Newspaper Page Text
2
JOHNSON DEFIED'
Bl BASEBALL
STRIKERS fl
Ty Cobb's Partners Standing
Firm, and No Immediate Set
tlement Is in Sight.
PHILADELPHIA. Max 2o Def ? nv
the threat of President Ban .Johnson t«»
suspend and blacklist th. striking mem
bers of the Detroit team. the bdsehaii
players who art' refusing to until
Ty Cobb reinstated stood firm
and reiterated their dcterminaWui iv»t i
io give in
With toda> s game between ’hr T\
gers and the Athletics c:m. eii< a. ho i ■
side* had the entire dav to- .
eaces and meetings to ;nak« < amp; .gn'
plant The conference betw*'-n l*;esi
dent .Johnson and Pnskhnt Navin. of
the Detroit chib, whs scheduled .. b<
held before noon, while toniomrA i li* » «■»
w il|, be a full meeting oi tin- A ..i*•. i• <ji
league magnates her- to vonsidm th
situation
The sugg. U'.n was maur Hnu I c i
’.rouble l>< arhit i ated. but Johnson
frowned upon thi- means of settling tln-i
dispute. Hi- ultimatum was that tin ,
authority and discipline of the leagm
must bt upheld. In ordci to curr\ ‘hi-I
out,.the most drastic and rm a! ia t<n •>
measures were proposed
Other Clubs May
Contribute Strikebreakers.
When the iiltilnatum was served upon |
tlie striking play-rs tlieii an-wci was. |
■ I.ei them go ahead."
The status of the nineteen "Milk-I
< t■.•' will bi definitely settled toimn
o«. The magnates will also a.t upon
i proposition that the Philadelphia .
Cleveland, Washington. St. Louis Nev •
York. Boston and Chicago clubs each
contribute two or more placets to Man
ager Hughe) Jennings, of the Tigers,
with which to make up a now team.
While Johnson is the head of the
league, it ties pointed out that the real
power in the present situation is Pres
ident Navin, of the Detroit club Tie |
finality of outlawing the players oi of I
punishing them by imposing heavy |
line- rested with Navin's jndgnient.
\ peculiar situation has developed a
regards Ty Cobb, the central liguie in |
the sensational baseball war. Altboug: I
obb is really espousible for !be |
strike.” he himself cun not be .•ln- -'< <t i
one of the strikers, t'obb a- Illi I
tier suepen ion on Suturdui. .inn th
Other players refused to take tin- lieb! '
gainst in Mtiietics. and In could no! I
have played under the chcinn«li<n> s.
Navin Hopes
For Speedy Peace.
I number of ’be Tiger- in Sun-,
cay in Atlantic City. returning to Phil j
adelpbia this morning. Some of the
strikers felt confident that some solu
tion of tile trouble would follow Mr.
• Navins arrival. Navin has 'be confi
dence and respect of his men, and ,t is
said that there has never been an)
friction between the players and the
tilth’s president.
This view was supported by a tele
gram which preceded the arrival of the
Tigers' president, and which contained
a, brief interview w ith him. in which he
felt sure that after ‘ they all gm to-I
gether the trouble would be thiashed
out and Cobb will b. back in Tim line I
Here's Johnson 's
Attitude on War
President Johnson r . follow
ing statement
’Every one of the striking pla>m>
baa automatic allx suspended himself
and made himself ineligible to worn
pete in a game under organized base- i
ball control until he 1- reinstated b\ ;
■ the national commission. By refusing
. to play a scheduled game, all tin se
players fyive vitiated a elaust in tlvn
contract which makes them liable to
fine not only by the Detroit luh. but |
j iso by the national commission.
The Detroit club will not appeal <m
:he field again until I am assured
that it has a team of compel- nt plus |
ers. who can compete sticce>sfull\ with
other teams in the league. There will!
be no mor»’ faices in the \merh-un
leagv#
’The standing of the i-iayvis musi ;
fl'-t be thrashed out by Mr Navin, j
Then theii status will reach im \s ■
member of tin national ij
wml haxe .< sa\ wheihei they w ill ■■
• nue to nlay ball m ihr Xnn- >■ • !
’ eague
”! arprcK iate th- ■< < i mi. ■' I*r
Shib- and Manage Mm k. •*' -
w
Athletics in postponing tod.ix -. gaao
k will b< played 'hut in ihe -on
• ossibly on Detroit - -• ■-m.. \ i.-it n
I 'htladelph i s
'lf tho st:■’:••• ma -f •.
by tomorrow, it is piobable th;u L -
• .facials of the Washingt-m < ib >
ag/e*' to a postponement. It vii’ Im
coin pl in lent if they co.
