Newspaper Page Text
TIIE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 25. I0C7.
Right Clothes for You
You’ll like these clothes of ours the
minute you see them; and you’ll like
them better when you wear them, for
their goodness is more than “skin-deep.”
They’re made of finest all-wool
fabrics by the best tailors in the trade;
they’re backed by the names of Ameri
ca’s best makers—Rogers, Peet & Co.
and Hart, Schalfner & Marx—and sold
under our guarantee of satisfaction or
money back.
Everything that’s new and good in
fabric, weave and pattern is here.
Correct Hat Myles
In one of our windows today there’s a
representative showing of most popular
new styles in popular-priced hats.
In soft hats the telescope is the favor-
ite-you’ll see it here in black and best
colors.
The derbies incline to narrow, flat brims and slight
ly rounding to nearly square crowns; they’re shown in
tans, browns and black.
$3 and $3.50
Copyright 1907 by Hart Schaffncr £s? Marx
Suits—$15 to $50
Top Coats—$ 15 to $40
Overcoats—$ 15 to $60
Smartest Shirts
It’s very generally admitted that the
best styles are always produced under the
Manhattan Brand.
And it’s well known, locally, that this store always
shows the choicest selections of Manhattan#.
The new lines on view today well uphold the repu
tation of the shirt nnd the store.
$1.50 to $3.50
Daniel Brothers Co.
L. J. DANIEL, President
45-47-49 Peachtree-Opposite Walton St.
Will Not Be Open Until Af
ter Prohibition Election
1b Over.
Birmingham, Ala., OCt. ID.—Oil ac
count of the Intenee Intereat felt here
Birmingham’* prohibition election,
Mayer Ward hal Issued a proclamation
sing all aalooha from tonight at mid
night until Tuesday. The BherlfTa of
Dee also has Issued a proclamation call,
lug for sufficient guarding of the bat
hoses on Monday.
JUSTICE’S RECORDS
IMPROPERLY KEPT
In their general presentment* to
fudge Pendleton, of the superior court.
Friday nfternoon the Fulton county
pand Jury declared that upon Investi
gation they had found that some of the
teeorda of the justice courta have not
D*en correctly kept. The grand Jury
did not mention any names In connec
tion with their Investigations.
When Prohibition Will Prohibit
Hall Given Ten Year*.
Fitzgerald, Ga., Oct. 25.—The case of
Alt Hall, a wreck from the habitual
«e of morphine, who was on trial at
ihli term of tho Ben Hill euperlor court,
•ad during which the prosecuting wit*
n«>. James Green, was stricken with
apoplexy and died, wae convicted of
burglary and sentenced by the Judge to
• term of ten years at the state form
Mlliedgevlll*. Hall has already
*»rved six chain gang terms for like
offenses.
"The Daylight Corner."
£
For the man who in•
tends to “get there,”
for the man who is a
Quick mover—the top
c °at is the necessary
thing.
We show some very
obby new Fall Top
Coats at $18.00 and
$20.00.
tiseman & Weil
1 Whitehall St.
To the Editor of The (Seorotnn:
There in mi old quatrain. remarkably
prophetic, which neeins to comprehend the
•object of temperance reform In four sue-
ceeslrc steps, each tine denoting a period of
time.
Dating from the passage of tho first reso
lutions by church councils, together with
certain legal enactments against drunken*
ness in the early history of our country,
there was paved the way for
Moral 8uasionfor tho Man Who Drinks,
6 s expressed In the old Washingtonian and
iter Murphy movements. These were di
rected ftt the reclaiming of the drlnkeri but
following there came a period designated by
Mental Suasion for tho Man Who
Think*,
wherein scientists discovered alcohol to be
an agency of destruction Instead of an aqua
J formerly supposed, mockingly pre-
nly thnt which Is already dead,
.. . u stimulant whose greater reac
tion Is manifold more narcotic fu the oxydts-
Ins of organic substance. It was during
this period that the effects of alcohol upou
the human system began first to lie under
stood, ntul the legalised traffic therein beln,
thoroughly entrenched In the commerda
world, the tide of reform was deflected
from exclusive work with the Individual to
the work of undermining the nefarious
trade In alcoholics by rcstrlctlvo and pro
hibitive measures. Realising the necessity
for
Legal Suasion for the Drunkard*maker
1 —*■ x»-- -—mini
tlonnl In scope. In this period we are to
day, nnd prohlbltou will not vet prohibit.
