Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 03, 1912, EXTRA, Page 2, Image 2

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2 GIVE GP FLOOD FIGHT AND FLEE Despairing of Holding Levees Against the Raging Water, I i Guards Seek Safety. BATON ROUGE, LA.. May 3. The back levees around the state fa r m near Angola gave way today and within a few more hours the entire plantation was inundated. NEXfr ORLEANS. May 2 Giving up theii fight against the flood that Is sweeping over the ug'ir plantation country through the lexci-s <t T'-ras. La., 100 men were r- scued earl' today by a steamboat and taken to a pro < of safety. The men had been trylni; f | 24 hours to close the b: - >k in the dik that allowed the water to pour out ov- r the low-lying parisites on the west bank of the river More than 100.000 persons ire home less in the Torras region, and ire flo« - ing in panic to higher ground. The flood is sweeping through a thi- kly set tled part of the state and still more persons will he driven from their homes by the on-coming waters Ri ■ a and relief work is being pushed with all possible haste The Federal authorities have taken charge of the : (•nation as flu- as possible and arc distributing supplies. The residents of Torras w ere talc n by aurprise. believing that tin ir levers would not break. A panic followed the flood. Most of the people man « ;ed to escape in a passenger train that was Handing at thr station. People Forced To Leave Home. CAIRO. ILL.. May 3--Bird Point, Mo., is submerged by flood water from the Mississippi today. For the second time In six weeks peoph have fled the village and farmers in the neighbor hood have been forced to flee fiom their homes. When the former flood rev ded, although water still food in the streets, many persons returned and began the, work of repairing the damage The second inundation has driven th( e peo away and done further heavy dim sge to the town Farifn is In the vicin ity fear that all chance of getting in crops this season has been killed by the second flood. INFANT CHILD OF FORMER ATLANTAN BURIED HERE Laura Loomis H.-iym . the two-year-1 old daughter of .Mr. and Mrs. w c,.l Haynes, of Columbia, S. <•„• is dead after an Illness of ten days. Mr. and \ Mrs. Hit,' ne.y who are former Allan-| tans, brought the body to Atlanta. I where the interment w.e in prlvan at i 'Westview cemetery. As Ml:- Laura I Lee Grant. Mrs. Haynes s; ■ u her girl hood in Atlanta, where . ft,- h ~... many friends. She is :< granddaughter of ib< .are 1. P Grant, During their hurt stay in Atlanta Mr. and Mr flux n.- - were the guests of Mi and Mi.- Julian Held, the interment t,-iking place from their house. HONEYMOONERS ELUDE SERENADERS BY ROPE NEW YORK, '.lav .1 Willi a leu-..- full of wedding gut t s who w. r. w.i ing to serenade them .is they started on their honeymoon. Mr ar. i Mr- h ■ ry wimpson, of S. radale. -lid ,'p,iv rope from an attic window .mi -..i safely away. DAILY STATISTICS. Warranty Deeds 4300—Mrs. J. A Sanial to W I' | ip. land lot t«0. .n„ r e > otieula.;, ,p.. as being lot Bin block '. m . -i, Companx of Atlanta. i,a b. vn ng i - t . northwe-t corner u| West i -.| Hoyt street. 150x200 feet XiiH m M.BM W Hlllhoive. ,>f svl.. to Mrs Mattie M.-i’all. of in,,.-.' , land lot <6 begining on m, ...j. Formwait street, ?ti f.-.-t ' southeast corner of sari 'm<l For Street. 41x1(1' feet. \pril 1 § Warranty Deed tn Secure t -an 81.000-Edgar r»srmik< ■ ■ wi -,i M I JI Bradley. land lot : b . .... east side of Formwrlt ... . , i gquth of southeos' ,•■.■■■ ■; j.; sti •et arid Fair street, 47xl<'< fee: \ in: Bond *nr Title. HUM-Mrs. Mattie M- .ill t m, Transfer and *•••>,,«.- ■> ;no •■ ~ £2 of the uhdixi- n ft:, finer erty hi city to: . t th. j- .