Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, June 21, 1912, FINAL, Image 8

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MILW AGENTS HUD OFF SUITS Claims Against N., C. & St. L. for Dalton Wreck Being Set tled at Calhoun. CALHOUN. GA., June 21.—Claim agents of the N., C. & St. L. railway have been in Calhoun this week en deavoring to settle claims against tha road Incurred by the recent wreck near Dalton. A large number of the injured are still suffering from their injuries too much to negotiate with the agents. The wife of Josh Hamilton, the negro porter who was killed, has accepted 11.000 for the loss of her husband. Charley Butler, another negro, who re ceived a broken leg and other injuries, has accepted S4OO. One of the agents is reported to have said that the rail road would feel satisfied If SIOO,OOO covers the amount of all claims. Letter of Appreciation. The people of Calhoun are showing their appreciation of the kindness ex tended them by the citizens of Dalton on the occasion of the Calhoun picnic train wreck last week. A letter of ap preciation has been sent to the mayor of Dalton, signed by Mayor J. F. Alli son, H. J. Ross, chancellor commander of the Calhoun Knights of Pythias; Mrs C. C. Harlan, president of the Woman's club; Colonel John Erwin, superintendent of the Methodist Sun day school, and W. L. Hines, superin tendent of the Baptist Sunday school. Mrs. Kate Littlefield and Dr. G. A. Anderson, who were seriously injured in the wreck, have been brought home, being the last of those injured to leave Delton. Both are apparently on the road to recovery. BRIDEGROOM INCLUDED IN SILK SOCK SHOWER NBft YORK, June 21.—Brides-to-be have all kinds of showers these days— linen showers and cut glass showers, even silk stocking showers—but it re mained for Miss Dorothy Everett to inaugurate the fashion of including a prospective bridegroom in a hosiery shower. She gave one at her home tor Miss Lila Blandy and Warren Rfshel, who are to’ be married in November. The invitations read: "Siy< stocking and silk hose shower.” His friends were evidently in the majority, for he re ceived 50 pairs, whil his fiancee had to be contented with 40 to add to her trousseau. COLONEL HAM LEWIS’ WARDROBE ASTRAY BALTIMORE, June 21.—James Ham ilton Lewis is threatening dire ven geance tonight on all the railroads and express companies. The cause of his ire is the lose of all his baggage be tween Baltimore and Chicago. He is reduced to the one suit upon hie back— a symphony in brqwn, with a pinkish tinge that harmonizes sweetly with his far-famed whiskers. So distraught is he that he has lost all interest in the two or tlirt»t»oms that preceded him here. THS LAX FOS WAY. If you had a medicine that would strengthen the liver, the stomach, the kidneys and the bowels and at the sama time make you strong with a systemic tonic, don’t you believe you would soon 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 Lai- FoB Remember the name—LAX-FOB. ••• HOTELS AND RESORTS. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. GREAT ATLANTIC HOTEL. Virginia ave . near Beach and Steel Pier, Open surroundings Capacity 500 Hot and cold sea water baths Large rooms. south ern exposure. Elevator to street level, spa cious porches, etc Special week rates: $2 50 up dally. Booklet. Coaches meet trains. COOPER & LEEDS. ONE OF ATLANTIC CITY'S LARGEST AND LEADING ALL THE-YEAR HOTELS. HOTEL RUDOLF On ocean front; close to all attractions capacity 1.000. The location, large rooms and open surroundings have established this as the most comfortable hotel for the summer. All baths supplied with sea and fresh water; running water In guest .rooms; spacious promenade verandas overlook the famous boardwalk. Orches tra. high-class restaurant. American and European plans. A. S. RUKEYSER. Manager. JOEL HILLMAN, President. Nervous Wrecks A FRIEND of mine said he believes nine / men out of ten had more or less ir ritation of the prostatlc urethra 1 don't know but what he s ( right. This Is one i of the most sensi tive parts of the I human anatomy more sensitive than the eye I have had hundreds of pa tients during the 86 years I have i been specialising In I diseases of men. chronic diseases