There remains another period In which
Prison 8unslon for tho 8tatute-breakor
tatty aucceed In outlawing alcohol; and even
then we may only restrict, ns we deal with
hiurder and arson.
Prohibition may not prohibit until through
a cnuipnlsii <>f education people learn that a
hundred heads may go erooked to every
one heel; that a man may be psychologi
cally drunk who hns never ‘'staggered" In
tT - life. The breaking down of cer‘“'“
n cells la not necessarily colnch
with disturbance of the vssotpntor system.
The chemical affinity of alcohol for wa
ter, resulting In the drying up of the fluids
of the body, create* the appetite or thirst,
the effort to quench this thirst, which
rs by wliat It feeds upon, create* the
t, the habit provides sufficient quantity
of alcohol to coagulate, the albumen In the
brain of even a moderate but habitual
drinker—the supply blocking the eliminative
nnd constructive process of tho system—nnd
the breaking down of certain brain cells
may destroy the “higher" man long before
the physical effects are apparent. And for
such a ninn to Imagine that because he has
never staggered he la not a flt subject for
active temperance legislation does not
square with facts. ...
"Their priests do err In Judgment through
a-lii.i" (tiidllna maiital not nh vat rut ■trunk-
Bible, null when inch n men substitutes (or
Invi) of Gotl, home ami native land threw
errora of JmlRuirnt ilealxnatMt » the wonla
atlielam, polygamy auil nnnrrhjr. though he
may wevor have Iteeu physically drunk, thnt
laomethlng present In baldt or remote In
Ihcrltnge Tina destroyed the ••higher' 1 mnn.
la ti problem of probabilities of which selena
DeepIte tradition and the vote at the
Savoy, thi .o are signs of uneaslneee
In modern England over the rigidity of
the rulen of drese. According to Wil
liam Archer, the evenlng-clothea habit
Is turning thousands of people from the
London theaters to the music halls
and Is perpetuating an evening-clothes
type of play. "To the British drama,"
he says, “the white choker is a choker
Indeed." while In America, with the In
fluence of drees restrictions removed,
the whole field of life Is open to the
playwright.
Plainly the times are ripe for a new
Carlyle and • new "Sartor Rcsartus.'
MUTABF Y.
Conditions have changed.—E. H, Har-
rlman.
Indeed they have;
Indeed, Indeed.
It almoet seems
As If the meed
Of money-grabbers
Was to be
A segregation
From the free;
Or If their freedom
Should remain.
The people's grip
Would choke their gain.
Wow, wow! •
It looks that way now.
The magnate who In other days
Might damn the public and Its ways;
Might snap his fingers at the laws
And make himself effect and cause:
Might merge and handle at his call
And force the weaker to the wall;
Might seal his lips In courts and tell
The government to go to hell;
Might scorn the efforts of the press
To paralyse his lawlessness;
Might give the lie to truth and smile
At those who dared proclaim his
guile;
Might smash the Decalogue and still
Retain the pulpit's tolerant will;
Might. In a word, do as he pleased
By seeing that the way was greased,
Is different now;
So different that
He trembles nnd takes off his hat
To that name public
Which before
He held In great contempt;
And, more.
He begs to have Its onslaughts cease
And let him have a little peace.
Say,
That’* the way
It looks today.
What Edward says Is on the flat.
And he won't have to awear to that.
W. J. LAMPTON.
The Doctor’s Revenge
By VIGGO TOEPFER
A folding bed, a table, two ehalrs which his morning mall. He picked up a letter
re not quite ante to alt In unleaa they nre j “That la from Walter." ho sold. looking at
ropped against he wall, a liookease and a ! the bandwriting. “Hut what doe. he
propped
pipe rack!
That Is the whole furniture of tho room
where Student Walter Judaon, of Columbia
University, had sjient three years studying
medicine.. It made no difference to Idm
that the room, being In an attle, had slop*
log walla and woa rather too cold for com
fort In winter nnd oppressively hot In the
summer. Being up high he had a beautiful
view of the Hudson nnd the ragged outlluea
of the rallandes ncroaa the river, npd ns he
had not yet grown citified enough to love
the sight of pavement nnd house walls, this
view meant more to. him than all the com
forts of a luxurious apnrtmi'ht.