■ ir t....... ■ , trlct of origi- dlx lli"r>. . v County. on th- east ■■ Fr „ • street and ft* f»ei -..nth a str, < t , ■ ,1 strew. Ily,<- A . ; IS.SM n D <'!>.W •. r : M . , \ i Crawford, land I” san-..' as aba, tlxlO.' feet May LS. l -’j Quitclaim. 41.000 M A Hrai;-' • Mrs Morel McCall, land lot .. •• t . . : . f j Formwait street -G f s-ut 1 ■ >i . southeast co-ner I . .-o - an.< .: i street. 4<x109 tee-. FRECKLEFACE New Rented: That B-'m-vrs Frecki s Coats Nnthio, Here’s a chance Mi- > "e< try a new remed' > -a vuaran’ee of a reliabh n y ■. ■ ■; t ' nil • ■ ■ ■ ' • the freckles, while t '• • - give '■■; .i ylear complexion, the , • ■ Simply get an mir.o • ’ • ilv strength, from lac h I - right's treatment wdl .w it is to rid yourself ■*' th- Lies and get be.oit" k- is more than one our-. mic worst casc ■ Pe sure to ask 1 *'■- 1 ! ■trer.gc othlre a th-. - r t>'e • leription sold under guarante- ■ r i.. Kcfc :f :t fails to temo_ye_fre TETTERINE CURES, ECZt MA Haynesville. Ala . April .■ J. T. Shuptrine. i-axannak, •■• Dear Sir Please send me ai: v ' of yenr Tetterine e- t .< t three weeks ago for n-.y ■' t ar: has eczema from wrist to elbow an.- • . ■ box 1 got lias nearly cured it. :ri | . thinks eno »~>x more wdl cure »i<-< m web 1 have tried everything 1 •■•mo g.-t hold of and nothing • •'’> ofle all druggist- ■I y m:itl fron' ow facturer. The Shupirine ccpipar... a vannah, Qa *"* j UNCLE TRUSTY! Copyright, 1913, ny International News Service. ■ Y u 1 a// I' i <wi \ J 11 BilOi wile ‘ AVell. William, it tvas a ton u'h Fight iiY Massachusetts! I see' by the papers that several hun dred silk hats were '.itifi' hed and a large number of innbrellas vvere broken : That was a thrilling mo ment when you swatted Theodore in the nose and he landed on your ear.' Talk about dignity—the whole country was proud of both of you! Kun and.get my slippers, Elihu!" HOKE SMITH MACHINE IN SCRAP HEAP; HIT BY POLITICALBOOMERANG As a result of its frenzied effort to lominat' absolutely the forthcoming itate convention, to lie assembled on bIV 29 in Atlant.l. the Hoke Smith machine finds itself today not only iitched and out of busine s as .in in im nelng factor n that convention, but ittmiv unabb to r cmiri even minority < present it ion thnr< in. That tne Hoke Snii’ll m i bine has ume to this melancholy plight is n.i gnly’c fault but its own. 'file state Democratic executive eom pittce was created of Hoke, by Hoke ind for Hoke. it has been as submi.-. ivv to him as vep yellow canine wa- to tiie mister ■at fed it. It Ins ■ i-n.e nothing situ < t op. Io . Up for bill ■■ e.\, ep( give Xec.it on to tiie ord ' "f Hoke. It han 'ecu i e. . phonograph to sound the voids ili'k. recorded within it. Tic i eh'i'c. wf'eii Senate Smith called ipon it to frame up p'. . sidentlai pm miry in G. irgia that would -to Smith’s aay of thinking asmir. the s-tiite to Woodrow Wilson it promptly inquired >f Hoke w hat sort of primary that must ie and Hoke • aid into abolish thi m .ent and fur < .unity unit t I.in. and rive th. i people i popular plurality .irimaty, so called, Wiison a Stalking Horse. I’ iv ■ s ii ; tha' t: a wav Wil -on by cany tug the big ..unties, cool.! another tiie smaller iin j rural counties | ■that I'.ilton. for instan. . , might by a am popular majority for Wilson, pm v ■ *of some d.e.. n or so rm .ill ■m ountii .- out of bu,- mess Tiie Hoki Smith mai nine eared noth. .: . > ...m \\ H< w;• s ill.id. a mere stroking iimsi E .liy ill til. mm Wilson did look as .: rm.ml be a rood bet in Georgia, hoiev.- the H Re Smith machine ■ ' I. e l m n him. and n. d him as a "■ i k hind ini. i. it mmhi move on. o mm ■ r. -.iptun < ■■ c m from the m Cant Brown li >s: ; , in whom the p. ..p’,. of the st it.