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i HE ATLANTA UEUKUIAN A Mi -NM\«.
ICIliAT. IM TUHKK 25. 1OTT.
r
1 TEe Kind of
Clothes You Want
Clothes that take very little out of your pock
et book, but put a lot of Style and Quality on
your back. ^
. Clothes that are worth every cent you pay
for them.
Clothes that do not cost a penny extra be
cause they come from a Credit Store.
These arc the kind of Clothes YOU need,
and they are the kind we have for you.
The clock of time is ticking off the seconds
and both hands point to Fall and Winter. So
come NOW to the Store where
$1.00 A WEEK CLOTHES
EVERY MEMBER of the FAMILY
Men’s Suits, Raincoats, Overcoats, Hots, and Shoes
Women’s Tailored Suits, Coats. Millinery
Waists, Furs, Shoes
Boys’ Suits and Overcoats—Misses’ Suits
ASKIN £ MARINE CO.
L , 78 Whitehall St. J
$32,000 IS STOLEN-
FROM EXPRESS SAFE
Man in Charge Went Out
. and Then They Got
Busy.
Milwaukee, Wt«., Oct. 26.—The safe
In the shipping department of* the
United Staten Express rompany In the
union .station was robbed this morning
of money In bills estimated at from
91MhO to $12,000.
Confirmation of the robbery was par
tially obtained from officials of the un
ion station. Route Agent Owens de
clined to discuss the robbery.
While the chief clerk was gone some
one entered the shipping department,
opened the safe and with a knife or
raxor cut open packages of money and
extracted bundles of bills of large de
nomination. Detectives were hurriedly
summoned from Chicago.
1,000,000 ACRES
10 BE
Government Will in 1908
Throw Open New Lands
in California.
Berkeley, Cal./Oct. 26.—More than
a million acres of land will be opened
for settlement .In the West by the
government within the next year. This
becomes public with /he^ news that
Professor Samuel Fortier has been ap
pointed the head of the Irrigation In
vestigations of California. The gov
ernment. through the Irrigation sys
tem, Is making new plans to assist the
settlers on now tracts In developing
the yielding nature of the land.
K-0 SHOES
Designed especially to
meet the demand of
men who appreci
ate
STYLE
COMFORT
QUALITY
Made of the
best material,
distinctly the
latest model for either general or
dress wear, and fits smooth and com
fortable from the first day.
Gresham-Ashford Shoe Co.
93 Peachtree St.
TO ERECT A SHAFT
TO FALLEN HEROES
Will Be Unveiled on Next
Memorial Day in
Marietta.
In honor of the 3,000 Confederate sol
diers buried at Marietta, the Kennesaw.
Chapter of the Daughters of the Con
federacy will er*ct and on the next Me
morial Day, April 26. will unveil a hand
some memorial shaft.
Since 1900 the members of this chap
ter have been working industriously to
secure funds with which to erect this
shaft, tin account of the fact that this
chapter lifts had the burden of the work
and has had to bear the burden of the
expense In keeping up the cemetery and
In Improving upon it. erecting a speak
ers 1 stand and other structures on It.
the task of securing funds for this shaft
proved a gigantic one.
The shaft will cost $2,500, and of this
amount Just a little less than $2,000 Is
now In hand. This money was raised
In part by small contributions from
over the globe, and. by hard work and
entertainments of all kinds.
The Kennesaw Chapter is composed
principally of the Daughters of the Con
federacy In'.Marietta
shaft and soon bids will be ask*
will be three bases of graduated sixes,
the largest ohc 12 feet square. On each
base will be a die. and on each die a cap,
On these caps will be erected the
shaft, which will be octagonal, and will
be built of the best granite obtainable.
The monument will contain an inscrip
tion of the Confederate banner, the
Cross of Honor, the badge of the Daugh
ters of the Confederacy and Insignia
emblematic of the war and of the Con
federacy'.
The shaft will be on a splendid emi
nence. Just In front of the speakers’
stand, in view of the city, the railroad
and the street car line.