And even If he had htought of moving he
won Id never have been able to do so for
tlie sake at bis hoarding mistress, a moth
erly widow who had, an to speak, adopted
him from the first week he ns nn tnexpe-
rleneefl country buy hail come to New York
to study medicine, and Who beside* was nn
old frleud of his uncle. Hr. Townsend, of
. late tn the afternoon of s rather
dreary dny In December. The la inn Is lit,
the ensiles arc down. Walter Is busy at
hta deak. In front of him are two o|u>n
win's "Pre-6lstoric Nations" and Itswlln-
•on's "Origin of Nations.” The plea therein
set forth for the Zionist as srfdter of the
world veils one hop*, vogue, seemingly rain,
as yet Impraetlcaide, but etlll within the
realm of poaatMIHy that the time may come
when prohibition will prohibit. For psycho
logical drtinkonnrai !• the keynote of Nor-
dau’a "Degeneration,” and Nonlaii lends ths
Zionist congress. K. SI. V.
Augusts, Ga.
ROLE OF EVENING CLOTHES,
An Incident la not quite closed
which arose In London recently over
the enforcement of a hotel rule requir
ing evening dree* at dinner In the
main dining-room. Following tho Im
mediate occurrence the management
of the Savoy sent notes to 500 patrons
asking for their opinions on the rule.
The replies Indicate an overwhelming
sentiment for the regulation as It
stands.
Of course tho Savoy Is tho hotel of
a class. It was a limited referendum,
therefore, to which the management
had recourse. Yet it la recalled that
when the same question of an evening,
dress requirement aroee not long ago In
New York In a hotel aa exclusive as
exceedingly high rale* can make It,
there wai a marked difference of opin
ion among natrons.
The American likes good clothes not
less than the Briton. It was an Amer
ican woman who remarked that the
sense of being well dressed gavo her
a serehlty greater than that Imparted
by the conaolationa of religion. But
the state of being under bonds of eti
quette to associate certain hour* and
function* with certain fixed forms of
dress Is regarded sometimes a* Irk
some even In the most aristocratic
fl*r!i>. rf n Asf**#.*aevt
MISS JEAN REID’S BALL.
It la gratifying to read of the Im
prcsalon Ambassador and Mrs. Reid
and Miss Jean Reid, their young
daughter, ara creating on tho British
mind with all Its hide-bound conserva
tism and scorn of tho American’s new
ness. The Washington Post says of a
recent etate function at the embassy:
"I havo never seen a more repose
ful young hostess In my life." This
was the comment of this duchess of
Connaught on Jean Reid after the
great ball at the embassy, where. In
the absence of her mother, the ambas
sador’s daughter received the gueete.
For once there was no dearth of men
In the ball room—a fact which caused
almost amaxement, ns even at the
dances given by royalties this season
the ecarclty of men caused extreme
dissatisfaction. AH the smartest men
about town were there, among others
Prince Francis of Teek, who consider*
dancing a bore. The fact that he
waltsed no lea* than four times with
his hostess was much commented upon.
"Would the king be willing to gtvo hi*
permission were our future queen’s
brother determined to 'pop’ the ques
tion?" was asked by onlookers fre
quently during the night. Another of
the royal guests was Prince Arthur of
Connaught, who, like the rest of his
family. I» very fond of Americana. He,
too, danced with the hostess several
^The palatial Dorchester house looked
•ven more beautiful than It over did
under the management of Mr*. Whlte-
whlch were in new and novel devices,
were superintended nnd Inspected by
Jean Reid herself, who Is most artistic.
In one of the dancing rooms there
were banks of water lilies. The effect
was exceptionally good and was ad
mired greatly. Another room wee
adorned with a profusion of wild flow
ers. tall grasses and picturesque weeds.
The ambassador seemed vastly pleased
with his. daughter’s first big *ucce»* a*
a h •*«■".
loo?. Philadelphia," Ps."
