Newspaper Page Text
14
POPE'S DELEGATE
TO 0.5. ARRIVES
Declares Pontiff Is Now in Ex
cellent Health. But That He
Works Too Hard.
NEW YORK. May 3 —Archbishop
Giovanni Bonzano. apostolic delegate
to the United States, arrived here to
day from Naples on board the Nortn
German-Lloyd liner Koenig Albert, and
received a ceremonious welcome. He
was met at Quarantine by Mgrs La
velle and Hays, representing Cardinal
Farley; Coadjutor Bishop Mundelfn, of
Brooklyn, and other leading members
of the priesthood, representing prac
tically every other diocese in the United
States
The new papa! delegate said he was
glad he was coming to America since
he had always had great admiration
for the American peepee, and num
bered many American people, whom he
had met abroad, among his friends.
Speaking of the health of the pope,
whom he saw on April 16,
after the widespread rumor or . r>»
pontiff s death, he said ' His hollnes
was then in excellent health. He has
no illness except ’hr gout, but he Is
often tired and worn out with the au
diences that he gives every day from 9
a m to 1 p m.. and sometitrn . in th
evenings as well. Hr rcalb l»adr a
strenuous life for a man of his age.
for he is now 77 > > ars old. But the
gou’ 1 suppose, is r”ill> a blessing in
disguise" and the archbishop smlled
“for it takes the Ills of tip bodv off
through the fee’ "
Theopole Pap!" of St. Louts, a clos°
friend "f ’he papal delegate, accompa
nied him from Naples ind acted as his
secretary on the trip ovei.
HARVARD'S FAMOUS ELMS
ALL WILL BE CUT DOWN
CAMBRIDGE. MASS. M.n 3. Al!
the famous dms in th* 5 H<i*. »quad
rang!' are tn he cut down th' ummer
and red oak. planted in their places.
The elms au dying
Al wmwwxww I w—ip L . ._ >HJ.|||_J-L— -..J.J-1-- J.l LU-m.—uaii. ■■■< i ..-i iiiii»» » ■ ■ n.«» M r.-——
[rent raised w eqlityoi j win
$40,000 Worth of New Style Clothing and Furnishings to Be Sacrificed,at Once
<K . . . ... , r- T-t-mTiwT rrr-~TTr-r—n»- -r ■ «W »I mil IIIRR—WI 11 limwr gSgK *>
n w I■> M! ’•?Ryy n T rngiwfe^^ii'jmßM»*t^r^BPa»H!nraMaaM«L»ww«wri»^««w^MMiwrwresE3Cca3y!^'iyßrg.^ J maiJs imu _ rTTI n ... , ~ .7. . .
| QUICK AND GET YOUR PTCKr ~|
I An advance of $3,000 per year in our rent forces us to liquidate. Our close-price selling simply won't
I permit the additional expense. So we are going to close out our entire stock regardless of cost. We have
I herfsThe letter from our landlord—read it yourself your kind of Suits and Furnishings, your size, and .
I J. E. Hunnicutt & Company best of all, AT YOUR PRICE.
I MANTELS. TILES MASS | “ LTeS North Broad SL C?Sm«ZU> MX * Less Than Cost fori Shirt Prices Are! Season’s Newest
FIRE SETS. FENDERS. ANDIRONS | anJ ° ’ COPPER CORNICES. GUTTERS - . ■ ■ —— ■ 1 " 11 =7=—L'„.
COMBINATION GAS AND ELECTRIC i Phone G6S DOM'N SPOUTS. METAL CEILINGS. ~ . > T r-1 1 J wvj z* a . .
I Men s Fine Suits Now Slaughtered Hats Cut & Quick
~ ■ •—•—
I .Bevhl-Meador Co, d sc , sls Suits $ 9.951 SI.OO Shirts, : $1.50 Hat, $1.15
I $lB “ $11.95 HZ£ $2.00 “ $1.40
S2O - SIX4O Sl.SOShirts $2 .50 “ $1.75
Gentlemen:- COO- 50 “
s? J- 2 ‘ QQ
| -Regarding’the'rental of the'store tnat you now occupy;’ $25 “ $15.95i52.00 Shirts, I ' 4( -J
I after your lease expires; Sept. 1-1912; would say; tnat I expect to' ** $17.95 $1.401T
I get $600.00 per montn for tnlfl corner after tnat time. ” sl9 05 50 ShirtS $4.00 $2.75
$32 50 “ $21’95 $1.75 $5.00 “ $3.50
My present;intention is to lease tais corner so tnat
I the same will expire at t.ie • same time tn at tne leases on the $35 “ $22.75| $3.00 shirts. P b - uu J±±P
I other-stores.run out; which'will be five years from January 1-1912. S4O £< $23,95;
: _ buehl-Meador co.