The cemetery Is now owned by the
state and a bill will be before the legis
lature soon asking for old In keeping up
this city of the Confederate dead.
There Is no more historic spot In the
state than Marietta, which lay directly
In the path of Hherman’s famous march,
nnd which Is now the home of 3.000 of
the Confederate dead from every state
In the South, Including Missouri and
Maryland. 1
The shaft, upon which work will soon
begin nnd which will be unveiled April
26. will be at once a splendid nxldltion to
the cemetery and a fitting memorial to
those 3,000 brave men who fell In the
defense of their principles nnd *thelr
homes, nnd who are burled within its
oenflnes.
FOREMOST
In everythin# optical—the best, most ac
curate, most prompt prescription work done
In the entire Booth. Our patrons Kuow
these claims are substantiated by nu# serv-
Ice given them. A visit to onr stotf.- 75
Peachtree atreet. will convince those not
a Ires
ready otlr customers.
WALTEH HAU.AItl) OPTIf’Ah CO..
The only exclusive manufacturing retail
optical house In Atlanta.
00000000000000000000000000
O WAITING AT THE BANK, O
0 ROBBERS LOOT HOME. O
O O
0 Now York. Oct. 25.—Mr*. Thro
Odor. K. Schulz, with other disap- O
O 'pointed depositors, lingered around O
O the Knickerbocker until eevernl O
O hours had gone by. When ehe re- O
O turned home ehe foifnd' that bur- O
0 glnrs had ransacked the houee. O
O The thieves, evidently knowing O
0 (lie woe away, took their tlmo O
O nnd removed everything of value O
0 they could carry. The property O
O woe valued at <2,000. O
0 O
00000000O000000000000O00O0
Imitations Pay th» Dealer a Larger
Profit.
otherwise you would never 1,e offered
a euhetltute when you aek for an ad-
vertleed article. Imitations are not ad.
vertlaed hecauee they ere not perma
nent. For every genuine article there
are many Imitation*. The Imitator hna
no reputation to euetaln—the adver
tiser has. It stands to reason that the
advertised article la the beet, otherwise
the public would not buy it and the ad
vertising could no, be continued. When
you ask for an advertletd article see
that you get it.
Refuse Imitations.
HAWKINS ALIVE
SAYS HIS BROTHER
p. Y, Hawkins, of 33 Pelham street.
Western Heights, has Informed Pro
bation Officer Oloer Hist Ills brother,
Hsrt Hawkins, who wus the former
husband of Mrs. Arthur Hnggus. left
home on October II. and Is working
In a saw mill In south Georgia. He
had a letter from him under date of
October 31. Mrs. Roggus had produced
11 lit* I . I. .'I I n. luiggue tmw P 1
affidavit In police court to show
that Hawkins was dead before she
married Boggus.
THAN THAT OF LAST YEAR.
Special ,o The Georgian.
Decatur. Ala., Oct. 25.—This section
of the country Is now enjoying Ideal
cotton picking weather and ns a result
the farmers say that It will only be a
few more weeks until the entire cotton
crop of this section Is picked. They
say that practically all the cotton that
will open Is now open.
The erop this year Is said to be about
15 per cent less than the crop of last
year.
A matter
oi choice
Which will you have-
dry, chalky, tasteless
oyster packers dipped
out of a barrel, or
Oysterettes
dainty, appetizing bubbles of
crispness that melt on your
tongue with a savory suspicion
of salt and add zest
to your soup or oysters?
m moisture
proof packages
NATIONAL
BISCUIT
COMPANY
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
AND YOUNG PEOPLE’S TOPIC
A FIRST CLASS FIGHTING MAN
The International Sunday School Lesson For October 27
Is, “Caleb’s Faithfulness Rewarded.” Josh. 14:
6-15. ,
— - , BjSfil'i
By WILLIAM T. ELLIS.
A brut* Hum. who ha* never lowered hU
flag. I* nn object of fveryliodj’* adnilrn-
tlou. ptrii tho. weak look tip lo tho »trong.
