Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 01, 1912, EXTRA, Image 3

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)RDING TO WEBSTER i“ i t. g y B'r WINSUM P/ 7 ' ..." - , . . , P'~ - , . . , '"' Tthe enihiusiasm" A BALKY WAS FL,LI HE THREW A SOMB IN IN THE , raised the roof > I OF FIRE TO THE VZ\*T CROWD GALLERY- y/X'gffija •Airni- |S(II) tiiiOOCti Win Ifirfl b/H " -AHER prater Hoiiuinis began < 1 <’ . IrfLhlW " lES A ' ■/ m *u pOte ~J! N i-<- :'■■■ ■’/' • . -.m was qrowneo out j ..v'U ; w; yy- '.i,i/--- I tUs. Mr a « ... hi _J<- , [LIGHTS ON iHTE POLITICS on Pertinent Topics > ’ > ared From Here and There. nfs ain't what they ueter was,'' ' <-2d the Hon Bill Blevins today surveyed the crowd in the Khti olunda just before it broke up adjourned to the eapitol. "They Iseem to be no more chanst for |r to make an hones' livin’ wit'n- Sorkin', less’n he gits inter of- * . t-meinbers when a feller could |iss sum his home ligislater and :io Atlanta and land on the pay tore he could brush the dust clo'se. 1 had me a Job I i Vteenin' doah at the washroom I bein' as they let ev'rybody in what I ted to come in. hit wa n t so oner- j as you mought think, so T had I ty time to mix ‘round an’ pick up i >rle bit on the side. They was alius i owd of railroad men with real ley on their person, and mos’ any js fellies with influence could git , sheer/ But they’ve done gone and’! ff 'ID so they /ain’t nothin’ left | { go' but the lawyers. yours air's been meetin' this an' I ain't seen even Meetit^ ne waß when they uster he. sn ’il, OTI1 f u | o f g OO( j ref ] Ifcket (she wen "Not ’'■b ers an ' frien's. but this i I’age op 3 dry session. Hit’s the j jntly. i I even seen on the hij’ | I’here me the members is all got ' r' s ’ ,e ese here clubs they raise I'Y'.v about, an’ hit ain’t so Tshie. . , . , l| e ,.<fter supper as endurin the t luouldn't git me a . deadhead Isiree or four of them places e' '< ! Jim Price, of the county of as the pride Kelly of th* 1 j . It’s a read Panama, big jo shade a whole barbecue. 1» All in the crown as a silk top- Jl /Price told his admiring friends /at the new lid cost about two id a half at the legislature pct j ' they all agreed that it wa- Atoll Emmett Shaw, who iris j'»-.ed his editorial sanctum on f lade and Bludgeon to devote more ftion to law-making, is sore on Sin country editors. He was tell- Jhis troubles to a group of friends /he Kimball, and declared that the trage pt per couldn't print a death /ice witliou' burying the preacher II having th» undertaker deliver the a|orical tribute. He didn't go into u lie ..liars but it was inferred by those -eent that some south Georgia jour aUt had left out some essential fea treof one of Senator Shaw’s cards. “lyr always been told that molasses i January held the slow-moving ree l’d, knd I believed it until I rode once > tilt 'new eapitol elevator." said Imu/e member today. "T .said once, ' t? 's what I mean. I'll never try fi We appropriated money last I | ui a new electric elevator In | shaft, but if the old one ran. lower than this they must have |> sight it against a spot to see lei it was going‘up or down. It’s ’ the stairway after this." SURPRISE TO MANY IN ATLANTA tai fjeople are surprised at the 'K Results received from simple i hark, glycerine, etc., as Adler-l-ka, the German a.p remedy. Jacobs' Pharmacy at this simple remedy anti the digestive system and the impurities so thoroughly MINGLE DOSE removes sour gas on the stomach and con- INSTANTLY. It is the only rhivh never fails. UNE FOR POISON OAK •trine. Savannah, Ga G TeHsrine s °i < ? r ' ,S 1,1 ’" a,n P« ?' letterine. I have poison oak ‘it T lease burry it on to yours _* • „ w L. HAMLETT | V Ma” 21 ting r .al, <_ I ?■ Bids Girls to Learn to Keep House HOME MAKERS HAPPIEST /■ i « Bk\\ h Mb. wmßk\ B. nn'i\ Fm -a w (K. 'w Wt .. yS „ Mrs. John M. Slaion. Mrs. John M. Slaton Has Per sonal Charge of Beautifully Appointed Residence. "When all girls are trained again as they used to be in al) the arts that go to make a home, from the cook stove to the piano, there will be more happy marriages in America and la more progressive country." Mrs. John M. Slaton, wife of the man who is the leading candidate for the governorship of Georgia, who is her self proud to be known as one of the most accomplished housekeepers in Georgia, laid down this formula very seriously. "I should think it would be every Southern girl's ambition to be able to conduct a household penonally. to su perintend its every department from the arrangement and the preparation of the breakfast dishes to the drapery of the walls. She should check over ev ery expenditure and she should know what