Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 04, 1912, FINAL, Image 10

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S4IUNE WEDDINGS ON mi RUSH ‘First Two Days of the Month Bring 42 Atlanta Romeos to Ordinary’s Office. The magic effect of June if shown these days by the rush at the ordinary’s office that has been on since first the "Month of Weddings” opened. During the two days that the office has been open in June no less than 42 Atlanta men have sought license to fleave the realms of bachelordnm. Hard fly had the office opened on the first of the month when young men appeared lin the door. A blanched face and an a <4ljf of ‘‘T-never-can-face-lt” told the .experienced clerk what was wanted and >th* license book was pulled off - the fcshelf. Young Romeo was succeeded pt>y another who differed scarcely at all ffrom the first one. Through the day fthe rush continued. Ordinary’ Wilkin jron noticed that much of the routine pvdrk of the office was being omitted Hand called to one of his clerks. The t Fimple explanation. "It's June, sir,” told y • sthe reason and the rush went on. June has a more potent effect on .youth, say the poets, and the records jcn the ordinary's hooks hear them out. J K>ne prospective bridegroom on the list Is over 28 and his bride’s age is given is 21. Os the remainder nearly three kfourths are at the 21-19 period of life, pwhen the irresistible force of June can A jffiot he denied. - | Is Coffee a Poison? I * Read this POISON SQUAD MEMBER U COLLAPSES UNDER TEST ss J ___ ?•' The average cup of coffee con- tains about ZYj grains ot catteine - - COMPANIONS ARE SICK the drug that you read about here W* Every Mem —- Band s „ ffera Nausea, as Result of Caf- (t i • i f rs r ii seine Experiments. Cortee drinkers often suiter trom nead- , PHILADELPHIA, May 11.—Serious ache, nervousness, indigestion, biliousness, . ... . . - ... well as eoffe/t. to th» eight student heart irritation and other symptoms of ill member- o f the -poison th/ - r Hahnemann Medical College here All , 111 1 (f • ♦» 1 ] ‘l’ have been subject to severe headaches healtn---due to catteine, the drus in their and serious attacks of nausea, ° one member of the squad was in such a ft serious condition after taking the caf- COliee. seine-laden water for the first twenty days that he had to.be placed In a spe cial ward in the hospital. He received constant attention, has recovered and T' , l • f. . at th** college is said tn have rejoined ihe cause is often not understood •%, ihe poison squad at the Hahne ■ 1 mann college was formed very quietly. until expert medical test shows up 7,SLZ 1 Edmund T Nesbit, director of the Her •l ' 1 IJ| f ■ ine laboratory of the college. the bald tacts - IT Nesbit called for volunteers from ISW among the students. He said he wanted [L. —men who were willing to do something I for the benefit of humanity’ at large, even though ft might be to their own OP C f ,1 ’ll 1 discomfiture. Twenty-five students ne can set relict from the ills caused ' • unteered <>f these fourteen of the ° most perfect physically were chosen. I ft] ’■ ' ( \ 11 eleven as regular members of the squad by coHee by quitting it for 10 days and using SR’BTwX; Z, squad were given doses of caffeine while Dr. Nesbit and his assistants made personal observations, taking the PI pulses and temperature of the members TBF I 'S®A "* 1 s 'l ua 'i ami making notes on their Jj" ' * S * B ■ general physical condition. It was not Sf IM B S HBE « B until within the last few days that one B B ■ I K B member of the squad weakened under VH Bf M H ■ R waJr B tlie p 'T' rr iment to sm-h an extent tha’ wa » W B S B law B ’’ " as necessary to send him to thehos- awr ISL Vggk... pital. Dr. Nesbit refuses to reveal the fIRMI w flMw name of the student who collapsed, but declares that through proper treatment « immediately’ he soon recovered. • ’* » The caffeine was administered in a solution and was mixed with the water Al ,11 f 11 ~le s< l ,la<l cirank The students Hid not pure, palatable rood beverage ss: s;‘, , ;s , ' u xx giving It in order to keep the mind of « 1 I*l 1 • 11 w ’' le s,u dent free from worry, in order that tastes much like high-grade Java