Thor* I* * tingle to tin* tfllo which.,thW
week will more thitn ordinarily engross tho
at tout Ion of the Sunday school’* million*;
because It I* Tho story of C’aleh. that
doughty old hero who bail “kept the faith”
through two-score year** mid at 85 pro
nounced himself ••fit” for a battle with
giant*.
The modern analogy of Caleb!* romantic
experience I* In the victories which today
ate being achieved In. the cauae of com
mercial, political nnd *oclnl reform*. The
decent portion of society i* no Intereated
In the tremendous victories which are being
reported week by week, that It perhnpn I*
not taklu# thought of the during men who.
a score or more of year* ago, spied out
thin opportunity, with It* giant* nnd walled
cities, and courageously reported that vic
tory wa* possible. !.et n* take time for a
beer for the puthtliiders-many of whom
invo gone to their reward without having
_een their faith vindicated. We uro enter
ing the t'anauns into.which they had fh«
hardihood und fnr-*!gb ted ness to suupmm
A Romance of Heroiam.
This story I* one of I he fluent In the best
hook of flne stories. Twelve spies. It will
he recalled, had !»een *cut Into ('nnnnn
when the wandering children of Israel
reached the border* of their Promised
Land. Ten returned ferror s!rlcken. The
walled cities, aud the ferocious won* of
Aunk, hail overawed thorn. Two alone,
while admit tin# these dn tigers, yet said that
Israel was able to make the conquest. Hut
the panic-stricken people threnu-m’d them
with death by atoning. The majority ruled
—ami died miserably for Its pusillanimity.
Duly two men of all that company above
twenty year* of ago ever lived to enter the
Promised (.and; nnd those two were Joshua
and Caleb, the aples who had made the
bra
rave repo. .
Now. forty-five years after. Caleb is ask
in# nothin# Itetter of his old comrade
arms, Joshua. Israel's new hwlor. than
chance to go up ugalust those same walled
ttles which had seared the manhood out
of his ten associates, more than a genera
tion before. Hear the old warrior, chafing
battle at au age when niu»t men are In
their graves:
I am this day four ; s«*ore and flv
old. As yet I am ss strong this dsy as I
was In the day that Mows sent me; as my
strength wn* then, even so Is my strength
now, for tvor. and to go out and to come
In.
try, whereof .lehovnh spokh In ttvlf day;
for thou heanlest in that day *lbfw the
Aunklm were there, and cities great and
fortified; It may he that Jehovah will be
with me. a ml I shall drive them out. as
Jehovah spake."
A Man Who Did Not Whimper.
Never a whine In that declaration. Caleb
was not exulting over Ills weaker asso
ciates. nor failing at his nation for its past
treatment of him. He bad known hard
times, bitterly hart I times, hut his life had
not been embittered. He w**s ns free from
tho spirit of whimpering as from the spirit
of fear.
Nor ilh! he nsk any odd* or concessions
or special privilege*. Then* was no attempt
to plead Ids age or Ills past service or his
tribal relationship as an excuse for au easy
berth. Surely we should have forgiven old
Caleb If hi* had been content to pose as it
•’has been," and to seek u soft and com
fortable assignment In the new land. Yes;
hui we should 1mvn missed .the' Inspiration
of his heroic.example, lie Was sheer man
hood ui» to the end. All he asked of Hfo
was n brave man’s-chance. Apparently he
had never '.earned the Hebrew synonym
for the modern Americanism, "pull.” lie
was the name adventurous spirit upon his
last appearance that he had been at first.
When I have talked with old men who at
itbe late eventide of life lire still doing
great work—such as Edward EYorett Hale.
W. A. I*. Martin. Theodore Cttyler, Robert
Coftyer—It has seemed to in** tlmt the very
eonsunuuntlgn of success Is to be able to
continue to achieve until the very end. One
crowded hour of glorious life. It is trne.
Is I letter than long years of commonplace-
ness; but why not a protracted career
crowded with glorious life? finch was
Caleb’s, and nt 85 he chafed to go up
agalust the formidable Inhabitants of Heb
ron.
Hit Futurt Behind Him.