I Peachtree Street - - Corner Walton
II
Dog On State Payroll
As Label Licker Lies
Dead-Martyr to Duty
TOPEKA. KANS.. May 3.— Jimmy B.
Damm is dead Jimmy was the only
dog ever on the Kansas state pay roll,
and ■‘rem a purely practii al standpoint
was the most valuable dog in the state,
and well worthy of his hire. He died
a martyr to his duty.
Jimmy was the most bow-legged,
most direputable-lookfng canine that
ever crosed the borders A granite
slab is to be erected to his memory and
to ma<r hi- last resting place.
For manv year.-. Jimmy has been fur
nished good things to eat and a nice
place to sleep by the state water analy
sis department as the official stamp
licker The analysis department -xam
Ines the water of some 600 Kansas
towns every three months. When a
sample arrives at the department it
must be properly labeled, and for six
or seven years Jimmy ha« been the
licker of labels in th, department.
When Dr. <'. Young, head of the
department, or one of his assistants
would write the label to be placed on a
bottle of food or water, three distinct
raps would be given on a table and in
stantly Jimmy would be at the side of
the analyst. The label would be held
down, and Jimmy would proceed to
lick the gum and see that the label
was pasted on the bottle properly. A
man could pound on the table all day
and Jimmy would not budge, but let
him give three short, sharp raps and
Jimmy would be right on the job.
Jimmy finally died of a disease en
gendered by doing hie duty
GEN, Wil IJAM BOOTH
IS LOSING HIS SIGHT
LONDON, May 3.—lt is feared that
General William Booth, the octonega
rian founder and still active head of
'he Salvation Army, whose life is one
~f th. mo.-’ extraordinary human doc
ument.- of modern times. will have to
abandon his farew ell tour from coast to
coast of the United States
There is grave danger that fbe man
who first brought the light of Chris
tianity to the slums of London will
himself lose th" light of earthly eyes.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS:FRIDAY. MAY 3, 1912.
M ONE TERTJI
LASTING BYEARS
States May Have Chance to
Vote on Amendment Affect
ing President.
WASHINGTON. May 3.—Six years'
tenure with on!' one term for the presi
dent, is th" gist of a constitutional
amendment which will undoubtedly be
proposed to the states for ratification
:<:■ a direct result of the campaign thl.
year for the Republican nomination fen
pr< r-ident.
I'niv.iaa! regret is heard over the
spectacle p.' rented by a president of
th" United States and a former occu
pant of that high ofFr e un'imbering on
the stump the guns of abuse, vitupera
tion and mud spattering.
Th" only opposition to th" resolution
of Senator Works, of California, comes
from imu ;»n’ Republicans like Sena
tors Bourne, of Oregon, and Bristow, of
Kansas
Senator Tillman, of South Carolina,
today said
"J heartily favor the amendment, but
it is not original vi'h Senator Works
The Confederate states adopted it Sen
ators Bacon and Hoke Smith, of Geor
gia, approved the resolution, but fa
vored making the president ineligible
at any time after serving one term of
four years.”
SHIRT WON HHSRAND
FOR GIRL IN FACTORY
OMAHA. NERR , May 3 The mar
riage at St. Johns Catholic church here
of Miss Delia Brennan, of Harwood.
Pa., to Rodney C. Jewell, a drug clerk,
of Omaha, niaiked a'peculiar romance
Ten years ago Miss Brennan, who
was employed in a shirt factory at
Harwood, sewed into a shirt she was
making a card bearing her name and
address Jewell, who was living in Chi
cago. bought the shirt and wrote her
a letter.
They corresponded for ten years, and
a few weeks ago Jewell asked Miss
Brennan to come to Omaha and marry
him.
They never h id seen each other when
she got off the train here this morn
ing w t aring a bright red ribbon on
her sleeve to let Jev»ll know who she
wits. They got a icense right away.