s “ lion of the brain. _ •111/* /• X'x /• z- Before joining the "poison squad" ** but is absolutely free from Caffeine or •f the college. ••«»•»»•« The laboratory was organized about __ __ —LL- —.. fifteen months ago with Dr, Nesbit as AIIV Oin( I CirUlZ. director ami almost immediately an w t exhaustive study was started to ascer- tain the destructive qualities of caf feine as used in food stuffs. ♦ ♦ » » The students continued to live at the HI Ir\ 1 * *ll r dormitories or at boarding houses, but the I U days trial shows you some, facts, pital near the diet kitchen. Before perhaps you may conclude it’s worth more taken and the blood pressure was test .l 11 .1 . 1 • I (f • ’ , ed During the period the drug was to be well than to drink coitee---its up to you « ii,ninl stered on y Dr. Nesbit knew the 1 -f amount apportioned to each man and 1 .t when and in what quantity it was ad- tO deClde ministered. —New York Sun, May 12, “There s a Reason 9 for Postum POSTUM CEREAL CO., LTD., BATTLE CREEK, MICH. Legislature s First Rohin Here BILL BLEVINS IS PEEVED Bill Blevins, of the county of Glynn, has arrived. Mr. Blevins is to the legislature what the first robin is to summer, first harbinger of the nested days to come. He usually arrives about a week before the first roll call and strives earnestly to land a place as doorkeeper of the house or messenger for the senate or custodian for the Cap itol dome. Bill never was particular, always maintaining that his name on the state pay’ roll was really the most important detail of his ambition to serve his commonwealth. But Mr. Blevins was peeved today. He leaned against a pillar in the Kim ball house corridor and complained querelously that Mr Kimball was not bestowing that attention to his busi ness which should mark the keeper of such a hostelry a« this. Loafers Driving Away Trade. “Hit’s these here cheer warmers,” Mr. Blevins asseverated "Look at ’em. Count ’em. They’ drap inter them leather cheers befo’ breakfus and thar they’ sets One of ’em draps a mawnln’ papen> he borrowed off’n somebody else. The neares’ man reaches out an gits it. an’ the feller nex’ to him has to wait until hit’s plum wore out. "That old feller with the billy’ goat whiskers has held down that cheer nex’ to the end till he’s sunk sech a hole In it I bet they pull him out at night with a bootjack. If he ever gits out, which 1 has mv doubts. I’ve seen him rFTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ANO NEWS. TUESDAY, JUNE 4. 1912. , settln’ thar for fo’ summers, an’ unless > his little boy brings him his meals hit’s , a wonder to me he ain’t starved plum to death. That feller with the wooden laig, he’s in his same old seat he was ’ settln’ In the day Hoke Smith fired 1 Little Joe Brown, which I remember t well, an’ it looks like the same old leg • which hit might well be, for the Lawd knows he ain’t had no occcasion to wear it out. There used to be a man with a wen . what claimed that last 1 cheer on the far side, but 1 reckon he’s 1 dead. Anyway. I ain’t seen him today. “Regular Customer" Stands Up. "Hit does appear to me that Colonel Kimball might come out an’ speak to them old fellers kinder nice and polite, and show ’em how they’re drivin’ away’ trade. Look at me, now. a regular cus tomer for ten years, fo’ced to stand up and lean agin a post. I’m goin’ to get plum’ disgusted and move up to the Piedmont some day.” "Why’ don’t you go up to your room. Mr. Blevins, and take a rest?” Inquired the sympathizer into whose ears the story of distress had been poured. "Well, you see.” returned Mr. Blev ins. "whilst I’m a reg’lar customer, as I might say. I ain’t got no reg’lar room. When I comes to town I live’s with my’ wife’s cousins out by the Oaklan’ semi nary, and after breakfus I Jes’ tote a little snack of vittles In my pocket and come up to the hotel to mix round amongst my ftfen’s But I been cornin’ for ten year, an’ hit do seem like I was entitled to some speshul consideration. Ain’t I right’.’" ■NEHSTOSEE BASEBALLGAME Atlanta Shriners will take charge of Ponce DeLeon park tomorrow. It is Shriners’ day’ at the baseball game. A large class is to be initiated and the occasion will be celebrated