things in a household cost. Os course the women of America are not responsible for the higli cost of liv ing, but I am afraid that ome of them are responsible in great part for the height of the cost. " Home Beautifully Appointed. Mrs. Slaton stood in the receiving room of the Slaton country home on Peachtree road, a home that is ad mittedly one of tlie most beautifully appointed, not only In the South but in the country, and she admitted smil ingly that the appointments of that home were of hei own design from cel lar to garret and even out through the great lawns and groves and gardens that stretch in flowered acres on every side. "Let',' start at the pantry." said Mr» Slaton, and aftm h-’ had shown a row "f I'pl- oton, tm> m I'n’ipen 'd <•., disk jlu plate, put and pun '.hut ev®/ THE ATI.AXTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MO NT.) AY. .1 JL i went to make a feist, she pointed to "tlie closet." where a hundred differ ent Jams, jellies and other fruit jon fections bad been made with her own hands because, she said naively, her husband especially like tlmse kinds. "I'm a great believer in the outdoor living." said Mrs. Slaton. "That's why we've made this little breakfast porch with nothing between it ami the lawn but its floor and its roof and the screens." ' It was a very pretty breakfast porch with a broad swing hanging invitingly just back of the flower-crowned ta ble. "When we have no guests we use this breakfast porch at every meal in the warm months." explained Mrs. Sla ton. "Save for Mr. Slaton's study and my boudoir it is relly our favorite room in the whole house." Mrs. Slaton seemed really much fond er of the open breakfast porch than the splendldli appointed banquet hall just beyond, though the banquet room is large enough to seat a hundred at its tables and its silver plate and china represent tiensured gif’:- of legislative bodies to Governor Slaton a.- well as the splendid selections of Mrs, Slaton s mother ano herself "Mother Taught Me." "All I know about housework," con tinued Mrs. Slaton, "my mother tauglu me.” Mrs. W. B Grant, the mother, added that her daughter had really been a satisfactory pupil. “Let me show you some more out - doors home," said Mrs. Slaton. "I am sure that one really serious trouble with with so many of out houses lies in poor ventilation. So when we arrang ed this home we rcalfy subordinated many important things to fresh air Here al the very top is the sleeping porch. I think it Is the third largest room in the h«ue< Mr Slatm sleeps there all the yeru armtn'l except m initement weather" tin ll’* amr I1«,oi •ipotlis’ ,- rat jin, t mm r d' ignerl r,,i 'h< of s ut.te when th- luui uitiei liediooniv (7p and Down Peachtree Help! Who Got The Major's Hat? I Major Bedford F’. Goldthwaite. whose i ancestral acres lie in the wiregrass and piny woods of -outli Georgia, Is per turbed i”:t bis polished dome shall be sun binned by these July rays. I’or the major lost bis hat tbciay, and mere is no Other like it. Fie complained bit terly io a group of fiiends ns he sought the shade of a ple.ee where they have it riot tied and on draught. "I was coming out of that restaraw acrose the street." he explained, "when I lost my hat. Gentlemen. 1 had worn ■ that hrt since Little Joe Brown was I ole' ted the first time, and it was like in old friend to me. it was soft as I silk and black as a crow and wide j brimmed like an umbrella, and it had | absorbed the contour of every bump on my cranium. The man who had left just before me. sir. bad taken it." "Didn't he leave bis own in Its pla.ee. major'.'" asked a sympathizing friend. Major Goldthwaite gazed sadly upon a tiny object in his hand. He placed it on his head, and it looked like a • bantam try Ing to hatch an ostrich egg. “He loft this, sir." he returned. "And | aiy bat was a 7 7-K and there’s not one iiha t .size in town. I'll bet. But 1 have i one consolation, sir. The absented minded villain that wore it down the street on a head built for this vest pocket sized dice box will have to cut holes in it before be can see. Why. by gad. sir. I'll bet it comes down past his i chin, and he must have been extremely exhilarated, sir. extremely exhil'arated. not to know the difference. And that reminds me it's time to have another one all round. Mr. Bartender, take the orders." DEADLY “TOY” PISTOL GETS A VICTIM EARLY ST. LoUfIS. July 1. The deadly "toy" pistol is out early this year. With the Fourth of July a few days away and the police under strict orders regarding such weapons. Roy Kleinkc moer, aged thirteen, is at his home, TO4 Thomas street, suffering from a > wound in the calf of his right leg. Hi was