is proper to advise attendance upon this lecture. ■ Those who have ever heard him need ,' no such admonition, because they will be sure to go If possible. Formerly United Btates senator from • Tennessee and esteemed us one of the ablest and most courageous from the South, he want down to defeat before “Bob" Taylor In the la*t campaign. But defeat has not taken the courage, the Are and the splendid eloquence away • from him. Senator Carmack Is now* a candidate ' for governor of hls state, and Is aligned against the powerful liquor clique. It will be a memorable campaign In Ten nessee, because Ed Carmack Is a tight er who never censes, and who never acknowledges defeat. When In the national congress he , shivered lances with the most redoubt- , able orators of the opposition, and they learned to respect him for hls ability, hls stralght-from-the-shoulder fighting and hls splendid courage. Senator Carmack belongs to that fiery yet erudite type of speakers. Be fore he went to the senate he was counted one of the brainiest and best editors In Tennessee. To ease and clearness of diction he adds a wldo knowledge of public men and affairs and patriotism of the highest type. The Tabernacle should he crowded on next Tuesday night to hear him. Aside frmn aiding a most deserving cause, one will hear a brilliant and scholarly uddress. The Pnce of Health. •'The price of health In a malarious district I" Just SB cents; the cost of a box of Dr. King's New Life Pills,” writes Ella Slayton, of Noland. Ark. New Life Pills cleanse gently and Im part new life and vigor to the system. 2oc. Satisfaction guaranteed ut all druggists. In Federal Court. The criminal docket In the United States court before Judge Newman Is rapidly drawing to a close. Monday afternoon a dozen enses were disposed of. All of these were cases growing out of the making of moonshine w hisky. ROOSEVELT PAYS TRIBUTE TO JEFFERSON DAVIS Vicksburg, Miss., Oct. 22.—Immedi ately after closing Ills address here yesterday afternoon President Roose velt and party were rapidly driven to the Yazoo and Mississippi railway sta tion. where a special stood In waiting. At 5:30 o'clock tho train pulled out tor Memphis, where the president ar rived shortly after midnight. No pro longed stop was made there, as the train was Immediately transferred to the tracks of the Louisville and Nash ville railway and the trip to Nashville begun. At the depot here an enthusiastic Mlsslsslpplan yelled, "Qoodby, Teddy; you can get anything Mississippi has got,” and this seemed to ptense the president. The welcome accorded the president here was one of the most cordial he has received on hls present Southern trip. It was late in the afternoon when the president addressed the great crowd. When he arose to speak at the close of Senator-elect Williams' address the big crowd accorded him a noisy demonstra. tion. Hats, handkerchiefs, parasols were waved by the crowd and the cheering lasted several minutes. President’s Address. The president spoke ns follows: "Mr. Mayor. Mr. Williams and you hosts, my fellow Americans—It Is In deed an honor for me to be today the guest of Vicksburg and of Mississippi, and I was Inexpressibly touched by the greeting over that great arch of cotton bales as I came up from the boats, which said that "Mississippi greets her president." (Applause.) "I should not be At to be president at all If I did not, with all my might and main, with all my heart and brain, seek to be. In the fullest sense, the president of Mississippi, the president of every state In this Union. (Ap plause.) "I am glad to be here In this historic city, this city forever memorable be cause of the heroic conflicts In which victor and vanquished alike showed such splendid courage, such splendid fealty to the light as it was given to each, and before the Civ'll war Missis sippi's sons had shown that they knew how to fight. Jefferson Davis. "It was from Vicksburg that a com pany of that famous regiment, which won undying renown In the Mexican war under the gallant leadership of its colonel, who afterward became the fa vorite son. nof only of Mississippi, but of all the South, Jefferson Davis, came (Applause.) "And. oh, my fellow citizens, think how fortunate we are; think what good fortune Is ours ns a nation that it is possible for the president of the nation ' to come here today, to .be conducted through your national park by the sur- >f the Con- and to feel that every Instance of heroism recorded by the monuments alike to the Union and the Confederate dead on that bat tlefield Js a subject for'just pride to, every citizen of this nation, no matter where he lives. As Mr. Lee read' to me that noble Inscription on the Pennsyl