JUDGE SAYS HUSBAND
HAS RIGHT TO CHOOSE
HIS WIFE'S FRIENDS
YONKERS N V Al ■ ! .
Hea.'J told >ll'B. Thomas McC<.. ? laai .
Husband has a right to m- iaiii. .<
friends hi* shail a s
In othet words, rhe b.usb.na -
ihe jtiftse of the wife’s company
Airs McCoy was in coint
weekly tfiimoiiy increas' d.
"He doesn't want tn- to g • <*i
have any 1 iends .met becaus; m husn't ;
any," Mrs. Mc«’v> -aid. "and ■ n
nv lv stu.v d'u' ti| n f .m iious.
'I think' \ou: hii-hsnd has .« :iga:
v “i.-u . . i m ; L .< up. „ »
a
_ »
|| HOW CITY SCA TTERS GERMS |i
j_r j*4 ’
w ’rY 'k—qf“j'
i ..-1 r
Ifr'W- It--
' t v is IP
i k -
>
Here * llic new a iil iiiiiulii I<• 2,irii;iyc used Lur up-tov) it garbiiwp collect ion b,\ tile city
<>l At In id u. Il is red mid sp-ed\ mid holds ;i tremendous loud of rel'use. but. it is open to the
winds, mid w hen pded ingli w. iih loose pupers mid triish ils con tents are blown away as fast as
ihe truck is loaded, scattering diseasi laden refuse into the air and causing cases of fever.
MEGUNGINGG
GMS IN GELL
Continued From Page One.
, ooiiiul .is Lulu <»n mg vris« .«ft. r
I\ ■ ! -<• of ' ■ • us mu JI" >;ing iiinv iiymns
lin .ill during tin night, and his song;
■t’-i'\.il <i;d nut <nd until lip* uarix
limm - <»i , '!t' morning. When it uaan
-1t;..- In lip guilds n| the deilUi Willi li
; to • i .iiig- . Rieheson -asked ihat :Ip\
m. i . j.’i Irin in .ringing ’ X »-.i i<• ,
. M v <h>d. -n Thee.-
•Fncls Solace in
Twenty-Third Psalm.
<’muimtet| by ihe promise of his old
fathe. tlu.it Ills body should rest boMd”
that of his mother in the family lot in
Virginia, tile doomed man -pent hi.
his da\ on euttli In meditation. lie
seemed eager to talk, and tin* huideii
of his conversation v as the fate m hi
soul.
lb land ove ind over again he
thumbed Bibb, ;l ip| -•■•'♦•med to Hnd
particular solace in the T\\rnt\-in id
Psalm aid the .seventeenth Vcis< •.!'
tin tw• nt y ->•'* (»nd chapter of Hex* ~i
tions \\ iiich i ads 'Ami let him that!
is uthi. d come, and \\lne<»e\< r xx/.i |. t
him lake the water of He freely ■’
To his spiriiu.il mix ise: and the p L
1 m ( lanhtin tin lt<\. H-iheH W. S’j'i.. i
j bms he gave a most impn ->i\* i-xpo- 1
i • lion ol the beauties of the Bible |.. ; -
sage* Il< api g"d * hei l ruths in :..
own .if' lie repl a fed the ’ v c.! ' ■
yei of Hie T\\ er.! y. o\ p1 h Ps.ihll
again and ag.*. 1 : ‘I »< :i\ut mt m»i o\ . j
unto the will of nunc t nvniii •<. lor falx •
witnesses are arisen up agains: me, i
alld s i ic|; . Ip. <a he nil. : i.iel: >• " '• i -■_ '
he sCenu'd to think, applied *o himself.)
The condemned pastor talked im
eeusingly. "I must talk, talk, talk.” he |
j cried “I ha v< >o lilt le • ime to !1\ e |
• and so much to mix that I can not j
keep «iuiei I do not want to sim p
Ht linge.ed long and bo ingw ••* *•? ■
tin im idem- of his box’hoed in Vir I
•g nia. mention- d the uam-' of hi- iioihei j
with revvreiuu and dr-played an if-!
foi ling zest in recounting im ah i:i- ol
ns college dnx s at lab* rt\ . Mo.