shot by Willie Doyle, aged ten. ■•■.hen Willie pulled the trigger of a "toy " pls ol 100 close to Roy's legs. The wad from the cartridge struck the calf of the leg. ASKS DIVORCE BECAUSE WIFE CALLED-MA’WITCH ST Lnl’lS. July I. Mrs. Lena bit a neighbor's thumb and called her mother-in-law a "witch, her husband. John, alleged in a divorce petition he tiled at Claxton. Kreutzer is a gardener. He declared his wife has a quarrelspmo disposition; that she called him names and threat ened his life. Ihe\ have two voting da ughter*. arc insufficient to a<’cofiiiiiodat»' all the house partv. Tries bedrooms arc .so app'Hnted in draperies and furnishings that e\*( t y ait ale harmonizes perfectly thioughout the entire house Mis. Sla ton admitted that KO guests have fr» j quenil.v l»» cn entertained at the horn* over week-end-. I realL love th«»s< parties.” she said smlHnglv. "because it gives me a chance to do housekeep ing on a ready large scale/' Then she confessed she prepares h« husband’s breakfasts in hei kitchen with her own hands in spite of a ret inue of cooks and hei Japanese butler Sato "Salo's going to be a great-states_ man in .Japan,” she said, "and he i just as good x < hos while he i* pre paring here foi his calling/ RELIABLE DENTISTRY " ~~.“ »» ■ $s of Teeth . . $lO :J All Other Dentistry at DR. E; G. GRIF FIN'S X„. J4* , Ova** Brown *♦ Alien g O r u?i 3tor* Moyre. 5 in 7 f ttindev'< ® <*» i • adv Atter»df» w i "College for Girls Much for Boy" A REAL NOTE FROM CHINA I.ce Hand, former Atlanta I’hlnaman and court interpreter, who went back to <'anton recently in quest of a bride, has written n most unique letter to a friend in this city, enthusing over the conditions that prevail in the new re public. "I am sure t'hina is American of Asia some day." writes Lee in telling of the wonders the new rulers have worked in the ieju venation. "Over iO.OOfI in new colleges since last May. college for girls is much for boy," remarks Lee very blandly. Here's the letter. Hashu mura Togo never had any thing "on it:' Sanning. Canton, t'hina. I geust you think I had forget to write you. Not so. lam busy to’study over the new born China. \Y r hat I tell you about the rebels? They going to get what want it ami littlle more. China is now want tilings like American. I am surd" China is American of Asia some day. China had over ten thsands new college since last of May (year ago): college for grils is much for boy. Anxious to educate her pople. Canton Is over 3.000.UU0 population ten years ago. only 2 newspapers. Since rebels, Ifi daily papers. What I think is. the newspapers bring the American up. That newspapers is going to take China up in the air. The railway is getting PRIEST GLVES UP PULPIT TO INVESTIGATE LEPROSY ST. LOIHS. July I.—To undertake the study of medicine, and particularly to investigate leprosy in the Hawaiian Islands. Rev. nhniles Keller, pastor of the Catholic church at Centaur. St. Louis county, has tendered his resig nation and will go to Cambridge, Mass., to tale several special courses in medi cine in preparation for his work. Fa ther Keller has just completed a four tear couise at th” American Medical college. For soreness of the muscles, whether induced by violent exercise or injury, there is nothing better than Chamber lain’s Liniment. This liniment also re lieves rheumatic pains. For sale by all dealers. The highest point of woman s hap piness is reached only through moth erhood, in the clasping of her child within her arms. Yet the mother-to be is often fearful of nature's ordeal and shrinks from the suffering inci dent to its consummation. But for nature’s ills and discomforts nature provides remedies, and in Mother's Friend Is to be found medicine of great value to every expectant mother. It is an emulsion for external application, composed of ingredients which act with beneficial and sooth ing effect on those portions of the system involved. It is intended to prepare the system for the crisis, and thus relieve, in great part, the suffer ing through which the mother usually passes. The regular use of Mother’s Friend will repay any mother in the comfort it affords before, and the help ful restoration to health and strength it brings about after baby comes. Mother's Friend Is for sale at am ,-rgy, x drug stores ft | knnapV j Write for our ||lnl|lltl JJI U'Uv free book for gey# t ** expectant moth- ers which contains much valuable information, and many suggestions of a helpful nature. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, Ga. nice shape. Talk about railway. I bad travel a lot. Nothings can class with Amei lean. I am menber North Ave Presbyterian church. Atlanta, for years. Rev. Dr. R O. Flinn is my pator: am now at tend Presbyterian church at home. Since rebels the church is peck up. Pople want to be Christian more any religion. We bad Sunday in China now. The Christian geting strong; the college boys and grils many attend. Thsands pople attend church on Sun day. Befor rebels the pople do not know what Sunday was: that is true. China Is bron again. Take ns 20 years; China will have the power up against any country in the w-orld the way pople is work In the empire. I am expect you send me some bas ball Georgians. Missed the basba.il Georgian very much. When I were in Atlanta alway take the basball Geor gian. for I love of basball. 1 geust the Atlanta t rackers is going up. I am alway for Crackers. We some basball in jtome, hut nothing like we had in American. I get in game, too, with the college boys. Wish you can see me. I almost work like my friend Tycobb. Kind regular to my friend, especially mv friend in Atlanta. Your truly. ' LEE HAND. WANTS TO MARRY.2.OOO COUPLES BEFORE nE DIES ST. LOUIS, July I.—Justice of the Peace J. C. Brady, of East St. Louis, broke his single day’s marriage record when be tied the nuptial knot for five couples, incidentally, he brought, the total of ceremonies to his credit to 82S and got just a little bit closer to 2.000 the number he says he hopes to per form before he dies. SEABOARD ANNOUNCES LOW RATE TO WASHINGTON. $19.35 round trip, on sale July 4 and 5. Get full Information at Uity Ticket Office. 88 Peachtree street, phones 100. 464564665 TONIC AND BEV ERAGE VALUE OF HIRES Qualities of this Greatest American Drink that Have Made it so Popular. The reason you crave Hires in summer is that it contains tonic properties that build up your system. As a beverage Hires has been recognized as the first real American drink, but its toning properties are as pronounced as its thirst quenching properties. Here are the ingredients that make it valuable: Sarsaparilla, sasaafrag, pipaissewa and hopg—clear the blood and aid digestion. Vanilla and wintergreen—recog nized nerve tonic value. Triticum and juniper berries— for kidneys and bladder. » Ginger and birch bark—a gen tle astringent. Roots and barks, iierba and flow era—lor their stimulating and re freshing arotna. It i» because of these natural tonic properties that Hires has so long lieen recognized as the most health ful as well aa tiie most refreshing of drinks. There isn’t a trace of drugs in Hires. It is a natural refresher. When you want a real dnnk—not ordinary rootbeer—,iuat say Hires OPEN.LETTER TO PHYSICIANS You w-fll agree that the following T»r«- sents an Incurable case so far as DigitaMs, Nitro Glycerin. Basham's Mixture, etc., are concerned: Chronic Bright's Disease of the kidneys, patient In convulsions nearly every day for three weeks, twenty pounds of the patient's weight being dropsy. Patient—W. E. Strickland, address <5 Verona Place, San Francisco. Patient's physician. Dr. Kelley, toM him there was no hope. E. L Baldwin, President of the Ferry' Drug Store. No. 20 Market Street, was instrumental tn having Fulton’s R«nal Compound put to the test In this case. There was gradual improvement there after and final recovery. That It was complete may he known from the fact that this was about, seven years ago and he was well at last advices a. few months ago. The motive of Fulton’s Renal Compound <a mild infusion) Is to sfbp the degenera tion in renal tissues and gradually relax <* the obstructed kidney. Then the usual heart, eliminative and tonic treatment is helpful (there Is n# conflict) and the prognosis changes from despair to hope, t When not extreme many cases recover under the Renal Compound alone.) The substance of the formula surrounds each bottle. Frank I'xirnondson * Bro.. 14 S. Broad street and 106 N. Pryor street, will fill prescriptions and supidy pamphlets. John J. Fulton Co., San Francisco. Drives Sallowness from the Skin Ladiea, imperfect complexion h caused by a tluggiah lirw. A few days beatment with CARTER’S LITTLE UVER PILLS will do mots to clean up the «kin than ait the beauty < ream! in erostDs. Cureaconahpation. * unrlogu the b»er, eodiindigestion, bihomnenAod | B Liq t di 11 ine «a Purely vege-ir , tabic —never fail. Small ML Smelt Dace. SwmD Frio*. ] The GENUINE meat beet YOUR nearest soda fountain has Hires,ofcourse. Step around there now while you’re in the mood and Just say HIRES. i Hires is the genuine rootbeer. Flavors of forest and field—essence j of roots and herbs. The good things . that please the taste andbrace the whole system. But not a trace of drugs. 5c —sparkling, delicious. At your home, car bonated, in bottles. ‘Pure '/ Xa A'’ 1 i k J