- Si 1.1 but I >-t (all j vote 1 ill I a : .ill '■;■ m . .undent t Bm ’ ' ;t,p| a .. t o ..rat, tiie st ite j thro w - to.. ,om tu . a: th. ex r- .w ot tr. Htti* f. ”..w . miscarried I r 1 op. yam a- i - mb i> r. >,| (1 p ~ | • lit. atul as it will mn . arty again. :* tiie Smith outfit him the nerve to try i’ a’ a thiid tine -whi< ii it hasn't. 1 uii’ ■ rn ■ Hipp h.et .'.u">nw < ■ mice ipinin-ato •! . in Ma-eii ' ' ’ ' up -■■ car ,• , , amwi.p. , (r . it. l -. G- '.ri.i in Hie presidential pri. made I. iV e al! tile deJ.-oates in : • rtrib convent; ■ t’ndm till rule that mi."n -..v- p.-, frar-'d, the d< h ■ • ' ■ ’ tl < on\ ftt>. ■■! mu-1 . . ■' : - i i 'me t• • ttn ’: commit - ■ tc<. .art mum -.’■■ t., ■ th, T .ends ' an-.t wmportv'. ■ e t’r in tnnin’ in; r;v. .- m r, _ ; . . . ir . THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: FRIDAY. MAY 3. 1912. ties iniiy have gone severally. Thu- Fulton, Floyd and Chatham, 'hreii of the big eity counties that went for Wilson, must, nevertheless, send Underwooil delegates to the convention. Had the Smith machine not been so busy undertaking t • "hog’ the eonven tion for Hoke -to obliterate the minor i'y uiterly- it might have a look-in in the i .>nV■ I>l !<’li of May It would, in deed, be .ei.it it 1> fl I'd minority represen- • alien therein that would let folks know ■ ie Smith machine was still alive and able t" kies, any way. As it by its own foolish efforts at playing tile swine, it will have to see a convention a. semb'c in which no whis of'ihe ar itm.-s of Hoke will he heard Ami oli. v. or. Hoke and his chief ! : leu:> no o: of p iiilicity - .he will have to i mid his ;■a •■ while the convention a i : il le.aaics to I'.ilt im 're. which • o x-i’"- \ ill ye "-eed promptly to elect Clark How<-Il bis own successor on the imiiona! committee, and all without protest <■> •:>■ any punrur that amounts :o any’oom politically Just now! The Hoke Smith ma 'hine reckoned "i: out lis host, when It reckoned i" : 1 unt !•:■ pehp’e of Georgia. Those ; peo|.;, ir. . in their might, and they * walloped • Smith machine past all • ■uni'ion- walloped it so badly and ■ -■' the' mu that it has been sent to • lie iim.k >• ii ' 'I in ■ it never will re- I turn ready tor business. It; i y little ereaturA the state i •■•iiii’t . w h( good for the few . Ac, i. of iifi yet allotted to it. of ■■:r . It will be good, not because it . wan»s t". l>it bei.iuse it just naturally | wti! have tt.. . | « Gas, Sourness and Indigestion Quickly Banished Stomach’ Distress Vanishes in Five Minute"- and Dys pepsia Is Easily Con quered by Mi-O-Na Stom ach Tablets. Tint feeling after metis ?>.- ■ jnied h. ivinf,-s..it pit stora- | ,u.s that you ,ve in dinger >f ir. ligi stioti. Smit to put your stomach rlg'i* be s. ■ v • - fti «r "Vi: that serious r. . ill's \\ ill follow. . l< t p Ml-' 1 \'A . tom ". h tablet ■ ith j 'Hi a'; * 1;<; .tiyiy. i.iky one or two v ith .neais and stmijch di.-.- v ill t-ver. -U 'pear. A nan can . -ily ■ a:: y a b>x in bir vc?t p<>cket A > 'o in ' in arry tb’em m het purse. ’!■ U' - ur< ,f i.i.-y of stom. i di.-tp rst if used as. directed. It '. ur f >ri f-i ntents in the stomach Ante-Breakfast Tennis Parties Latest Craze In Atlanta Society The "before breakfast” tennis party is the latest and most popular craze to strike Atlanta. Originated by several of 'the more strenuous young people, the practice of j getting op and donning white garments at the witching hour of 6 o'clock has become general with the younger folk. Almost any morning the early riser may see parties of two, four or eight going to and from the tennis courts. < >ften it is a mere “between us" par ty. in which a lad and his lassie use the fad as an excuse for Seeing more of each other. Still oftener it.is the young working man who would be sure to get i up on time who begins the day in such a manner. The idea promises to become wide spread. LIGHT SHOWERS, WARMER. SAYS WEATHER PROPHET Light April showers are due tonight and tomorrow according to the !