“Ki dies-an o .< nan of greai . -m . i
I saiii Mi lohmsmi a'i-. r baxiug The
Ideati) "lie tulkefl al icpgli OI he j
gr..a' ' piritn.c mnlr w hi- h ehgi<m I
|hold- ..mi wm,-!: 1,
' , 1; i•» imm 11 • ‘ is in a -'.da' I.a me <>' ■
mi’itl. ami I I- *•; that hi \\ m, a deatn ;
i mu; geaitsb and like i - an man j
IHe ha ' made ai> r- e xx it (Sod. and
I • x - -a l ••'!; .’I ■ - eel > is p i- -.i > ! c
X e : i 111 > *i. - I». .XI i -
j Laughim. th ’ pi Ison pax ■ : laid ais j
; hai Im .mid •♦ • «•-. r<i. i',not: man ’n a
| loi > i-oiiililii-ii -lb i» < ;ilin mid |
Tells the Warden
He Needn t Wo- rv.
*u... .... v-.h th. I
' UI IM.H. .■ .■lll-; I I.' < 1 • r.tnq Kit ti ■ t .i-
I-t • i:,. -t -pirii and k< pt up an ;
J amm t*■ d < «mx ei -ation
i < »n«. c \\ In :i th- v, ,u ii< u x\ cm :. • his |
‘*t IJ tin prisemei looked up hrighily.
• and • xmmim d:
“ill be wild 'ou x\!i<n yon ware mx|
’ warden. Y-W nr- dn t wm i x i won i j
i break down ..gain
w . ti r
a pai'kiig* of lel'ei-' - ierp J fr mi 1
i inp 11 e lust dux •■! txx O W iiep 1?• j
i w ird< n »v>ld !ti< arson that la ■> igli’ j
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAS’ ANT) NEWS; MONDAY. MAY 2<\ 1912.
LGSEO GEN BEST,
GEGLJRES BBIOE
Continued From Page One.
.'•h «i!’ ii. ami then it was too lute to he
mad.
“W’e >p«-ni,. the night .it m\ um le’s
:i’>.m in i hiinrsx iile and tame to.Xt
i inta x« kt riilay m-u nim?
Th. xouiig couple arriyrd at the Ma
r ii< before brcikfast Sunday, with
out baggage of anx kind. Sullivan
. k-d for the best room in the house
| and got it. op (lie second floor and next
the- e|. \ ator. Th'-y staved (heie all
dax Sunday and the next anybody saw
of them xy.is early today when they
went to breakfast in the main dining
room Mi Sm ivan looked unusually
pretty in a black -alin drr.-m with '
skirt iu.-t touching h ( i ankh s, and h- i
h.illiant < olor was height- ii'ui by th’ 1
ord. .H ol limning the gauntlet of a
Imud’i'd pairs of-ex - s. for all the guests
:, .t i heard of the elopement Sir blu-he i
w n ii a.-krd of her marriage and it -
(i .Hl imiuii rrs I• “my hu 'band
Mr. SulHyan I'misvnted to lr* intet-
1 xi.-w.-d only aftri he was omvincid
that Hie p i.e s had the essential facts
auywax. lb wanted it plainly stated
;hat he* h.idnh done- anything to ho
la.-naimd of. .iml he was glad Mrs. Sul
; i\ an was glad and eyw \ body was hap
py, Uli a.-" It vx*.’ Mi llilb(‘rt. lb’ did
:-a kiat\\ anything of Mi. < lillier;’ ;
fe* iing- ami didn't s< em to -a re.
And Here’s What
1 Mr. Gilbert Says.
: I’a: M (iilbt'.i nxi l worrying lb*
h 'aid tm- news from his fiumwe’s father
by : • .-hone on Satmday night. Mr.
was preparing for a Hip to
<la in- -\ i lie. but he ah udoned it sud
| I <opg .aiiilate myself that I didn’t
j g-a ii- '. I -nk I got off lucky. I
iuixe mm H-legra plietl them lamgratula
i ti- iml tior.'i intend to w i itv I'll
| have nothing move t<» do with her/’ he
u>d at Marietta today
“Sir aa-n‘t -cm Hm d the engage
’ :i•.. i>l img 1 ga \ ■ In ’ mn my letters.
I i n ■■ es or ••*' ■ pr< svnts I don't
| know w betlu . .--1)0 will, as I have had
I h • <. »t mm tra a: a> -I \it h Imi sim < sh»
I c;.. ( -‘H Saimaiux muht. But I tigu x I
'am m k\ lo g- i ”ff a- w el| a- I hay <
' T■» nr-i I lie ;-d g.bom ' "a< mi Sat- i
i m ay aig* ' x\ Imp .\| r I’urkei. ‘n • i
! telephoned m.\ Ain! i hit's al!