and nervous disor ders, who were al most nervous wrecks from a reflex Irr 11 a tion caused by the pros tatlc urethra being affected. Had pains J wp JI tSSiPOLd In back, nick back DR WM. M. BAIRD of heat, and Ernwn-Randolph Bldfl.couldn't sleep. Atlanta. Ga. Good physicians ’had treated them without result because they didn't find the cause of the trouble My office hours are 8 to 7; Sundays and holidays 10 to 1 My monographs free by mall in plain, sealed wrapper. $200,000,000.00 A YEAR FOR FOREIGN LUXURIES Mr. Kipling once said something to the effect that as long as women "would walk gaj " it was up to the men to find the mom y to furnish the finery, and a glance at the figures just made public by the bureau of statistics in Washington indicates that the Ameri can man has not been giving his wom en folks any the worst of it. The figures show that by the end of the current fiscal year, which falls on June 30, the Tired Business Man In this country will have spent $200,000,000 on imported luxuries alone, mostly for a woman—a tidy, sizable sum. • According to the bureau we never have been very stingy where women’s finery and jewels were concerned, but this year we have broken all records In many of the divisions. The biggest gain, though, and in a division that can not be blamed entirely on women, is in art works. The fondness of the ladies for dia monds did not fall off any in the past year. There have been quite a few million dollars’ worth In this country for some time, and by the end of June we will have imported $41,000,000 worth more. We have already brought in more than $35,000,000 worth. There must be a great many more j DIRIGIBLE BALLOON MAKES NEW RECORD BERLIN, June 21.—Count Zeppelin’s airship Victoria Luise bas made a con tinuous twelve-hour trip of 350 miles. She started from Dusseldorf with 25 passengers, crosseQ Holland, passing over Amsterdam, skirted the Nether lands and the coasts of Heligoland and went up the Elbe, where she saluted the kaiser, who was taking part in a regatta at Brunsbuttelkoog. She stopped at Hamburg. This is a Ger man record for speed and distance in a dirigible. A. R. DORSEY LICENSED. MACON, GA., June 21.—Thirty new undertakers and embalmers were li censed by the Georgia examining board w-hich has Just completed its annual sessions in Macon. Eight of these were negroes. A. R. Dorsey was the only one from Atlanta. THE GLOBE CLOTHING COMPANY iimssi] Cool,Soisette Summery Shirts ggg —■—m. Cool Soisette Summery Shirts. Some with collars to match. Just the right Shirt for now » iw 50c, 85c, $1 ofx - I THERE’S A 1 | M Special Sale of Men's Suits going on here. The Suits are mostly stouts ami slims—the kind ; short and long folks wear. They are good patterns, and right in every way. Almost any .size. They are worth I'-' W- » sl6. sls, $lB. You can take L.. /• choice at • W $7.50 J| Mohair Cravenetted Suits. Very light ; i weight. Cool. In grays, dark blues and black. The price now S«SSSw SftSßSft $12.50 and $15.00 0 ~ ~ SISiS SIS six HIM MIX Plenty good blue Serge Suits, or gray and ssra brown Cheviot Suits. Two or three-piece | SSSsS style «t , •“ asjijgs $lO, $12.50. sls, $16.50, $lB, S2O f|| SSMS IN FURNISHINGS ||| Special, men's nainsook and open-work Un derwear—Shirts or Drawers. I'he usual Sil*!* 8 !- 50c quality. Now at 25c. SB Special in New Straw Hats g|| Rough Sennets, Milans, Jap Braids. Three JtSitSSt* new shapes. Special, at SI.OO. Bathing Suits—men’s or bovs’ 50c and SI.OO. Children’s Wash Suits —white or colored— el»s;ss;s SI.OO, $1.50. SMt 58 ! 5 Rompers, 50c. Overalls for children, 25c, 50c. |Sfew Illi lISBgll THE GLOBE CLOTHING CO. EIGHTY-NINE WHITEHALL STREET THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 1912. Tired Business Men in the country now than there were ten years ago. for the value of the Imports of embroidery and laces has increased more than 50 per cent in that time. By the end of June we will have brought In more than $44,000,000 worth of this kind of furbelows, but it is quite a shock to our reputation for good taste to learn that three-fourths of it is cot ton goods. Apparently, however, the Tired Busi ness Man has not forgotten himself In the past year. He has brought over enough