all aft ernoon. The initiation will be beld at night in the St. Nicholas skating rink across the street from the baseball park. The celebration will begin at 2:30 o’clock, when the new Arab patrol, which has just received its uniforms, will leave the Masonic temple headed by the fifth Regiment band. The pa rade will pass up Peachtree and White hall streets to Mitchell, down Mitchell to Broad, down Broad to Alabama, on Alabama back to Whitehall and on Peachtree to Walton street, where special cars to the ball grounds will be boarded. When the paraders reach Ponce De- Leon park the Arab patrol will give a drill on the diamond. Patrol and sabre drills will be given there. The fancy drills will not be given in public, but will be performed before the Shriners in the skating rink. After the game the nobles will ad journ across the park to the old amusement park, where an old-fashion ed Georgia barbecue will be served. Fol lowing the barbecue they will meet in the St. Nicholas skating rink for the initiation.of one of the largest classes in the history of the Atlanta lodge. ALTRURIANS PLAN PABAOISE HERE Dr. Fealy, Occult Leader, Pro poses “Vibration” Sanita rium for Perfect Living. Georgia is soon to have a retreat where students of the occult may sit at the feet of the Yogi without journey ing to the peaks of the Himalayas, if Dr. L. A. Fealy. of Ireland, India and Birmingham, carries out his plans. Dr. Fealy’ is in Atlanta today after a lecture to his followers who compose the Altru rian society, and has just returned from a visit to Madison. Ga., where he pro poses to establish his retreat and sani tarium. Atlanta has not been the haunt of Swamis and Yogis in Oriental robes, most of its apostles of the occult carry ing on their researches in small and sjgn-emblazoned tents, for a small piece of silver they’ delve into the unknown and emerge with a fortune in store for each and every applicant. But Dr. Fealy is not one of these. He is said to have a most extensive and at the same time lucrative clientele in Birmingham, and his income is only equalled by his lavishness in charitable work. He lectured last night at the Carnegie library and this afternoon and evening will address his class, members of the Altrurian society, at the Piedmont. Believe Absolutely in Him. Just how many Atlanta women are of his cult is hard to determine, but the Altrurians believe absolutely and im plicitly in Dr. Fealy and his work. They say he Is a. great healer, a master of the science of vibrations, and to his all seeing eye there is neither distance nor matter. The writer sat In the drawing room of the home of a north side woman of social prominence as she spoke of Fealy’ the Yogi and his work. "He Is a master,” she said. "In him I have perfect faith. I have studied under the great Hindoo mystics who have visited Boston and New York, and I have known Dr. Fealy for a year. I do not merely believe in hfs powers—l know. "It Is all vibrations. Matter Is mete ly vibrations. There is really’ no such thing as matter. That chair is merely one form of vibrations, the table is an other. Change Its vibrations and you change ft into something else. When one is ill hfs vibrations are disarranged. The Yogi knows what is wrong and by his will corrects it. “It isn’t exactly theosophy, nor Budd hism, nor any one creed. We take the best from all. Buddha, Mohammed. Christ—they are all accepted as great leaders. Our law is ‘the law of perfect peace to every living creature.’ The nearer one attains this state the nearer one approaches perfection We have been studying under Dr. Fealy for many months. Some of us have learned a great deal. Oh, yes. he believes in re incarnation. What we can not attain in this life we may gain in our next incarnation. Became Yogi in India. "Dr. Fealy is Irish, a graduate of Trinity college In Dublin, and King’s college, of London. He is about years of age When young he devel oped tuberculosis, and physicians or dered him to the south of Italy. He had made preparations to leave when a stranger approached him on the street and told him of a retreat far in the re mote passes of the Indian Himalayas, and Dr. Fealy went there instead He made his