•I \ • he.tr*i Hom any <u ; iiem
“Vis I -’ft my ant om<‘bilc a t thiines-
I \dh 1 \x < k ago xc-t< rdax. lot her to
jm - Ihi, I o 'tib know whether they
! used tpx mm him fm the elopement.”
I ' : T'- -i 1 .- p ■ immi y oting
’'m ham of Mart 1 ! ta and is well known
. A•’. • .i: ■ : a H i - • •. id -<»*. ia :;y
\i ’- - I‘a . • old Sm
iw.'s gi a;hmlc(l from Ihena’a college, al
i ‘ irm-my ju -. sex oral \ ars ago. and was
j ol!-- of th- .m • ’ ■■rnhiem •-.»< iely gills
m L’t , t.ii, a e low u She is a m-m-
Ib( .■ of •ho rill Mu soioi it v and ie
j ■ >mt ; x aH -ma d th- -mveiHioil of that
o. by • Xtlania. Site is i t ommi of j
M . t M itn Hm . of In.mm Park.
"• m * t Pi. pa ■ (o 1-ax .* iodax fol
;1 • ■m< ii |o <> l)c ap ai; e mla n t at the
, ■ ■ ' ' : m. - fm m\t \x c- k \ numb-’i
I ,Ls .■ .ib.l <<■:« 1..-, u an- !
I i-r I'.p u . (1 ~f tlie
iM : - ' ;i!b. 1-1 -1.. -.i„ . .n llc M rs.
| ( ,*’i. .Sulivi i-- ■ ..nn.- toil w ith .l.ick
' '-J.: .< '>.!!>'■. in ih<' insm ;in<’.- busj-
! !■ - lb i~ ;i .yia.huite nt G'r.ii’Hi it - I
I< ■ tun-, .uiii sp.-in tw<> j. ar:~ ot the I'ni- |
> * ■ it;. ol *.eorgtia lie :a member I
ill. Sm' .'bi ! i ai.rnitj ii. i> |
j about y- ars old. and was private
to l ongiessman Thom is At
;i; \ 1.1 y. a1 S li. spent . 0(1 -
i-i'i'ialdi ' m<- in (hiiiiesville while as.
at< .i ei i \1 I 11. and th. : ■ .on -
tinned ' - courtship of Miss Parker.
| ■’•.>. i. bad known aln n site wa> a
V ■ in At-
I .m i,.,j.: v |, ; * ,j jn-t.
•■y- : '• i>. th iI. m-j ..r .< little |
t ' ■
Body Sunk With Iron
Looks Like Man Last
Seen Flashing a Roll i
l.tts ANGELES. Maj 20.—The body
of a man with a piece of iron tied to
his arm floated to the surface in San
Pedro harbor and was recovered by a
fisherman. Today the police are seek
ing to solve the second murder mystery
of the last few weeks, while the first is
still a puzzle.
That lite man had been murdered is
evident. The hands were tied togethei
with a rope, attached «t<> which was a
heavy piece of iron. One arm was
broken, the skull fractured and the
limbs w era bruised, indicating a terrific
death struggle with his assailants.
The body is thought to have been in
the water three weeks or a month. The
only mark of identification was a gold
ring. .On the inside of this ring an in
scription has almost been entirely worn
away, but the police were able to de
cipher initials which they claim to be
■ E. It.' 1
The proprietor of the American hotel
at San Pedro declared last night that
11- inard Rein, who came here from Oc
troi'. Mich., after declaring he was go
ing to San Francisco, and after having
displayed a large roll of money, disap
peared from his hotel on May I and
lias not been seen since. Rein's bag
gage is still at the hotel. The proprie
tor declares Rein's description in many
particulars fits that of the body founfl.
SOUTH GEORGIA HEN
LAYS A SERIAL EGG
Ih’SToX. <;x May 20. An egg in txvo
I pai ts joined together by a tube an inch
long and about an eighth of an inch in
diameter is on exhibition ai a local drug i
store. The shell is soft. The yolk is in !
one part of the egg and the white in an- i
other, showing that it is one egg rather I
than the joining of two.
Thu freak xvas brought intu town by
Lee Watkins, a farmer.
YOU SHOULD ANSWER
THEIR QUESTIONS
When Children Ask Questions They Art
Deserving of Intelligent and
Ready Replies.
