Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 09, 1912, HOME, Page 10, Image 10

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10 WM 8F HERO stirs veterans Mrs. Longstreet's Appeal for Aid in Saving Tallulah Falls Responded to by Many. MACON, GA.. May 9.—Following a great ovation elven the widow of Gen era! James Longstreet when she was introduced to the assemblage of gray veterans at the morning session of the Confederate reunion at the auditorium yesterday. Mrs. Longstreet, v.is president of the Tallulah Fal s Con servation association, mad. an impas sioned appeal for help In the great cru sade she has undertaken for the con servation of Dixie s marvelous scenic wonder in the Blue Ridge mountains of the South. The soldiers of the six ties were stirred again to the fighting point by the touching appeal to their honor and valor by the widow of the commander whom thev had follow cd over many hard fields. Mrs. Longstreet was introduced by General West, and, after the tumult of applause which greeted her was si lenced, she spoke as follows in par: . Appeals to Men’s Courage. "My Countrymen: You grizzled knights who followed the rainbows of battle from 'fil to 'fis. 1 have journeyed from my home tn the mountains of the great commonwealth whose honored guests you are to greet you, and to give especially tender welcome to the Survivors "f the immortal First corps of the Army of Northern Virginia, in the name of the commander who rests in the unawakening slumber on one of the red hillsides of Georgia. Lee’s old war ehorse, the strong right arm of the Confederate States army. "In this hour of imperilrnent to the Souths stainless memories, her proud traditions, her sacred honor, I come to make appeal to the courage of rnen who have never quailed before the enemy's steel, an appeal which Robert E. Lee would make could he speak from the si lent tomb at Lexington. "Standing on the border kind of eternity, with its shadows touching your silvered heads and bent forms, i you last survivors of an army the like of which the world shall see no more, will give answer to the South’s call which shall resound from every moun tain top and echo In every gaplrfg val ley. which shall he written in the rain bows that arch Tallulah and read in the crest of every wave upon our ocean shores until it shall put a tongue In every wound of th- South's mangled honor which shall cry to heaven. “Falls Shall Not Be Sacrificed.” "The most beautiful waterfalls <m t h.e continent of North America, planted by the hand of God In the fairest land of all. our own loved South, shall not be aacrffli ed to satisfy the gold greed of a band of looters whose boss Is in Wall Street, New York. "I desire that every veteran and son of a veteran In whose veins the fight ing blood of the South still runs strong and red to furnish me with his name and address’ before leaving this re union." At the close of the morning session Mrs. Longstreet was detained on the speakers' platform for more than an hour by the hundreds of veterans from all parts of the country who crowded about her to grasp her hand and pledge their support In the tight for the honor of the South. to Q gk and what a disappointment it is to find that though you are young, your hair is beginning to turn gray—that you are •urely going to look old before your time. Don't wait for any more gray hairs to come—get a bottle of HAY'S HAIR HEALTH today. Start in now and use it regularly. Those gray hairs will soon disappear - be restored to their natural color and ‘ Stay so. HAY’S HAIR HEALTH will keep you looking young. SI.OO and 50c at Drug Stnr--« nr direct upon receipt of price and dealer* namr. Send 10c for ; trial bottle. Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J. , FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED BY JACOBS’ PHARMACY. STEAMER TRUNKS FOR SHORT TRIPS These little trunks are built to stand the knock abouts of short trips. There’s a saving in the price, too. $2.75 to $25.00 LIEBERMAN'S The Trunk Store . 