way into the forbidden coun try and there met a mystic brother hood, the leaders of the cull of which he is now a follower. He recovered h : s health and under their teaching, cov ering a number of years, became a Yogi." For some time Dr. Fealy’ has con ducted a sanitarium and retreat in Bir mingham, but it was burned a short time ago He now proposes establish ing a larger sanitarium at Madison, not far from Atlanta, where the quiet and repose should be conducive to medita tion. and a. disciple of his cult may "loaf and invite his soul" without the distractions of auto horns and trolky wheels. The Atlanta Altrurians. The Altrurian society- of Atlanta, a branch of the Birmingham society, in cludes 38 members, with women pre dominating. The officers are: W. H. Starick, president: Mrs Frank Red ding Logan, vice president, and Miss Annette Applewhite. secretary. The list <ncludes Miss Annette Applewhite, Miss Cora Buckmaster. Mrs. Frank Eastman. W. H. Starick. president; Mrs. D. E. Ashby, Mrs. John B. Garr, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Harland, Mrs. Wil liam G. Obear. Mr. and Mrs. George S Obear. E. W. Whistler, Miss Leola Snow, Mrs L. C. Branch. Mrs. Emily Carpenter, Mrs. Lula Holland. Mrs J. C. Huff. Mrs J. R. Little. Mr. and Mis. R W. Wilt, A. W, Applewhite. Mrs. Alice Perryman. Mrs W B Cummings, Mr. and Mrs W. E. Lenney, Mrs. Frank Cobler. F. C. Thayer. R F Bishop. H Thaden, Mrs. J. J Neville, Miss Sadie Workman. Mrs Henry Carnes, Mrs. Frank Redding Logan, vice president; Mrs James H. Hopler, Mrs. J. O. Noel, Mrs. F. E. Walker, Mrs. E. W La- Zarus, Mrs O. G. Cox, R. M. Williams, Mrs. Harry L Wilson. DR. E. C. DARGAN HEADS MERCER TRUSTEE BOARD MACON. GA.. June 4. — Dr. E. C. Dar gan, president of the Southern Baptist convention and pastor of the First Baptist church of Macon, has been elected president of the board of trus tees of Mercer university to succeed the late Thomas G. Lawson Rev. G. W Garner, of Eatonton, was chosen for the vacancy of the board. Men er close tomorrow morning when ,»u diploma will bt prtoenltii the giaduatct. The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good ” are but Experiments, and endanger th® health of Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, T* ar ** goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relitVes Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea —The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 7T MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY. Dr. E. G. Griffin’s 241-2 Whitehall Street, Over Brown & Alien’s Drug Store. dKk Lowest Prices —Best Work. $5 A Set of Teeth $5.00 ■ afe l . Impressions—Teeth Same Day, 4P»*»w- established 22 years Crowns, $3.00 Bridge Work, $4.00 PHONE 1708. Hours Bto 7. Sunday 9to I. Lady Attendant. J —i ■iimiiihmw GRAND CANADIAN TOUR McFarland’s Seventh Annual Tour to Toronto without change $55 pays offers one solid week of travel through every necessary expense for the tour, seven states and Canada, covering 2,500 High-class features are guaranteed, miles, including 500 miles by water, vis- Many already booked. Names furnished Iting Cincinnati, Detroit, Buffalo. Ntaga- Send for free picture of Niagara Fallsand ra Falls and Toronto. Canada. A select full information to ,1. F. McFarland, Man and limited party leaves Atlanta. Ga . ager. 41 >/ 2 Peachtree st., Atlanta, Ga., July 8 in a special Pullman train through Phone Main 4608-J. Qlkinu A M ASHEVILLE, H. C. > has prepared Boys for Collogo ond Man- M m alrwu ** ** ”■ COL. R. BINGHAM ( hood for Xl9 years. Our Graduates Excel m w in all the Colleges they at tend. North and South. Ventilation. Sanitation and Safety N ® Against Fire pronounced the BEST by XSO doctors and by every visiting Parent. ( at m Average Gain of 19 pounds term of entrance accentuates our Climate. Fare and Care of Puolle. Military, to help in making Men of Boys. Box tn I f I s I rfUSSX I 1 S'BwKßwSw I i ■ g g :."