A common tragedy la that many lives do
not fulfill their early promise. Caleb’s did.
lie kept on as he began. Caleb the veteran
Is the natural complement of Caleb tho
young man. Many men, though, for whom
it brilliant future was predicted, lmve left
rears their future behind them. Their noble youth
Special to The Georgian.
Anniston Ala.. Oct. 25.—Two young
men are in Jail charged with the hor
rible murder of Trank Knighton, which
occurred just two weeks ago Monday. ■
The accused are Jim Hall, aged 16
years, and Cleveland Bedford, about 19 j
years of age. The arrests were made
by Policemen Eden and Eason, while
Jverseer Parker assisted In the arrest
of Bedford last night.
FOUND
0000000000000000000000000^* j I
01
THIRD TERMERS WILL
RF.FLGCT ROOSEVELT.” O!
0 O !
O Washington. Oct. 25.—After O j
O calling on President Roosevelt to- O;
O day. Governor Hoclu of Kansas. Qj
O sah
Q “We thlrd-te»*mera will el*ct O
O the president again, whether lie 0
O llk**s it or not. Why. we’ll mn O
O <*ver everybody that's against him O
O like a herd of Texas steers.’’ O
I COOOOO9QOOOOO0O<W<?QOOC^Ot>
Red Rock on draught
at all first class Soda Founts.
Large glass 5c—but you
must say Red Rock and
“say it plain.”
Manufactured by
THE RED ROCK CO.
has somehow gone to seed In Ignoble old
.Sere, for Instance, Is a certain preacher.
In his youth gave great promise of
la yot.._ „— _
power. He had vision. His Ideals were
* ’ lift
exalted. Ills spirituality was vital and
glowing. A passion for helpfulness con
sumed him. nnd many weak spirits leaned
upon him. Now, well post middle life, he
has attained cUurehly eminence—and the
contempt of nil who know him well. He
Is an ecrleslnstlcal politician, slick, smooth,
cunning; holding, apparently, no principles
that may hinder his worldly prosperity,
lie Is promluent, but not great; eminent,
but n failure. He will die “unwept and nn.
honored.” although uot, perhaps, “unsung.'
for the machine of which he Is a part will
some day bury hliu with fitting honors
Yet those who knew and loved the real mnri
that he once was, mourn na for a lost soul
As yesterday's dinner will not sustain c
man tomorrow, so early ideals and faith
fulness will not suffice for the demands of
age. Caleb’s claim on Hebron wa* not
merely Ida brave report as one of tho twelve
spies; It was his present ability to go In and
conquer the hill country. Between Ida
youthful nobility nnd hi* patriarchal snb-
Imlty there were crowded decades of faith-
perlence. There are people arising I
pemhT
year* ago. There Is no grip nor power In
such testimony. It la what happened to
day that counts. Present relationships aro
flan needs to he on his guard to keep
personal spiritual life a present experience.
A Fighting Man’s Faith.
The man who. In the face of bitter and
powerful misrepresentation and opposition.
Is doing more for the American name In
Chinn than any other. Judge L. F. Whllfley,
said to nm one day In Shanghai. “Next to
honesty, the most Important quality In life
Is courage." It was a voice of experience
out of the thick of battle. Ami It Is a word
for the times—whether spoken by old Caleb,
of ancient days, or one of his later types.
Expediency has been the donduaut note of
a great deal of modern-life; a great deal
of fighting must yet be done Imforo this
can he supplanted by truth. Many men will
have to be misunderstood nnd criticised and
antagonized before that brave day can be
fully brought In which put* truth above
everything else.
The life platform of Caleb might he sum
med iip In those word* from the Naalmist.
which would make u splendid motto for
*nv young Person facing life: “Walt for
Jehovah. He strong, and let thv heart
take, courage, yen, wait thou f,ir Jeho
vah. He was a man who wholly followed
.lenovan* mu nt iuhima i.kn.-.i. ■ •
Jehovah; nnd. of course, Jehovah is hound
•o vindicate nil sueh.
