Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 17, 1912, LATE SPORTS, Page 7, Image 7

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GATHDLIGSFLOCK INTO LOUISVILLE Over 20.000 Expected at Con vention of American Feder ation of Church Societies. LOUISVILLE, KY, Aug. 17.—Hotels and boarding houses here began to fill rapidly today with delegates and visi tors to the convention of the American Federation of Catholic Societies, which is scheduled to convene tomorrow. It was estimated that over 5,000 visi tors were in town this afternoon, and those in charge of the meeting pre dicted that the Catholic registration would surpass 20.000 before the con vention adjourned, August 21. Among the first to arrive were the 800 duly appointed delegates to the convention. The program as made public by the arrangements committee today included a solemn pontifical mass in the Cathe dral of the Assumption tomorrow. The Most Reverend John Bonzano, papal delegate to Washington, has been chosen to conduct these ceremonies, and the Right Reverend James A. McFaul, D.D., bishop of Trenton, N. J., to de liver the sermon. The other events of Sunday will in clude a grand parade in the afternoon and a mass meeting at the armory, where addresses will be delivered by the Right Reverend Dennis O’Dona ghue, bishop of Louisville; Governor McCready of Kentucky, and Mayor Head of this city. The Hon. Edward Feeny, of Brooklyn, has been chosen to make response on behalf of' the federa tion. Indian Killed On Track. • Near Rochelle, 111., an Indian went to sleep on a railroad track and was killed by the fast express. He paid for his carelessness with his life. Often it’s that way when people neglect coughs and colds. Don’t risk your life when prompt use of Dr. King's New Discov ery will cure them and so prevent a dangerous throat or lung trouble. “It completely cured me, in a short time, of a terrible cough that followed a se vere attack of Grip,” writes .1. R. Watts. Floydada. Tex., “and I regained 15 pounds in weight that I had lost.” Quick, safe, reliable and guaranteed. 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottle free at all druggists. »•» A vast amount of ill health is due to impaired digestion. When the stom ach fails to perform its functions pro) - erly, the. whole system becomes de rangee \ few doses of Chamberlain’s Tablets is all you need. They will strengthen your digestion, invigorate your live:. and regulate your bowels, entire', doing away with that miser able feeling due to faulty digestion. Try it. Many others have been per manently cured—why not you? For sale by all dealers. *“ Promptness, the Keynote of COSMOPOLITAN Efficiency YOU carry as much LIFE INSURANCE protection as J./ a man in your circumstances should? DEATH MAY COME AT ANY MOMENT—IN THE TWINK LING OF AN EYE! A COSMOPOLITAN POLICY does not insure against death—nothing can do that—but it does, by creating an estate in stanter, insure your loved ones against the penalty of DEATH— the aftermath of your passing. When men think of death they are apt to think of it only in connection with their spiritual welfare, and overlook entirely the de vastation in the household which inevitably comes as a result of their demise. Can there be anything more pitiable than the sight of a woman, delicately reared in a home of refinement, given on her wedding day to a man to whom she is to be the chief joy until the moment of his death, being thrust out, armed with nothing more formidable than a cambric needle, with helpless children by her side, to strug gle for bread in a world where brawny muscle and a rugged soul are necessary? It is the mission of LIFE INSURANCE to appeal to the highest instincts of manhood—to awaken it to what it really is, the marvel of self abasement. “WIFE AND CHILDREN FIRST” should be the creed and gospel of mankind, never more efficaciously expressed than when a man puts the shield of a COSMOPOLI TAN LIFE POLICY between those whom he loves better than himself and malignant, grinding poverty. COSMOPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY HOME OFFICE, ATLANTA, GEORGIA WRITES “THE BANKNOTE POLICY” Want a Monkey Named After You? CHANCE TO BE FAMOUS Everybody ean have a namesake— that Is, if they have $7 and are willing for a monkey to bear the entitlement that was given by mamma and papa when you couldn’t say anything but “goo" and couldn’t voice your protest. V. H. Kreigshaber is father of the idea. He believes that the encaged Simians in Grant park'are the cause of more juvenile joy than anything in Atlanta, and he is for fun for the kids. He would therefore increase the num ber of the banderlog held for public gaze and amazement in the Gress zoo. MOONSHINER WHO DESTROYED BOND IS HERE FOR PEN TERM In order to save his surety from having to pay the amount of a bond which had given him his freedom, J. D. Dollard, a moonshiner of Troy, Ala,, burned the bail and then attempted to disappear He was convicted of con spiracy against the government, and today began a term of two years in the Atlanta Federal penitentiary. Dollard was indicted for illicit dis tilling. A frfend came to his rescue and made bond. The moonshiner didn't want to face trial. He didn’t want to sacrifice the friend who had made him free, though. His signature to the bond was all that made escape impossible. So he burned the bond. He entered the office of the United States commis sioner at Troy, took the paper and ap plied the match. Its disappearance was traced to him, and the indictment, trial, and sentence followed. Dollard was brought to Atlanta last night. GULF STEAMSHIP LINE PLANNED BY COLUMBUS COLUMBUS, GA., Aug. 17.