My Dear Ml-a Vnmlerhosf:
me an eternity. IIow changed everything
IsJ During tho two months you won*
stopping here with your aunt. Now York
. the most Ideal spot In the
world, on
prosaic.
i terribly
I feel
not one who under
one who os ref to try.
.... Imm ..
lonesome. There
stands me. not even one who cures t<
I lived while 1 was together with you
saw you, heard you. talked to you. Now
merely exist. I ent, drink, sleep, utter
lectures, but like nu uninterested automa
ton. Just now I dream myself In your
aunt's cosy sitting room,
always listened to me <
I must —-
ream I live It over again
nnd hope. Though you
to you.
"How nntuml that ws arc Miking of
Christmas, which Is here now. Of course,
you are busy making presents nnd look
forward with great Joy to the holidays.
" *8o do you, of course,’ I bear you mo
so very much, 1 must admit. As
usual I am to spend Christmas with my
old uncle nt Nyncb. I am very fond of
hint, nnd so thankful l>eenu*o he hns looked
after me ever since my pareuta diet!; hut
l the truth, he Is not very entertaln-
ultro-conservstlve In
to tel] — .
lug. Hu Is n bachelor,
all his views nndi hns only one passion—to
dy baciill.
.Vo, J do not anticipate much. I know
the receipt. It Is Christmas day. We are
three—Uncle Walter, his housekeeper, Miss
Knox, a dear old soul, very hard of hearing,
nnd myself.
"We sit down for dinner, sing a hyi .
smoke a couple of cxrelleut clgara, drink a
glass or two of hot Jamaica rum, talk of
■«« -■*— -lecpy.’ To •“** ,n " **•» »•*•***•
_nd yawn on.. .
ancle, I tin. Corel night. I thank you for
a hare done for nie.'
nd night, mjr l»y."
■ inat I, all I see of chi...mu. nnn poor
though It Is. you might make It the hap
piest day In my life, It you who .pend It In
the midst of alt your friends would tend a
thought to mo. the lonesome fellow—or—I
thinking of the last day—when yon left.
• were ntono unit 1 wanted to ask you
• question which means happiness or mis-
•, life or death to me—hut I dared not.
me each * Christmas letter then tt would
“WALTER S. JUDSO.SV
oyer the lines, lie hml really finished
he had thought he would never dare. Some.
at the door, "tome In.” **
body knocked
was his land'
Judaon. yon
I . hnrrr If yon want
your letters !u the mail tonight.”
"In t minute.” The pen rushed across
the paper. It did not take long to writ*
bis nnele nt Nynek that he exported to st
rife there nn the 3:3) train Christmas itsy.
Then he sen le,l the envelopes, pot tho
stamps on and delivered them to the youth
ful postilion d’amour, who bounded down
■lain four steps m a time merrily whlstllna
“Waiting st the rhureb.”
But Walter heard nothin*. An earth;
quake could not have deafened the whirl
in his mind. He kept peeing np and down
the Boor, uncertain woether it would not
have been wlaer to wait n little longer In
stead of forcing a climax, finddruly b*
stopped, tore open the door and rushed
down stairs. He looked up the street, but
U was too late—Jehu had disappeared with
the tetters. . . ,
Toe next forenoon. Dr. Townsend was
sitting In bin hninrlls« offtce looking ovsr
handwriting. "Rut wliat does he
mean? *My Dear Miss Vanderhoef,'" He
looked nt the signature. "Yours faithful
ly. Walter N. Judson." Then ho looked nt
the envelope once more. "Tat. that Is
meant for nie-lmt how"— and without
e 11 s£ nn t,iro, »ffh the letter.
Now—listen to that—entertaining I am uot
-ultra-conservative—that means I’m nn old
rooi—nnd I have only one passion-bacilli, J
must any the portrait Is not very flutter*
! I,, » 1 ! m ~ ; Ml**,Knox—now thnt Is sore
enough. Hut If I do not make you pay for
that volley, my boy, my name Is not Wal
ter Townsend/'
The Mine nfternoon the old doctor took
the train for Weebawken, nnd did not re
turn for a couple or days, Christinas day
came with dear, cold. Ideal wluler wenth*
nlmself Went to the station
In hi* sleigh to receive his nephew.