' v ■ c*et heard tell of a child that
■■i‘i if: ask questions - It is a pat of
lucation. Even before children
ii ~ii 1.-.- hool age inquisitiveness is
mi- of the 1 chief eiia. aeteristics.
Hut, more is the pity, children do not
alwa\ < g< t intelligent answers to their
- m-stimm I'sually this is dm- to a lack
lid propei reterciiec books in the home.
I'lii th "t gian took this into eonsldcra
li'.ii V. h.-n it selected th.- Standard At
:i- : i <"n onologi.-al History of the
World tot distribution to Its readers.
riii- ■- .i book for remix reference.
' >i' :.i from eov. rto .-o\ < r wit ii interest -
mg and m.-truetix >■ inatnvH: relating to
on own miinin as wll ns the entire
‘ , .lust th.- things that one wants
to know m .< minute and can not be ex
i-cetf d to rem. mber. Take? 'or instance.
I th* e tapters t eating the history of the
world, wm.m begin- with ti-.e first im
p.irmni event ami follows all history
flow I. ;til, |,r. s.-nt y . r. And it is ail
set forth in such cmiveriient form that
i om- c.,n find at a glance b\ referring
n. t lu- y. :' r. .tost tlie information sought.
Ilesidt '. the: , are ninety full pages of
colored maj.s which cover the entile
giobe l>. countries, departments, dis
tricts. t"‘.vin< > - and states. Then there !
.11. m.in\ other subjects which never
b< . .I.- as i.e.ir.-d in i book u s this eha:-
... t-r. al: of which goes to make The!
Geoigi.ii-'s Atlas a wmk of reference
that should be in eve.* home.
I'.-r a- :o. t tim. you .an get t!ii« val-
Alla - b.- i.resenting six headings
t-ped ffei tile fest 1-agi of The floor. I
• g-m tm: a -mad .K| n<e fee as ex- j
I iin< -■ in ' ■ .5r...: a nnouncemont on *
.ii'.t I'iiK. "f -his issue, tie: it today
j.'li'. “ i repur.-.i t" .'li-ni- tile riufs- |
■> ' ' -1 ti v.'in " n hoaie. ‘
MINISTER’S WIFE I
iFREED BY BULLET
I
i . ■
Rev. C. 0. Bennett Slain by
Cousin on Eve of Divorce
Suit She Had Brought.
WAYCROSS, GA.. Mai 20.—Mrs. C.
I if. Bennett, of Mill wood, who was suing
j .• husband for divorce, has been freed
j from her domestic bonds, but Carrey
| Bennett, a cousin of C. O. Bennett, and
j not the law, is responsible. In front of
a large crowd at the railroad station
yesterday morning t’arrey Bennett shot
and killed Rev. C. O. Bennett, her hus
band.
Alleged undue relations between
Carrey Bennett and Mrs. C. O. Bennett
a.ie said to have caused the shooting.
The dead man was a Baptist preacher.
rhe trouble between the cousins had
■ r>cen standing for a tong time. The
j preacher Bennett was 38 years old and
|< ar ey r.as only 20. but the young man
I uas said to be unusually attentive to
his cousin s wife. A short while ago
Mrs. Bennett, with her four children,
departed from A! ill wood. Her last let
ter from her husband told her never to
come back.
Death Stops Lawsuit.
Not long after she left, divorce pro
ceedings against Rev. Mr. Bennett were
filed.. Although the latter showed no
desire to resume marita,! relations with
bis wife, he contested the suit and was
going to fight it in the courts had not
death stepped in and made it all un-
I necessary.
I'ntil yesterday Mrs. c. O. Bennett
I had not visited Millwood. Shortly after
I she came Carrey Bennett arrived from
Kirkland and before the train had left
the.station the pistol duel had begun.
C. rj. Bennett, is said to have tired the
fl: st shot.
’ When the smoke cleared. Rev. C; O.
Bennett was lying dead and Carrey
Bennett had wounds in his left hand
and breast. Stray bullets went into the
crowd. .T. W. Murray, the station agent,
was struck in the foot anti Sam Murray,
an eight-year-old boy. caught one in
his leg.
Fast Train Ditched;
Drummer Escapes
From Car With Ax
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.. May 20.
The first section of the Pioneer Limited,
crack train of the Chicago, Milwaukee
and St. Paul railroad, wont into the
ditch near LaCrosse. Wgs.. today. Three
cars left the rails. None of the passen
gers were reported seriously hurt.