good wine to make several large fortunes, and his tobacco is quite an Item. Tobacco and Its various manu factures foot up to the nice little sum of $32,000,000, and this, of course, does not take in the stupendous sum spent for the weed that is grown in our own country. Even the children have their Inningr In the luxury list, and their toys make quite an item. We bought $9,000,000 worth abroad in the year for the little ones of these United States, But. as has been stated, the works of art show the biggest incnease. The money spent for art treasures brought to this country will -approximate $40,- 000,000, as against $22,500,000 tor las' year. IT ISN’T MOCHA UNLESS IT’S OVER 200 YEARS OLD CHICAGO, June 21.—Coffee branded “Mocha” that is less than 200 years old is not genuine, according to twenty cof fee experts. The last shipment from Mocha, Arabia, was made about two centuries ago, they testified. The question of what was “Mocha" arose during the trial of the Thompson * Taylor Spice Company on a Federal charge of misbranding coffee. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Tha Kind You Have Always Bought POLICE TO CRUSH COCAINE TRAFFIC “This Peril Is Ten Times Worse Than Blind Tigers,” Says Chief Beavers. “The cocaine peril is ten times worse than the blind tiger," said Police Chief Beavers today in discussing the police warfare against violators of the co caine laws and the efforts to save At lanta boys from the clutches of the dread “coke habit.” Close tab will be kept on all drug victims brought into the police station to ascertain whether dope has been sold them illegally. Every possible clew will be followed and any offending druggist found, and all “coke” ped dlers will be given the limit. The po lice are satisfied that the stand taken by Recorder Broyles in the present crusade will have a wholesome effect on cocaine dispensers. "Scores of negroes and many white boys in Atlanta arc being driven into imbecility by the use of cocaine,” said Chief Beavers, “and thousands of dol lars are being spent for the drug. It is far worse than the whisky habit, for cocaine literally converts its victims into insane beings every time they use it, and the victim, once acquiring the habit, never quits. It seems, until death relieves him. “The habit has grown to greater pro portions among negroes, but still it has made alarming inroads among whites." The law stipulates that cocaine shall be sold only on prescription of a physi - cian. STUART'S BUCHU AND JUNIPER COMPOUND CURES KIDNE* »NO BLADDER TROUBLE! Read Georgian want ads for quick re sults. THIS USEFUL ATLAS GIVEN TO READERS OF THE GEORGIAN FOR WHO PRESENT EVERYDAY qv USE »■—tl UdE a HEADINGS nvnDvnnnv sO® OBBMn Sp EVERYBODY || LIKE THIS: NEEDS IT j [Atlanta Ggogtj When you read in your daily paper of the massacre in Resht, ;’v.’4 g USt enou & h to show P art of do von wonder where that city ‘ heading with date) and the ex- i„ locate < Can yon name the S$ jj pra, ./“ to , U ", ? C “ S ’ boundanes of Persia 1 Do you '||| ling, packing, shipping, check- know that Tabriz is the most yj;; ■;> ■?/ ing, accounting, etc., as ex important commercial center :: -LT '.t' '•*'•'•’ •'•’ plained below, of Northwestern Persia? It is jffirFwr IffioT-i L ;: :>* a city of 200,000 inhabitants ;.?a $ •>;> and does a large export busi- ;? Have you a large, UU- ness in dried fruits, cotton and W.;. Wieldy Atlas? Lay It carpets. This is the kind of ■> aside and get The Geor- information you get at a ;.W s ian ’ s ready reference At- ,i.« in The Georriu.’. las—always handy for STANDARD ATLAS. quick US6. REDUCED ILLUSTRATION—ActuaI size 8 3-4x7 inches. table of contents (701 ORFF) IM APS Areas and Depths of the Great Oceans. M -4 M M A- v JeL jJk .HL Biographies of Our Presidents. wona. OF ALL COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD- ALL STATES and TERRITORIES-PROVINCES OF CANADA Forestry In the United States < ■» Hl *L?.t o lm^runt l E^n?of'mi Ye “ r ’ Before chr “ l t 0 the JUST CLIP AND PRESENT rltorles. Decrease of the Population of States and Ter- I g j X PAGE HEADINGS AND GET THIS $1.50 Insular Possessions Maps Judicial Branch of Our (.»overnment~~Powers, Jurisdiction a wv w a wvwx a ■ a A Kin A’LioniK?rhi nr*ir* a i w » i=;se.