French Financier
Made S3OO Per Day
While in Jail Cell
PARIS, May 3—The Paris police
have raided a financial establishment
in the Rue Laffitte and confiscated the
contents of the safe, as well as the
books, thereby putting a stop to the
lucrative source of revenue of a banker
named Zucco, who has been in prison
for several months for irregular finan
cial transactions.
M. Zucco, although occupying a cell,
first at the Sante and then at Fresnes,
contrived to open another financial es
tablishment in the same house as that
occupied by his bank, which was closed
by the police when he was arrested.
From his cell he directed a scheme for
getting small investors to subscribe
jointly for lottery bonds.
Business went well. The new estab
lishment was soon employing ten clerks
and M. Zucco in his cell was making
about S3OO a day. But disappointed
clients informed the police.
OPERATE ON BRAIN TO
SETTLE INSURANCE'SUIT
CHICAGO, May 3—Andrew J. White,
the “man of mystery," who, after his re
lease from a New York prison, appeared
in Niles, Mich , claiming to be George
A. Kimmel, a long-missing banker, lies
in a Chicago hospital today, speechless
since an operation expected to lift a cloud
from his memory. Upon the success of
the operation hinges the outcoem of a
suit for $25,000 Insurance money claimed
by Mrs Estelle Kimmel
Injury to his skull received in an acci
dent in St Louis many years ago ob
scured his memory of early life. An op
eration to relieve the pressure of the bone
on the brain was performed.
THE LAX EOS WAY.
If you had a medicine that would
strengthen the liver, the stomach, the
kidneys and the bowels and at the same
time make you strong with a systemic
tonic, don’t you believe you would soon
be well?
That's "The Lax-Fos Way.”
We ask you to buy the first bottle on
the money-back plan, and you will ask
your druggist to sell you the second.
It keeps your whole Insides right.
There is nothing else made like Lax-
Fos
Remember the name—LAX-FOS. **•
White City Park Now Open
SILENCE WINS BRIDE
AFTER FIFTEEN YEARS
ST. WOTS, May 3.—After keeping
his mouth shut fifteen years, Robert
H Silence told Bessie E. Chalmers, No.
1514-A Yeffingwell avenue, that < he
loved her. After fifteen years of silent
waiting for Silence, she accepted him.
and immediately after their marriage
yesterday afternoon she became true
to her new name and refused to say a
word to a reporter.
John F Cabb, who married’Silence’s
sister several years ago, told of Rob
ert's love for Bessie and their court
ship. Silence finally admitted he had
loved Bessie all these years, but just
couldn't propose
One thing which induced him to break
his silence, he said, was the thought
that the gjrl had golden hair, which
occurred to him every time he thought
"Silence is Golden.”
FOR THE MAN WHO SHAVES
Turham) -1 p/yvwywvvtrEf
I jurham} -
Cut this ad out,
and bring to
our store
Fill out and bring this ad to our Peachtree store and we will give you a DURHAM
DEMONSTRATOR with one blade for 35c to become your PERSONAL PROPERTY.
N A ME •
ADDRE55....7.7..... "7..... 7.7.7.7. .7 7?77.777...7.
KING HARDWARE COMPANY
53 Peachtree Street
HEART KEPT BEATING
THOUGH TAKEN OUT
OF PATIENT’S BODY
NEW YORK, May 3.—An account of
some remarkable experiments made at
the Rockefeller institute for medical re
search, with tissues from the heart, is
given by Dr Alezls Carrel, director of
the institute, in a report just published
here. Dr Carrel announces that be was
able to keep pieces of the heart tissue pul
sating rythmically outside the organism
from which they were taken for more
than two months. The fragments were
preserved in glass jars in suitable media
The experiments were a part of a series
to determine whether or not the life of
tissue can be preserved Indefinitely out
side the body.
PLAN CHAIN OF STORES
IN GROCERY MERGER
ST. LOOTS, May 3.—A merger of a
chain of retail grocery stores In Cin
cinnati, Philadelphia. New York and
Brooklyn is under way. The movement
is headed by Jacob Maurer and D. L.
Remley, of the Maurer-Remley Meat
and Grocery Company, of St. Louis.
The company already has fourteen
stores here.
The stores of one concern in Phila
delphia and another in Cincinnati are
known to be in the movement. The
New York and Brooklyn stores consid
ered m the merger have not been
named. The : main office of the new
concern, which probably will be capital
ized at $1,000,000. will be in St. Louis.