William West, a traveling salesman,
caught in a wash room of one of the
cars, chopped his way out. The train
had been warned of washouts and was
running slowly.
I
How High
Are You Going
A strong body and steady nerves
are needed as much or more by 7 /
the
r
Business Man and Busy Woman
as by any athlete.
Many use
Grape=Nuts
FOOD
because they find it “does the business.”
■A
Grape-Nuts has a delicious taste, is made of Wheat and Barley,
and perfectly cooked at the factory.
Il contains Phosphate of Potash in the grain) the element
which unites in the body with albumin and water to form and rebuild
the tissue cells in Body, Brain and Nerves.
That’s why
“There’s a Reason” for Grape-Nuts
• I
Pojfutn Cereal Company, Limtted, Baftle Creek. Michigan |
I .
’fa""' ==^s? 4 .
*
I ATLANTA LAWYERS TO BE
HEARD BY BAR OF STATE
MACON, GA., .May 20.—The program
for the annual convention of the Geor
gia Bar association, announced by Sec
retary Orville A. Park, of Macon, shows
that Atlanta attorneys will take a lead
ing part. Alexander W. Smith is presi
dent and wijl make the opening ad
dress. Judge AV. R. Hammond will dis
cuss the “Evil and Cure of Monopolis
tic Business Tendency." Robert C. Al
ston -will have as his theme “A State
Within a State in Georgia." E. R. Black
will be one of the speakers on the
question of "Shall Women Be Admitted
to the Bar in Georgia?"
“SYRUP HF FIGS" FOG INDIGESTION, -
BILIOUSNESS ANO CONSFIPAI ION
Better than castor oil, calomel or cathartics to cleanse
your stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels. Harm
less Laxative for men, women and children.
Primitive folks did not need laxa
tives. They lived outdoors, ate plenty
of fruit, and all of their food was coarse.
We modern people are different. AVe
exercise too little, eat little fruit, and
our food is too fine—too rich.
AA’e simply can't have our ten yards
of bowels clogged up, liver choked with
sour bile and stomach full of foul effete
matter and feel well. It means that the
food ami waste retained in the stomach
and 30 feet of bowels ferments—decays.
• The decay creates poisons, gases and
acids, and those poisons are sucked into
the blood through the very ducts in
tended to suck in the nutriment. Then'
we have sick headache, become dull,
bilious, tongue coated, nervous, meals
don’t digest, and we feel nfiserable all
over. So we must make out choice. AA'e
must live like primitive folks, else we
FEEL SMB!, HEADACHY, BILIOUS
OR CONSTIPATED? TAKE CASGARETS.
A
No odds how bad your liver, stomach or bowels: how much your head
aches, how miserable and uncomfortable you are from constipation, indi
gestion. biliousness and sluggish intestines —you always get the desired re
sults with Cascarets.
Don.’t let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable another
moment, put an end to the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness,
sick, sour, gassy stomach, backache and all other distress; cleanse your in
side organs of all the poison and effete matter which is producing the mis
ery. Take Cascarets tonight sure.
S I G=E, I S=Xl \
\ ” J
10 Cents. Never gripe or sicken.
“CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.”
LOCAL GARMENT WORKERS
TO SPEND DAY AT FALLS ’
.1. « I ■ ■ —•
Factories-in Atlanta employing mem
bers of the United Garment Workers ot
America will close June 6 for one day.
Nearly every man. woman and child
who is a member of the organization
will go to Tallulah Falls that day for a
picnic. A special train has been char
tered for the crowd of about 2.000 peo
ple, which is to leave the Terminal
station at 8 o'clock in the morning.
They will remain on the outing all day,
returning to Atlanta at 9 o'clock that
night.
Factory owners have been notified of
the outing and will close their plants to
allow employees to make the trip.
must take artificial means to move th« -j
excess bile and waste matter on and out
of the system. >
The safest, most harmless and effee- V
tive stomach, liver and bowel cleansct
and regulator for men, women anc i
children is delicious Syrup of Figs, J
which doesn’t irritate, gripe or weaken. ’
Its effect is the effect of fruits. It is
composed entirely of luscious figs, senna
and aromatics. Don't think you ani
drugging yourself. Syrup of Figs can
be constantly used without harm.
Ask your druggist for "Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna," and see on the la
bel that it is prepared by The California
Fig Syrup Company. This is the only
genuine—the old reliable. Refuse, with
contempt, the so-called Fig Syrup imi
tations sometimes offered to deceive
you.