vania monument, an Inscription that should make the heart of every true American thrill as he reads It: ‘Here brothers fought for their principles; roes dl people precious legacy of their noble man hood.' Sectional Feeling Obliterated. "What other war Is there of which w cun say that before the generation that foght It had died away, the whole nn nflMTn , through your national park b DR, PURTEn, an Old Railroad Surgeon, spent several years of study and experi ment in getting up the preparation known as Dr. PoltB^S ■ VV “ _ Oil, Inf'll IQ rn m inn country rise* to feel the same triumph , ■ V ’ 11 , '-Vimng alike for those who fought so valiantly into universal use (hat 'In me Ilea to see that the United States does Its full share In making the Mississippi river a part of the sea coast. In making It a deep channel to tho Great Lakes from the gulf. "Mr. Williams, It has been suggested to me that we need to construe the con. stltiitlon broadly In order to get power to do what 1 want. I think I heard you mention thnt you were a good federal- 1st. The p.ople of Holland took two- thirds of their country out from under the ocean and they have lived behind the dykee for centuries In safety. With one-tenth of the effort, we, an Infinitely greater nation, can take those Incom parably rich bottom lands of the lower Mississippi out from alt fear of 1 Hood ing by the Mississippi. Deep Water Channel. "While I do not like to say In ad vance what I Intend to do, I shall break my rule In this case and say that in my next message to congress 1 shall advo cate as heartily as I know how that the congress now elected shall take the first steps to bring about that deep channel way and the attendant high and broad ■ levee system which will make of these alluvial bottoms the rich, est and most populous agricultural land on the face of the globe. I think that any policy which tends to the uplifting of any portion of our people In the end distributes Its benent over the whole people. Here we have a policy whose ^"TJurPrice^he Lowest Veil FULL SET $10 TEETH, $5. GOLD' CROWNS, While Crowns and FILLINGS, $1 to $5 TEETH WITHOUT PLATES, PUT IN, $1 TO $4, All Work Guarantee!) BELL PHONE 3211 ENTERPRISE PAINLESS DENTISTS. 100# Whitehall street Ovsr Beannen 4 >nth—y*s Drug glare 01 Inlsrost to VJomcn- ■ en as are not serlfiutly out ivho have exacting duties Iter In the way of bouse- In social duties and func- rtously tax their strength, rslr.g mothers. Dr. Pierce's rlptlon has proved a most rtlng tonic and Invigorat ing nervine. By Its timely use, much serious sickness - and sintering .may b« for what they believed to be right and triumphed and tor those who fought ao 1 valiantly for what they, with equal sin eerily, thought to be right and lost? (Applause.) I "It Is a good thing for an American president to travel over the country, not for what he can teach, but for what he can learn. I twice have been down in ! this alluvial delta of the Mississippi. In each case I came primarily for bear. A voice—"Did you get any?" "The last time I got ’em, the first lime all I can aay Is that the bears and > I broke even. I got as many of them I as they did of*me. But on each occa sion I learned a lot that had nothing to 1 do with the bear hunting. ■■■ "It seems to me that no American cleanses and rapidly heals all injured or diseased parts. It NSS^wSSStmStSA a rich and wonderful region the lower Mississippi valley Is, so that he may go back to Washington, as I shall go back, with the sat purpose to do everything as the most conve nient and efficient application obtain able for wounds, burns, sores and skin diseases, whether slight or serious. It is a scientific combina tion of medicinal qualities which relieves pain, antiseptically cleanses and rapidly heals all injured or diseased parts. It has become a sort of “PiOUSBllOllI Sl!fg6(ffl.” All druggists sell it. 25c avoided. Tho .operating table snd the mrscoits* knife, would. It ls bcllcvctr. Ifldnro hate to he employed If thin tno<ti Valuable woman'* rem-iv were remrted »o In-good lime, 'the - Favorite Prescript lion" his proven u great boon to expectant mother* by preparing tho system for tbo coming of baby, thereby rendering child birth safe, easy, and almost painless. Bear In mind, please that Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription Is not a secret or patent medicine, against which the most Intelligent people are quite naturally averse, because of tbo uncertainty as to their composition and harmless character, but Is a sicpicixe or asowx coupost- Tiox, a full list of all It* Ingredients being printed, In plain English, on every bottle- wrapper. An examination of this list of Ingredients will disclose