Professor Htnlkle says of Caleb; “That
’rearion of Milton, the Seraph
beautiful __ fi<v
Alsllel. 'Faithful found among‘The' faith'
lcss._ fnlthfu! only be.’ Is the type and Ideal
of the class. Mhadracb. Meshaeb and Abed-
nego restating the enthusiasm of myriads
and faintly defying the fiery furnace: the
Apostle 1 util clinging to his views of the
law and the gospel when even his brother
Peter began to waver; Martin Luther, with
hi* foot on the Bible, confronting the
whole world: John Knox, defying sever-
elgn and nobles anti priest* nllke, deter
mined the gospel should be freely preached;
.°. ul "5 rt . missionary to India
■mid the derision of the world—have all ex-
’•tab spirit that must utter
mpiltlcd the
wlmt is In the heart.
A Goal Worth Winning.
"If we only strive to he pure nnd true,
lo earn or ns there will come nn hour
When the tree of life shall burst Into
flower,
And rnlu at our feet .. -w „.,
of something grander than ever we knew.
glorious dower
Caleb thought he was asking only for
the hard thing: really he was asking for
the precious thing. Hebron I* one of the
golden names of the Old Testament. True,
hi* .highest reward mute in his own fear-
leas'spirit. for. ns *uys Lowell-
“ *Tls not the grape* of Canaan that repay.
Hut the high faith that failed not by the
Hie price which Caleb eoleted nnd won
bad. more to commend It than giants and
Hebron was older than Abra-
. ..lied cities. ,
ham. anti hallowed by memories of the
patriarchs. It was there, under the tree*
of Mature, that Abraham had dwelt. There
| Sarah had ‘tiled nut! been burled in the
care of Mncpelah. There lsnn«- and Jacob
had sojourned. And there, after Its first
conquest by Joshua amt its final subjugn-
tlon by < aleb. the trill* or Judah found
a rallying place. It was at Hebron that
| Davit! rofgned for Seven and one-half years.
Today Hebron, still Inhabited. |* regarded
of the oldest towns hi the world.
Courage always wins the great prizes.
Life would be a finer, rlcln MB
slou for must of ns If we ouly faced ft’witb
more of fearlessness nnd exalted fidelity.
There nitty l*» hard und dark space* to the
but the end Is conquest and
pen****.
SOUTHERN CAR WORKS
WILL BE REBUILT.
j Special to The Georgian,
j Way crow, Gn., Oct. 36.—By the
I burning of ihe South Aiiantic Car and
i Works It Is thought the damage will
i hardly fall below $250.0bO. Titere la
Insurance on the plant amounting to
| $240,060, and titer** will be u large
| amount of salvage on material and
• some few machines which may be used
[again. While no definite action
i be taken until after the Insurant
I Juster* are through with their work,
there Is every Indication that the work*
will be rebuilt at once.
FOR "DRY" VICTORy
They Combine in a Desper
ate Battle For Local
Option.
Wilmington, Del., Oct. 25.—Detawars
women are organising rapidly and com.
pactly for service on election day N 0
vember 6, In the fight for antl-licens.
enactments In all parts of the ttate
The vigor with which the women
have come Into the thick of the strug.
gle has caused more uneasiness to sa!
loon-keepers than any other factor in
the struggle. I
“The long-tongued women are nialA
Ing this tight a hard one.” said one nt
the 'leaders of the license forces ih»
other night. lne
"It Is more correct to say,” remi.a
Mrs. Elizabeth Marks, president ofth!
Anti-License Federation, "that the
broken-hearted mothers aro making th»
trouble for tho saloons.”
Shoulder to shoulder with Mrs. Marks
In the struggle are men and women of
many creeds.
From Kansas to aid the women In
their campaign has come Assistant At
torney General Trlckett, who raised
the Kansas anti-license legislation from
the farcical code which lax enforcement
had made It Into a set of law, that are
obeyed and respected.
"Our work.” said Mrs. Marks ye,ter.
day, "Is, above everything else, nractl-
cal. Wc get the women Interested first
and. through them, reach their hue.’
bands, sons and sweethearts.