How are you, Walter? I low are you,
my hoy? Welcome home and a merry Christ*
Walter did not riotlco the merry twin-
K!ri uncl ®", . ns he answered,
Thank yon, node. Merry Christmas to
you. In n rather absent-minded way.
ouce on the way home, he thought of
asking bis unde n question, but dared not.
Now they were In the doctor’s private of.
llco Walter walked nervously up and down.
“Is not there n letter Tor mer* he blurt*
I out, at last.
"For you? From
"Oh, never mind,
i>t any."
"Well, really, 1 do not know; l hare not
‘on any."
"How are you, Wattarr It was Miss
Knox who had come In. "IIow happy I
"m I« see you again, nnd now we are to
have a real old-fashioned Merry Christmas,
Isn’t thnt so. Doc?" lint "Doc" did not
listen. Ills hack was turned toward them
nnd he chuckled to himself as he flUed bis
pipe.
"Yon have not got n letter for me. Miss
Knox? shouted Waiter, angloualy awaiting
the answer.
"Oh, never mind the latter, you know I
do not ue«*d any. Yon are expected nnd
‘come wlthour —jfj— fij
alter sighed.
I am afraid I must give you
way. the w
train, so wo
pretty soon."
"No, uncle. You must not ask mo to do
that. I nm hot ungrateful. I wish you
every happiness, but—I must leave."
"Leave— whnt do you menu? Where nre
you going?"
"It does not matter where. If only 1 get
nwnv from hero."
’The devil—I really think there nre tenrs
In your eyes—nnd you almost n mnn."
"I know I must seem .Insnne, but I can’t
tell you."
"Then, let me do It. You ace, Walter;
you had painted me too black, so 1 must
hare rerengo."
"I nnlntcd you too black—I do not under
stand."
"No, but you soon shall. It was your
own fault. You got your letters mixed nnd
sent one to Miss Alice telllug her to expect
you st 8 today, while you sent me n letter
of^ f proposal, which was really quite well
"And then?"
‘Than It was of cours* up to me to cor*
"Then of course It came to nn explana
tion, and now sho will l»e here on the 6
o’clock train."
*Oh, yon nre the best old uncle In the
RECEIVER NAMED
BY REFEREE FOR
SOUTHERN STEEL
Big Iron Concern Unable
to Weather Pressure
of Creditors.
Excuse me; I think I
ahead.
•hall hove a merry <
I am sure we
An old-fashioned spelling bee will be
had In the school house In Kirkwood
Thursday nigh], XV. C. Cousins will
be the teacher, and nn excellent musi
cal program will be rendered before
the sides are chosen.
Walter sighed.
Impossible to make her understand that
way," said the doctor., turning around,
he began sniffing ns if be smelt somethh
"What I* the matter, Doc?" It came 1
Miss Knox. "Do you smell anything? It
must lie the turkey burning,” and before
they knew It she was gone.
"That Is the way to nnudle her.’’ laughed
the doctor, and settled down comfortably In
his Idg easy chair.
"Now, sit down a moment. Walter. Y’ou
are nervous—been worklug too hard, I sup*
pose."
"Not nt all, uncle. Thera Is nothing the
matter with me."
"Yes, yon are nervous, but we shall soon
cure you of that. I am Just the mao."
"Yes, I know you are quite famous as t
specialist In nervous diseases, but"—
“Ob. non*ens»! I am not going to All
you up with pills nnd tonics. You need a
rest cure, yon nre going to stay right here
with me nml do uothlug at all for three or
four weeks."
Hut, uncle’’—
I know what you are going to
i». 4*’u luiNfl • nm an old, rather
grumpy fellow, ultra-conservative, that la to
say. foolish. And I have only one passion—
bacilli, though I like a good dinner, a good
Havana, and n hot mm. Is not that right?"
"Oh, Uncle W.lter"-
"Do you dare deny It?"
The old doctor enjoyed the miserable ex
pression on his nephew's face aa be used
fils own expressions verbatim.
"Well, never mind, my boy, I, too, have
nee been young, and understand how a
omig fellow finds. What we need In this
jouse Is more life, more young people. To
ask you to spend Christmas with old Miss
" ox and myself Is like potting you In
But, Unde Walter, you are really mis*
taken, I assure you."