«■?,' weather bureau, and the same condi tions will probably h"ld for Sunday. Cloudy weather for today is not ex pected to bring my rain with it be fore' tonight. The temperature is due to ri-.- several degrees between now and tomorrow. 140 MEDICAL GRADUATES TRY STATE EXAMINATION Thi medical examination conducted by the state board of health is now un der wax at the state capital. About 140 graduates of medical schools are being examined for licenses to practice medi cine. The examination w ill be finished tomorrow-. I tnd cns forms and sour food belches I into th' mouth, Atl-O-XA stomach tab i let., will stop the miserv in five min t utes. If y u have any symptoms of indl g, d> n't waste time. Put your stomach in shape before indigestion take- i om.nand. Indigestion or any chronic stomach trouble leads to loss of vigor- and vi- j tality. half the nervous wreeks in .'.mere a toda' , ->n blame indigestion I f ir their condition. i Fermentation of food means that ! ' .air .- tom i'■;« is run down: that your j .fr -d doe= not dig'st and that the blood l I not being supplied w ith nutritious ele- ; j merit < in no supply the various ."'gans I lof the body with sufficient nourish- I j nw nt. That s why indigestion often causes pre weakness brain fag, mipit ition of I heart in tivr liver and even pains in i the kidneys Qe; a ’b cent box of AII-O-XA 3tom- I ach tablets today at <ny 1: ug ] Don’t " aste time with relievers get | j the remedy that cur: s as well as re-j POPE'S DELEGATE FO 0. S. IRRIVES 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 North 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 Mundeiin, of Brooklyn, and other leading members of the priesthood, representing prac tically every other diocese in the United States. The new papal delegate said he was glad he was coming to America, since he had always had great admiration for the American peopee, and num bered many American people, whom he had met abroad, among his friends. Speaking of the health of the pope, whom he raw on April 16, shortly after the widespread rumor of the pontiff's death, he said: "His holiness was then in excellent health. He has no illness except the 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 sometimes In the evenings as well. He really leads a strenuous life for a man of his age. for he is now 77 years old. But the gout, I suppose, is really a blessing in disguise"—and the archbishop smiled— "for it takes the ills of the body off through the feet." Theopole Papin, of St. Louis, a close friend of the papal delegate, accompa nied him from Naples and acted as his secretary on the trip over. TURK WARSHiFsUNK AFTER PROPER WARNING CONSTANTINOPLE. TURKEY, May 3.—A telegram received from Smyrna says the steamer Texas, which went down in the gulf of Smyrna with 140 persons Monday night, was sunk by a shell fired from the military fort and not by a mine, as at first reported. The dispatches say two blank shots were first tired by the Turkish fortifi cation. warning the vessel that she had deviated from the proper channel. When no notice was taken a shell sent the ship to the bottom. WOMAN PASSES ASMAN; UNDONE BY FAINTING ERIE. PA., May 3.