"The work In Wilmington Is a sample
of what la being done everywhere In
Delaware. The city has been divided
by our organisation Into districts, and
in each of these, a women’s committee
goes from door to door enlisting the cu-
operation of women In each household
Men are seen and argued with some-
times, but the primary work Is done
with the women.”
"What arguments do you glr* to.vour
women recruits to be used with their
male relatives and friends’"
"Practical arguments. We show the
money that could be. saved If saloon,
were abolished. In Wilmington. We
point to the crimes that are causdd bv
liquor, tho deaths that result Indirectly
from It when it weakens the human
system and makes It the easy prey of
such diseases as pneumonia, heart dis
ease, Insanity and other maladies.
"We show the unhappiness that
cornea Into millions of homes through
drunkenness and the loss, not merely
of self-respecL but of the respect of
the community. We show tho number
of positions that have been lost through
the use of Intoxicants and the million,
of dollars that are frittered away an
nually over the bara of Delaware.
“With these arguments go thousand,
of personal, practical experiences told
by women In all parts of the state ami
th« knowledge by the men that the
arguments and the experience, are true.
"The churches are with us. More
than 80 per cent of the women are with
us. We are In earnest and we are In
the fight not only for this year, but for
every year while the local option law
shall remain on the atatnte books of
Delaware.”
Only One "BROMO QUININE.”
That Is LAXATIVE BROMO <
QUININE.
Look for the signature of E. W.
GROVE. Used the world over to Cun
a Cold In One Day. 25c.
SCOTTISH RITE
MASONS ADVANCE
Washington, Oct. 26.—Among th«
many well-known men who were elect
ed at yesterday's session, supreme
council, Scottish Rite Masonry, for the
Southern Jurisdiction of the United
States to receive the highest degree In
Scottish Rite Masonry—that of the
thirty-third degree, honorary—th«
names of Admiral Winfield Scott
Schley, United States Senator Nathan
Bay Scott of West Virginia ami
Francis Emory Warren, of Wyoming,
stand out most prominently.
The following Scottish Rile Mason,
also were elected to the thlrt»thlrd
degree, honorary: . , ,
Alabama—-Joseph Dickson Matlock.
John Henry McCormick: Robert Sterl
ing Teague. , •
Florida—Otis Little Keene.
Georgia—Joseph Cholmondely. Green
field Hyman, Wallace Wltkover.
Kentucky—William Henry Bartho o-
mew. Albert Pltgalns, William Douglas
Webb.
Louisiana—Frank Chalony, Gustav
Daniel Levy.
Mississippi—Harry Turner Howard
Tennessee—Newton Copeland Rich
ard*.
Virginia—Hay Talliaferro Thornton
Man and Wife May Both Die.
Special to The Georgian. • ,
Anniston, Ala., Oct. 25.—News from
Joe Smith, the Weaver man who cut
his throat with a drawing knife ana
then Jumped Into the well In the yard m
an effort to kill himself. Is that both
Smith and Ills wife are In a setlotm
condition. Smith Is said to have ion
tractert typhoid fever since the attend 11
at self-destruction. ,
Ills wife, who has fever, has au»
suffered a severe backset.
Get Well
Munp’s 3X Rheumatism Cure
leldom fills to relieve In oo- to tbr-
•ad cures In a few days. ,’J„i,et ts
Gdoor Cure J£St'I ll ; ( d°«K
E lotna or groin, «»*
Disease.
trouble. Price 2§f.
Munjon's 22v KWl
Ins In tbe back,
pains In tbe bark. loins or
Urns of KMney Dl«aa»e. FrfceSc. M
Munyon’s Headache Cure stops
In three mlnntes. Price 3k*. n lm>a n
Hanyon’s StoaS Pttkf
Hies of the blood. g t oneum*** 1
Munyos's s.! 1 ::. p . r '7.2'S 0 S?.
and breaks up .Void In”, few boora
Mtinron’e Pile Olotment posit!
T*1r ***•
ill forms of pll#s Price »r. dpiggilfi**.
Mnnyon’s Remedies at »U
brfltlj «t S cent* ft