“ STANDARD ATLAS “!3¥S l WORLD Maps of Everv State and Territory, Showing Routes and Regions, with Routes of Re- < like «’ustTation): bound in silk-finished cloth, beautiful and durable; printed cent Exploration. , on superhne paper; containing tull-page colored maps of every state in the canui"^?.' D ' C ' Union and every country in the world, showing raiload lines, steamship of cme%\7 th?l^ted'States. routes etc ; history of the world at a glance shown on colored charts; chrono- Population of tiw* t’nttesi states by states. logical tables treating historical events from 7,000 B. C. to the present ; also Powers l 'an<i°saiariL n !'rthe'prcsident nh'd'vice President of new descriptive gazetteer of the world; progress of forest and reclamation PrinH e pa!’ n Count B rUs“f the World-Preaent Heads. Form, of S f rviPe =. Hn(l P o P' ll «t i on of all principal cities and countries of . Government and Population. the entire world. Present at this office six headings of con- Expense Railroad Maps of Canadian Provinces. aO n,D,x-A rlotoc onzl flin • Reclamation Service Projects. dates, anti the t/vv lee Salaries and Composition of I’ntted States Senate and House of Representatives. Bh^p? l^ife h and oArealt^f 0 Area lt^f, the a Ea'rJ? U ' or? Alf /"AIT TAT"* T"*! C? Send Expense Fee and Headings, White 1 House' IVI AI I 4 include 15 Oents Extra for NOTE: Census figure* ars from latest official reports— * A Postazr? I#lo and 1»11. SHE CLAIMS SCHOOL PUNCTUALITY RECORD WAUKEGAN, ILL., June 21—Miss Mary Ethel Hicks claims a world’s rec. ord for school attendance. For thirteen and one-half years she has attended the Waukegan public schools without being absent pr tardy. Miss Hicks made public her record today'after ahe had heard that Harold F. Woodyate, of Dixon, claimed the state record with a faultless attend ance of seven years. POSLAM BRINGS _ SKIN HEALTH AND COMFORT Poslam and Postam Soap mean lasting skin health and comfort to all who are afflicted with any annoying or disfiguring skin disease. These troubles cause acute distress, particularly in hot weather, when bodily comfort is difficult under best conditions. Itching stops when Pos lam is applied, irritation is subdued, angry skin is comforted. Restful sleep may be enjoyed. The complete cure of eczema, acne, all eruptions. Itching trou bles, sunburn, stings, scalds and every form of skin ailment is easily accom plished .by this perfect remedy. POSLAM SOAP, besides assisting in the work of healing, should be used daily for its many benefits to the skin, whether or not disease is present. Best for baby’s bath; absolutely pure; soothes tender skin; never irritates. All druggists sell Poslam (price, 50 cents) and Poslam Soap (price, 25 cents). For free sampled, write to the Emergency Laboratories. 32 West Twenty-fifth street, New York City. SWEET POTATO PLANTS of our famous Nancy Hall variety at $1.75 per thousand, or $2.00 ex press .prepaid. Prompt shipment, good count and safe arrival guar anteed. ► BEAR’S HEAD FARM, Pine Castle, Fla. Department For Savings Sr EWB— ■HU Hr; | iHreR BKHrw H I if l. ’hkonAmk-’l Si I I' SMk l I • a r r 11 7 i 'r**?*Tr ‘ The illustration shows a section of our con venient and spacious department for Savings, where accounts of SI.OO or more are welcomed, and where deposits draw a liberal interest. Come in and see what has been done to at tract YOU as one of our Savings depositors. Notice the convenient business-like arrangement which has been provided in order to make it a pleasure, as well as a profitable convenience, for you to deposit your spare money here. And in addition to this, we have a neat, handy little bank for home savings, which will help you to make good use of your stray coppers and nickels and dimes. This department is on the ground floor, where are our great Safe Deposit Vault, Individual Coupon Booths, Depositors’ Private Consulting Room and Ladies’ Reception Room. THIRD NATIONAL BANK Capital and Surplus $1,700,000.00 FRANK HAWKINS President R. W. BYERS. .. .Assistant Cashier JOS. A. McCORD Vice President A. M. BERGSTROM. . Asst. Cashier JOHN W. GRANT. Vice President W. B. SYMMERS Asst. Cashier THOMAS C. ERWIN Cashier A. J. HANSELL Asst. Cashier