—After working in mines and machine shops for two years and successfully passing herself off as a man all that time. Mrs. Alexandra Seliski revealed her sex by the simple process of fainting. HE LAX-FOS WAY. I If you had a medicine that would 1 strengthen the liver, the stomach, the kidneys nnn 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 J.ax-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 i Eos. Remember the name—LAN-FOS. ••• Delicious Desserts and Salads at the CAFETERIA It's a block out of the way, but it’s worth it. 63- 65 North Forsyth. One hun dred feet south of the Pied mont. Both Tempting and Healthful fclf Lrrv Cottolefw4iad< ® Pastries ' / Indigestion is the cause of most human ills; lard —which\ is made from hog-fat— is ofttimes indigestible. Cottolcne is more healthful, more wholesome and goes one-third farther V] than lard —therefore, is more economical. Being made from pure, vegetable oils, containing no hog fat, Cottolcne makes food which agrees with the stomach and aids rather than retards digestion. Don’t be talked into using some of the many imitations. Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY ' (t Nature's Gift from the Sunny South" LOCAL MOTORCYCLE ENTHUSIASTS WILL ORGANIZE TONIGHT Atlanta motorcyclists meet in the Transportation club tonight to effect a permanent organization. C. L. Elyea is the temporary chairman of the club and Howard Geldert secretary, both of them having been named at a former meeting. A committee of three will make nominations for permanent offi cers tonight. When the automobile hill climb is held on May 11 there will be two mo torcycle events, and all members of the new club will be admitted as contest ants. The first event will be for four horsepower. single-cylinder machines and the second for seven-horsepower, two-cylinder machines. REVIVAL AT METHODIST CHURCH CLOSES SUNDAY With the service Sunday night the revival meeting which for the past two weeks has been carried on at St. Pauls Methodist church will come to a close. Two general services will be held Sun day, at 11 and 3 o'clock, and in the afternoon a service for women only’ will be held. Rev. B.‘ F Fraser, the pastor, has conducted the revival, with the assis tance of Professor and Mrs. Charles Butler, two singing evangelists. Through the revival many new con verts were made and a number taken into the church. , LOWEST PRICES—BEST WORK | GUARANTEED /k A A I SET OF TEETH;) ,00 01 HER HI fricesjust asreason ' able ALL MY WORK IS GUARANTEED—!<E‘ P THAT IN MIND. DR. E. G. GRIFFIN’S dental rooms | 24i/ 2 WHITEHALL ST.—OVER BROWN AND ALLEN'S. Shctect Against " Against z Substitutes ••• Imitations Get theWell-Known LJ| 89 8 S Round Package ■■ SB S»a HW? W’ MALTED MILK rtil*ll Made in the largest, best equipped and sanitar/ Malted Milk p,ant ,n 4he wor!d do not make milk product s’— , a Skim Milk, Condensed Milk, etc. But the Original-Genuine W^sjnvaUO s '/ HOFLICK S MALTED MILK Made from pure, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble in k<mg or_m,lkr« waten Best food . drink for aI! ageSs Ipb.,. *r‘ce. so Oe«* rQ MAtTfD MF ASK FOR HORLICK’S Used all over the Globe KILLED BROTHER'S WIFE BECAUSE HE LOVED HER NEW YORK. May 3.—Mrs. Marchesl. the ycung wife of Theodore Marches!, a printer, was shot twice in the heart and killed shortly before midnight in her home in the upper east side by a man described by the police, as Joseph Marchesl, her brother-in-law. After killing Mrs. Mar ches!, the man shot himself, and was taken to a hospital in g. dying condition. Mrs. Marches! was the daughter of a wealthy Italian nobleman. Her husband was a childhood friend, who came to this country and prospered. A year ago he decided to bring hi. brother to America. As Theodore was unable to leave his busi ness, he sent his wife back to Italy to bring his brother to New York. During the trip the brother, it is said, became enamored of the handsome yotipg matron amCI'RA SOAP SHAVING STICK For Tender Faces S Indispensable for those subject to red ness. roughness, anH other irritations of the skin A shaving luxury. No mug. no soggy soap, no germs, no waste of time or money In nickeled box, 25c.. at |StAvIN6 stores or by mail. Liberal sample free. (STICK Address“Cuticura,” Dept.2B, Boston.