‘1. But I will tell you a secret.
M Hi ,s a rent dear old soul. She
knows bow to roast a turkey: hut preside
at a table—no. And, therefore, I have
xu... ..... cares over to
"I mu clad to hour It.”
"Would It I mi lndl.rr.ot to Mk who the
"Not nt nit. I got the Idoo nil of * Hid
den. while vlnltlnt' ray old rbum, Vnndor-
hre-f. In I’hllndolpbln.
"JudK. Vnnd.rhm'f?”
'Y... tb.ro nr. m.ny young people In
the bourn', nnd when I bniraonni 10 coin-
plnln «pf Mug lonowim.—
“'There I. only one grown daughter,
"W'.lt, on. In enough, Um't It?”
"And nb.t"
"Why, ph. ronnented Immediately.”
"You mean " .
"I mean I apnke to b.r father lint, and
he of course prepared her. You know her,
* think.” *
"I thought I did.” Walter groaned.
"Yon phall aee a change heir when «b*
An Imitation Takes for It, Pattern the
Real Article.
There wan never an Imitation made
of an Imitation.
Imltatoru altvayn counterfeit the gen
uine article. The genuine la wlmt you
ank for, becauee genuine art.ules are
the advertlaed onea. lmltutluna are not
advertlaed, but depend for their busl-
neaa on the ability of the dealer to
•ell you aomethlng claimed to be "Juat
aa good’’ when you axk for the genuine,
becauee he makea more profit on the
Imitation.
Why accept Imitation* when you can
get the genuine by Imitating?
Refuse Imitation.—Get What You Aek
For.
Wiley’s candy will melt
in your mouth and Georgian
want ads will put money in
your pocket. A forty-cent
box of Wiley’s best candy
free with each thirty-cent
want ad in next Saturday’s
Georgian.
Birmingham, Ala., Oct. 35.—Through
Federal Referee Jamea O. Thompeon,
E. B. Chandler and Mortis Adler havo
been named receiver* for the Southern
Steel Company by Judge bscar Hunt-
ley. The Southern Steel Company la
capltallaed at 135.001),000.
UTE INDIANS ARE
AGAIN ON WARPATH
Washington, Oct. 35.—The Dte In
dian*, who more than a year ago wan
dered nway from their rebervatton In
Utah and created trouble In Colorado
and Wyoming by threatening to take
the warpath, are reported to have again
broken out on the Cheyenne river res
ervation In South Dakntn. At the r«-
queat of the aerretary of the Interior
the war department Immediately or
dered troop* from Fort Mead. s. Dak.,
to the ecene of the trouble.
TRAIN IS DERAILED,
BLOCKING TRAFFIC.
fiprrlal to The tleorglnti.
Hawklnavllle, Ga., ■ Oct. 25.— 1 The
Wrlghtavllle am] Tennllle Baasenger
train, due here at 5 p. m., waa derailed
at a aiding twelve mllee east of Haw-
kln.vllle Wednesday afternoon and up
to late Thurrdny afternoon no train*
could paia. All of the train* were on
the other aide. No paaaenger* Were se
riously hurt and Express Messenger T.
D. Smith, whose home I* here, was
brul.ed about the head.
BECAU8E OF DAD HEALTH
MAN TAKES OWN LIFE.
Special to The Georgian.
Columbus, Ga., Oct. 35.—News has
reached here of the suicide by shooting
of Thomas B. Beeland, a farmer near
Reynolds, aa.
He waa a brother of SherifT Beeland,
of that county. He had been In III
health.
Diamonds
and Diamond Jewelry
Whether you know all about diamonds or noth
ing about them, this store is nn eminently satisfac
tory place to buy them.
First of all, we have the stones—peerless in
quality and variety. Then we have expert sales
manship, backed by the house’s reputation, and its
policy of absolutely honest methods of doing busi
ness.*
If you yourself are a diamond expert, you will
know what you are getting. If you are not tech
nically informed on the subject, you will be thor
oughly safe in taking our judgment in the matter.
Diamond Jewelry in a great profusion of very
desirable styles—rings, studs, brooches, bracelets,
necklaces, earrings.
Maier & Berkele