the fset that It fs non-alcoholic In Its composition, chemic ally pure, trlplc-rcflncd glycerine taking the place of the commonly used alcohol. In Its mako-up. In this connection It may not bo dut of plaeo to state that the •Favorite Prescription” of Dr. Pierce Is the only medicine put np for the cure of woman’s peculiar weaknesses and ail ments, and sold throngh druggists, all the Ingredients of which have the un animous endorsement of all the leading medical writers and teacher* of all tho several schools of practice, and that too as remedies for the illmcnta for which •Favorite Prescription" Is recommended. A little book of these endorsements will be sent to-any address, post-paid, snd absolutely free If yon request tamo by g wtal card, or letter, of Dr. B. V. Pierce, uffalo. N. V. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. .Constipation It the catiso of many diseases. Core tho can*o and yon corn tho disease. Easy to tako as candy. first and direct benefit will come to the man on the plantation, the tiller of the soil. "1 want, when wc etart In this speech making work of Improving the Missis sippi, to be sure that we start on prin ciple* that will prevent mistakes, ex travagance, misappropriation of ef fort. I shall have no small difficulty In persuading some people of the wisdom of a policy such as that I advocate, a policy which must continue over a long course of years. If that policy Is taint, ed In any way by Jobbers, or folly. It will be Immeasurably more difficult to carry It through. What we must look out for Is the action of the men, proba bly well meaning, who. In their anxiety to serve some particular district, will try to divert what should be a na tional effort to deepen a great national highway. Into a succession of efforts spread out so thin as to make all In effective. Irrigation in 8outh. “Ultimately, I believe, there can be Ian enormous spread of the activity of the national government In the care of our waterways. Ultimately, I believe, the national government ran do an Immense amount of Irrigation through certain portions of the Southern states ! not affected by the project for the deepening of the Mississippi. I believe that, through the co-operation of the notional government, as much can be done In the way of Irrigation to relieve the condition In certain Southern states as has already been done by Irrigation In the far West. "It is as Important for a nation that there shall be a foundation of material prosperity as It Is Important for an Individual that there shoqld be such a foundation. 1 distrust the man in pri vate life who Is filled with enthusiasm to reform mankind, but who can not support hls own wife and family. With a nation. It Is the same thing. We must have a basis of material prosperity In which to build, but woe to the nation which never rears on that foundation fhS superstructure of a higher life." You’ll Lika This One. Tho Georgian will begin printing on Wednciday one of the most thrilling stories you ever read. It Is railed "The Parmenter Millions.” and Is by that prince of story-tellers. Arthur W. Marchmont. The heroine Is Just the sort of girl you like. Don't miss a single Installment. GENERAL BOOTH MUCH IMPROVED Chicago, Oct. 22.—General Booth, the aged commander of the Salvation Ar my. who has been III since last Friday at the residence of Commander Kllbey, » w much Improved last night. A ru mor thst he was suffering from ap pendicitis, was denied by Dr. Cleff, the attending physician. THE KING STEEL is a range with a reputation We have sold them for years and have never had to make one of our guarantees good yet. Tho price runs all the way from $50 and up, and thej’ are guaranteed from top to bottom. KING HARDWARE CO. 53 Peachtree St. A Beautiful Woman I, often eWHgajBrfta , Imperial Hajr Regenerator 1 will remedy this: Ahy ehsde Ik® Mark to the lightest Ash I" prn,lured. Colore s* 4“'-''* Lastly applied. Absolutely leas, ’sample of hair eolore-l In* C'orr«»»]>onden*'e confidential. Imperial Cfcem/cjI Mtg. Co.. 135 W. 231 St.. Hem U* 8old^^Jacob«*JPharmacy^2|*||*^^ ALBANY INDORSES „ PROPOSED CANAL That the city of Albany la In accord with the movement of the AtlaJj* Chamber of Commerce looking w digging of a canal to provide a waies way from the Atlantic ocean to Mississippi river has been demonstra • ed by the action of the city council • enthusiastically Indorsing the pr-'jec The chamber of commerce has cetved letters of encouragement no™ cities all over the state, all realum*- as does Albany, the great benefit t“ would accrue to the state from the pro- posed canal. - - v •« Butcher’s Polish Also Johnson's wax at the GEORGIA PAINT & GLASS CO, 40 Peachtree Street fr