92 Whitehall St. LAWYERS CLASH IN STEEL H EARI NG Federal Court Refuses Govern ment Injunction to Stop De struction of Books. NEW YORK, May 9—A sharp tilt between Richard V. Lindabury, chief of counsel for the United States Steel Corporation, ami Jacob M. Dickinson, former secretary of war and head of the government’s array of legal talent, mark' ll today’s session of the hearings in the customs house here, in the Fed eral suit to dissolve the alleged trust. George A. Cragin. general sales agent of the American Steel and Wire Com pany. w is under examination by Judge Dickinson. \ttorney Lindabury brok< In with a heated denunciation of Judge Dickin son’s methods, declaring that his pro cedure was ‘‘a practice that was some what worse than the Spanish inqui sition.” Calls Practice Astounding. Mr. Lindabury said that it was as tounding that a government attorney should confront a witness with testi mony that that witness was supposed! to have given before a grand Jury and particularly when the witness in ques tion was the government’s own. Judge Dickinson replied that he re garded Mr. Cragin as a hostile witness to the government, and added that the government was forced to go to em ployees of the company under examina tion to get the necessary information upon which to base the proof that they were i onsplrators in restraint of trade. Cragin admitted that he was the ac credited representative of the Ameri can Steel and Wire Company at thej monthly' meeting of the steel pool. There were In all five pools. Mr. Cragin deviated that the Ameri can Steel and Wire Company had held a pro rata share In the business award ed under these agreements. Mr. <'ragin testified that after the rate fixing pools were destroyed, the members continued to meet In New York at Invitation luncheons and fixed prices. Restraining Order Refused Government. TRENTON, N. J., May 9.—Judges Gray, Buffington and McPherson, in the I’nited States district court here today, denied an in.tum tion. except as to the American Steel and Wire Company, to restrain the United States Steel Cor poration and Its subsidiary’ corpora tions from destroying hooks and pa pers needed as evidence in tile suit of the government to dissolve the Steel Trust. The opinion -ay s no proof was shown of the intention of the defendants to destroy hooks or papers The government Is given permission to 11 new the appeal. CITY OF CHATTANOOGA WINS VETERANS’REUNION MA< '< »N. GA.. May 9. Half a cen tury after the battles nf Lookout mountain. Missionary ridge, Orchard) knob, Ri'ssvllb l gap. Chickamauga and the campaign from Chattanooga to At lanta the old soldiers «>f the South will go bark to the scenes of their con flict ami In niemorx monad the stir ring tlav'- «»f ISh.'l Chattanooga, with all its historic environment, will be the scene <»f next year’s reunion of the I’nited Confederate veterans. 'The Tennessee city won the 1913 meeting of the Roys In Gray after a spirited contest that before it ended had t.ikon sensational turn San An tonio and Jacksonville were the <»p-j posing- cltir’- It was the Jacksonville deh gallon that accused Sf -ri ’ iry E. H. Hyman, of the Macon Chamber of Commerce, of trying to “sell” the reunion, with San Antonio as the ‘‘nutchaser.” The controversy engaged in bv these two cities led to their undoing, and ’’hat tannoga was given the next reunion as a c«»mm<»misc md a rebuke to cities adopting sin h i;o ti< - Chattanooga secur’ d | 1 "n'ti< ;ilh half the total In the convention, th* billot showing I’bntta no<»ga. I "lx Jacksonville, Kofi, and Nin Antonio t;»; WOMAN CONVICTED IN KETCHEL KILLING FREED JIII L I KSON CITY. MO . May 9. Wal ter S I »iplev must serve a life sentence* in th* penitentiary for the slaying of CHanveS’U M iddlcw emht Prize Fighter Stanley Kciehel in Webster county, but Goldie Smith, tin woman convicted with i.im, has been ordered discharged Roth are in tl • penitentiary serving life sen trt"’.'