“‘‘'l7l4Bl •'■t^,~^»'iS^c > s In these days of improved Is V manufacturing methods it is M 'i not unusual, pftrhaps, to see k f pianos on sale as low as 3195. P | But it is unusual to see K pianos of the quality we are F, ,5 offering for this sale at so low y. a price. ’ ( 4 It means a sacrifice of part V ■ of our profit, of course, but it ■ g means, too. that we have gone g I to the utmost pains in select- || I ing these exceptionally well- B jg made instruments. Our reputation for square jj| 3 dealing is your protection in “ IB buyinq one of these New Pianos I In handsome ma- C 4 ft IF’ 3 hogany cases —s| fl I & SI Colonial design. A ■7l fl r M limited quantity IVV J only, at t. I Terms: Now $lO, Each Month $6 R kJ Descriptions do not count r for as much as actually seeing ft these fine pianos. Call today fg and see, hear, play on them, gj You will be astonished at the g| value. HALLET & DAVIS B PIANO CO. a Established 1839, Manufacturers. g Capital $3,000,000. F 1226-27-28 Candler Building. WILLIAM CARDER, Manager * < -> t VeJ * NATIONAL SURGICAL INSTITUTE For the Treatment nl V.‘Z. DEFORMITIES J r ? VD* ESTABLISHED 1874. fl , Give the deformed / *4ira\> (Tb children a chance. / /F'\v\ -LI Send us their / f V \ names, we can / II \ 4ahelp them. This Institue Treats Chib Feet, Dis eases of the Spine, Hip Joints, Paraly sis, etc. Send for illustrated catalog. 72 South Pryor Street, Atlanta, Ga Ask any business man and be u I! ipII you The Georgian Want \<l pHunnis reach more.peoph and h'rng Imp.’ re'till* tba» «mild n u i»« ' b’ained in any ulhtr i medium in this aettiun. Ji •• f j Nervous Wrecks A FRIEND of mtne said he believes nine men out of ten had more or less tr \ citation of the prostatic urethra I don’t E know but what he's g CT ; ’ right This is one I IB r ' s ,h * most senst- I ' Wo five parts of the S sag anatomy— i :WE /iSS more sensitive than I W ’he eye I have bad = «’*■'- '<B hundreds of pa- 3 f- « tfents during the. -. $s 3f> years I have 5 a been specializing In I 'Wa < i iseases of men, I jfoaa chronic diseases 1 ’JSH 8,1,1 nervous disor- = -MW* ders, who were al- I MaEfesk.A,. A- /IS most nervous I fjMjro* Y ’WI wrecks from a s reflex Irritation g ' ra ' ly ed by the pros- ’ qWiiß : J tatic urethra being in back, neck, back ’ DR WM. M BAIRD of head and J Brown-Randolph Blda. couldn't sleep £ Atlanta, Ga. Good physicians / had treated them without result because 'I they didn't find the cause of the trouble. 4 Mv office hours are 8 to 7. Sundays and S holidays 10 to 1. My monographs free by > e mail in plain, sealed wrapper. ’ CORSYTH ) Todsy.' w I ■ Atlanta's Busiest Theater J Toripbt S:SO j Mabel Taliaferro & Co. NEXT WEEK ’I IHEP CAMP-MATTHEWS A C Iff’ccntorT I j ALSHAYNE-DARRELLACOH- Lu u McConnell I | WAY—Lavier—-Montrell A Co. AT LAST AN ATLAS | THAT STANDS ALONE Feat of Flat Book About the World Att'actinq Attention to Its Excellence Isn't an Atlas about the clumsiest > book you evet handled? Memory takes you way back to vour school days, when you were first “so proud nf the big. brightly-colored hook t which you soon found to be a greater source of physical annoyance than all | of your oilier books combined. It wouldn't go into your school bag easily, and it certainly was so top heavy that it would not stand upon its i thin edge, and when you placed it on its side it covered a great deal too much space gn your little desk. . As you grew older, did you ever find an Atlas that did not have the same, j annoying faults'.’ Even when you stowed It away on \ our book shelf you had to find a shel* d 1 ■j, enough to hold it. and then piop it » up with another book to keep it from toppling over. Taking it all in all, you never had a more bothersome book" Progress has been made, however, in Atlases as u- II as skyscraper,construc tion. and there is now a book built upon such common sense lines that the first boy who received one cried, "She I stands alone.” It ißilanus easily and firmly upon Its edges md outdistam-es all competition e This book which "stands alone" not only physically, hut by reason of its novel arrangement of contents, chro imlogic.il history of the world, census figures, geogciphicalh accurate ami - pi tm • sqm ly interesting maps md de. ! scriptions. Is above competition. ' 110 11 las t>i •y< ,'llene, is being iio • nt«d l»\ Th, i;,.. 41.111 tolls read :i ■ • ' ■ ''<<■-;• .... oy b. ,.|| pp( . j | H in tn'- iMpcr and .> small ekpvnse fee,