- The woman will be released to night This IS the decision of the case on apepai to the higher courts I’blgi Kennish wrote the opinion in i \\b’< h be finds the records show a good J < vuamsi Diffiex but that the trial : - • or' hoyld have sustained the motion to ■ oismi at" Goldie Smith for want »»f THT ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS: THURSDAY. MAY 9, 1912. The Visiting Girls Occasion All Parties Th* visit of Miss Blanch* Nisbet, of Macon, to Mrs. J. E. C. Peddar is an ticipated yvith interest. Miss Nisbet, of distinguished Southern ancestry, is one of the prettiest girls among the many sponsors and maids of honor around whom the social activities of the re union center this week. She is expect ed in Atlanta on the 15th, and Mrs. Peddar will give a series of three par ties for her, the guests to be members of the younger set. Mrs. Peddar will also entertain later at the second of two affairs for her married friends, th* first j of which was a recent delightful event. Miss Katherine Merrill, of Thomas ville, arrives tomorrow to spend some time with Miss Esther Smith. She will be delightfully entertained. Miss Smith gives a dinner party' Friday evening . and she will also have a feu young women friends at tea to meet Miss Merrill tomorrow afternoon. On Sat urday evening Mr. John Charles Wheat ley will give a dinner party in honor of Miss Merrill at the Piedmont Driving club. Miss Arthur Weir, of Toronto, Can ada, who is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Charles Godfrey, will be tendered a dinner party at East Lake tomorrow evening and will be entertained infor ! mally/Saturday evening by Miss Maude Scruggs. A number of informal par ties have been given for Miss Arthur Weir this week. Among those enter taining for her were Miss Bessie Bailey, Miss Julia Ingram and Miss Ardienne Battey. Miss FJmily Hart Brown, of Maine, will visit Miss Hildreth Burton Smith for the week-end, and Miss Smith will entertain for her tomorrow evening. Saturday evening she will be enter tained at a dinner party by Mr. Walter 1 'olqult t. The visit of Miss Ethel Newcomb, of New York, to Miss Nan Stephens has been terminated by a telegram which summoned her home on account of the illness of her mother. Last night Miss Stephens entertained informally for Miss Newcomb, sixteen gsiests being present. The Stephens home in West End was decorat’d in exquisite flowers from the gardens,' a color scheme of pink being carried out in the dining room. In the music room, where a mu sical program was rendered by’ the gifted hostess and Miss Newcomb, roses and Spanish Iris filled the vases about the apartment Miss Newcomb wore a white lace evening toilet over whit- , satin. Miss Stephens was gowned in white silk marquisette over satin. Mrs. Charles Willingham, Jr., left to- i day for Montgomery, Ala. Mrs Richard Elliott Miller continues . ill at her home on Piedmont avenu*. Mrs. Paul Jones Is to spend a month in Cedartown. —— Miss Janie Cooper will attend ’he Kappa Sigma dance in Athens Friday | evening. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rice ar* lu Co lumbia. Miss., called there by the death , of Mrs. Rice’s father. Dr. Sykes. i Mrs. Grant Martin has as her guest at her home In Inman Park. Mrs. C. \V. Dennis, of Brooklyn, N_. V. Miss Lucile Giddeon, of Knoxville, Tenn., Is the guest of Miss Layona Barnes, of 588 South Pryor street. Mr and Mrs. Ambrose Gaines have i returned to Knoxville, after a short stay ' at the Georgian Terrace. J ( Miss Bertie Rone, of 52 East Harris I street, is the guest of Mrs. J. L. Me- I London in Macon. 1 ——~ t Mrs. Frederick Wagener, of Fort ' Worth. Texas, is the guest of Mr. and ; Mrs. Fritz Wagener in West End. Mrs. R P Bird has returned to her home in Colquitt, after a visit to her sister, Mrs, Arthur G. Powell. Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Maddox have announced the birth of a son yesterday at their country home. “Woodhaven.” Mrs. George Denman and Miss Eliz abeth Denman leave soon for Kentucky to spend the remainder of the sum mer. I Mr A. D Adair is on a short business I trip to Knoxville and is the guest of his daughter. Mrs, Calvin Morgan Me < 'lung. Mrs. W. H Preston, oho has been quite 111 at her home on Georgia ave nue. is convalescing at Dr Robertson's sanitarium, on Capitol avenue. Mr and Mrs. Paul Rapier, who re cently returned from their wedding journey, are at home to their friends at S 4 Forrest ayentie. Mr and Mrs Edward Clarke and Miss Bessie ('lark* left last night for a three months' stay at White Sulphur Springs. Mrs Howard McCall entertained a few friends at tea at the Georgian Ter race this afternoon for Mrs W W. I Banks, of Tifton. Mrs. Arthur Scott’s I guest. Mrs Herbert Miller, of Charlotte. N C.. yvho has been spending a few days | lat the Georgian Terrace, is yvith Mrs. Rix Stafford, and will return home to i morrow night. Mrs. Wilmer Moore entertained th* i members of the Order of Old,-Fashioned Women at luncheon yesterday Mrs William H Kiser will be hostess at the meeting next Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs Julian Field have re turned from a stay at their summer home at Rabun Mrs. Field and Mrs A D Adair. Jr lea'* next Wednesday for i Knoxville, w here they w ill be guests of their sister, Mrs. Calvin Morgan Mc- Clung. who will give a series of lunch eons for them. A. number of parties will be tendered Mrs. Field and Mrs Adair during their visit. Miss Mary Cooper and Mr. Winship Nunnally will be quietly married this evening at 8:30 at the home of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Hunter Pope Coop er. in the presence of the immediate family only On account of Miss Cooper’s illness, the invitations to the wedding reception, which was to have followed the ceremony, have been re called by Mrs. Cooper. ANNOUNCEMENTS. A called meeting of th* Woman’s auxiliary of St. Lukes church will be held Friday afternoon. May 10, at I o'clock, in the infants class room. Not only every member of the auxiliary, but every woman in the parish, is earnestly requested to be present, as business'of importance is to be transacted. The ladies of St. Anthony's church will offer a tempting menu tomorrow at the popular little lunch room they are conducting on Walton street, be tween Peachtree and Broad streets, for the benefit of the building fund, and a continuance of the kind patronage ex tended by their friends is solicited. Mrs. Bridwell will be assisted by Mrs. Mary Reed, Mrs, Charles Hubbard. Mrs. George Moltz, Mrs. Paul McCorley, and Mrs. Anselm Arapln. The Young Ladies committee will be in charge of Miss Cecilia Valentino, ytho will be assisted by Misses Bertha Rhodes, Louise Pope, Irene Hancock, Eva Hubbard, Josie Manley, Bertha Eigemann and Emma Corley. The executive board of the Atlanta Woman's club will meet on Friday. May 10, at 10 a. m. In the committee room of the club house on Baker street. The meeting is Important and the members of the board are urged to attend. The regular monthly meeting of the Seventh Ward Civic club will be held In the pavilion in Howell park Friday afternoon at 5 o'clock. A large attend ance is urged to make this meeting pleasant and profitable. Develop Your Bust T 50c Package FREE to Any Woman Who Wants a Beautiful Figure Women need no rX- longer be humiliated AfIMMjKPSAffREKB an d embarrassed be cause they are thin, flat-chested and not f developed, for science *£/ has found a simple. I J way to give the beau- / tlful curves of a per- / feet figure. To prove / this. Jet us send you / X free of charge a 50c f\ K package that will A O show- you how easily B Hl WW Hie bust ran be devel- WHi JSMa «’ped from two to seven inches, and be- n me full, plump and 11 rm This discovery. 'W ’hat fa of such vital / interest to all thin ’ W uotnen. Is the result \ long study and in- vestigation by one of ■jg tJip leading women \ W physicians In New W York state, who. In X * seeking to overcome A defects In her own fl g'ire without use Ta. ■Awßi'jwiMß r “pads” <»r fnrmf. ■< Hltsrovpred a bappA combination of tissue building elements that Increased her bust some four inches, made her arms round and shapely and her neck and RhouldersP™""" 111 plump and symmetrical COUPON This prescription of Dr. FREE Catherine Kelly’s is a real discovery on far different 50c Tr «atmen. lines from the ordinary DP. KELLY’S figure developing treat FORM ment, and this ex- „ plains its almost uniform DEVELOPER SUCCeSS. ■WWW 1 MJUIXL-.UH. -U. Dr. Kelly not only gained a beautiful form by her own prescription, but used It successfully with many of her patients Women, this is a personal message from a physician of your own sex, anti all we ask is the opportunity tn show you with out an\ expense on your part, that Dr Kelly’s Form Developer will give you a perfect figure, beautiful complexion and improve the general health Send the little coupon above and 10c for expenses, and a 50r treatment will be mailed at on< e in plaim package Write us today. Dr KELLY MEDICAL m, Dept 321 L ER t Buffalo N Y. Atlanta's Piano Market III n-.- -r.'l!* illN 111 -■ jjl i T" ' n Sr I Cleveland-M anning Piano Here is a piano worthy of our name Henry ft S G. Linde man make it for us and put their reputation back of ours by moulding their signature into the steel frame One Price Only is made on this piano. You will find It on the tag the piano hears tn big. bold figures. No one can change it. This guarantees you the lowest price possible, and makes piano buying a pleasure. No Commission is giv*n any one on the piano you bu> The original price does not permit us giving commissions, and it would not be fair to ask you to pay it. Write for illustrated booklet with reasons why you should buy at a one-price no-com mission piano house it is free for the asking Cleveland-M anning Piano Co. 80 North Pryor Street The New Continental Pump, X\ letter Known as the “Stay=On" HJ \ \f\\ are now com i n £ to the front. The ’ time is now at hand—the summer ! days are fast approaching and Tans and Whites are entering up on a season °f unbounded \ popularity that bids fair to eclipse all former seasons. f e h ave Colonials in white \\ linen, canvas and White Buck. tWIK New styles in Russia Calf, Ooze IM! \ Calf and Gun metal. / Prices $5.00 to $7.00. L/ & < wCr 35 Whitehall Street Sole Agent , Mail Orders Laird & Schober Shoeb for Women Gii'en Prompt and Edwin Clapp Shoes for Men Careful Attention Chamberlindolinson=Dußose Company ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS — —1 A Man’s Summer Underwear A man in search of his summer underwear will find quick and efficient service here. The Men’s Furnishing Department is right on the main aisle as you enter--where you can get exactly what you want and be off in a hurry. Here are the different grades of summer underwear that are selling best. T hey are the qualities that about ninety per cent of the men folk seem to want. But if you are of the other ten per cent, there are several other kinds here that might interest you. We recommend very highly— Delpark’s English Mesh Shirts and' Mushn Shirts anel Drawers. A sturdy, Drawers —the material is not so but not 100 heavy material. Shirts "meshv” as the name implies. Knee with long or slmrt sleeves; ankle length , <4-11’41 Drawers a garment 50c length drawers, coat stvle shirt, sleeve lesa-a garment L SI.OO Balbriggan Shirts and Prawers A lit- th 1 Lighter, softer and better than the r» i i ■ i i ui ■ < i usual long or short-sleeve Shirts: ankle Delpark s ( nnkle Crepe Shirts and , ,? tut io, rtntvit c, i , .r length Drawers- a garment 50c Drawers: \ery soft, knee length Drawers, coat stvle Shirt, sleeveless — Knitted I IH " !| Suits. ex< i pfionalh soft and light; high neck and knee a garment 7ac length, with athletic or short Delpark’s Naineheek Shirts and Draw- ‘ ’ T- i <1 ta <4l Knitted Union Suits, of better make ers. Knee length Drawers, coat stvle » <• - t , , . , . , ... .it,. \ mid finish than ain- we know ot at this Shirt, with athletic or one-quarter price . bigh ne< _ k> knep length> wish length sleeves—a garment 50c athletic or short sleeves’ SI.OO Chamberlin =Johnson =Dußose Co. When You Write a Want Ad X Keep the main points in mind and tell the facts. Then step to the phone and call Main 8000 or Atlanta 8000 and ask for the Want Ad Department The Atlanta Georgian Want Ad Office No. 20 East Alabama Street, 1-2 block off Whitehall ■■■■■lll !■■■! nil !■ wi' ■mil