—A move ment has been launched by the Co lumbus Board of Trade providing for the owning and operating of a steam ship line on the Gulf of Mexico when the Panama and St. Andrews bay ca nals are opened t< traffic. There are five boats on the Chatta hoochee river, and it is the contention of the trade organization that if a steamship line is established on the gulf it will enable Columbus to get cheaper transportation facilities, because her own steamers could bring goods to the St. Andrews bay ports and the freight on Id be loaded on river steamers at that point and brought to the city at a v> ry low rate. SAUER’S PURE FLAVORING EX TRACTS have no equal. Sold every where 10c and 25c the bottle, at your grocer’s. Governor Brown should turn Gray out of the railroad commission because he only attends half of the meetings. »** J ME ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. It is his plan to have public-spirited citizens give the park management $7 and the park management promises to devote that amount to the purchase of monkeys. The management promises to name the Simian after the buyer. The movement has grown already. Money for monks has already been fur nished by Mr. Kreigshaber. J. W. Le roux, Carl Witt, Dan Carey, J. H. Ew ing, B. M. Grant, Porter Langston. W. B. Hdtnby, Isaac Schoen. B. Miflin Hood, W. Woods White and Ed Al friend. When the monkeys arrive they will be properly handed the names of their purchasers. 'JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES PREDICTED SUCCESS I OF VIOLINIST DITTLER A prophecy made by John Temple Graves in The Atlanta Georgian of April 25. 1906, has been richly verified by Herbert Dittler, violinist. In his editorial Colonel Graves said, after hearing Dittler play: “In the musical circles of this city there has been found a boy with the stamp of genius on his brow and the touch of genius on his fingers. Herbert 'Dittler seems to be at the present mo ment Atlanta’s best and newest hope of an artist of international fame.” The last five years young Dittler has continued his studies with European masters. Dr. Percy J. Starnes, city oiganist, and probably the most expe rienced musician in thill part of the country, has heard Dlttlefl play. Dr. Starnes had but one comment to make: “He is second only to Kubelik, and he has his life before him." Dittler will play at the free Sunday organ concert tomorrow afternoon. The general public is Invited to attend. The concert begins promptly at 4 o’clock. HEIRS PAY BANK’S DEBT AFTER LAPSE OF 20 YEARS CLEVELAND. OHIO, Aug. 17. Through the voluntary offer of the heirs of Aaron Wilcox and Zehas S. Wilson, who conducted the Lake Coun ty bank at Painesville, Ohio, when it failed twenty years ago, creditors of the bank will be paid $83,000. The bank’s affairs were wound up m 1-893. The actual remaining indebtedness was $38,000. The heirs announced that they had decided “the square thing to do would be to pay the $38,000, with three per cent interest." PENNY EACH FOR NAMES TO SUFFRAGE PETITION CHICAGO, Aug. 17.—Mrs. Catherine Waugh McCullough, an Evanston suf fragist, is advertising for names to a petition, offering a penny a name. parade on lm NriSIMNOONED Unions Vote to Discontinue March This Year and Cele brate at Grant Park. The big union parade, always th, great feature of Labor day. has been cast into the discard in Atlanta Al a recent meeting the Atlanta I’ederation of Trades canvassed the vot. taken among the unions, and it was found that a slight majority wWre in ivor of celebrating Labor day, September 2. without a parade. This feature will be eliminated for the first time in sixteen years. The cel ebration will be at Grant park, in the nature of an all-day jollification, with speaking and games and lunch. The Journal of Labor devotes its leading editorial in this week’s issue, out today, to a discussion of the pass ing* of the parade feature, under the caption "This Different Celebration.” It follows: Interest in Outcome. “The Atlanta labor unionists are mak ing a radical departure this year from a custom of sixteen years in abolishing the spectacular feature of the parade. Its outcome will be watched with in terest. "Hundreds of unionists the country over still believe in the parade, while other hundreds just as conscientiously oppose it.’ "The president of the American Fed eration of Labor unhesitatingly—as is his wont —deplores the passing of the feature, while others, probably not quite so prominent hut equally entitled to their honest opinion* just as earnestly’ view with satisfaction its discontinu ance. "A great majority of those opposed to the parade are among the trades which attend their daily tasks within doors. To these the physical discomfort of two or three hours in the hot sun Is a fear ful experience, and an acute —though in most cases temporary—illness develops. The question with these, of course, is putting loyalty to the cause above phys ical discomfort. “The outcome of the relegation of the parade in Atlanta for 1912 will be watched with interest by the unionists, and if it is found a mistake it will be corrected.” BASEBALL IN PEN IS PLAN OF A WOMAN REFORMER ALBANY. N. Y. Aug. 17.—Mrs. Maude Booth, of New York, a prison reformer, is organizing a baseball team at the Comstock penitentiary. I . Flo^9# y Bran ch. Ga., At£Ußi 9, 1512. I I General Clifford 1.. Anderson, President, ' I ■ CpSUOPObIWI LIFE WfejRAHCE COUPAIT, t I Third Rational Bank, Atlanta, Georgia. ‘ \ I I : L'aughon, your Agent at this place, has',. I I just handed me I - . full settlement of .all claims of: the Estate of my brother . JQH7 ’•' I I :7A-.:;:Lin c:i:iH, deceased, insured under. Polio-/ Ho. 1C32. ■ I I ''r .-.recdr<nized the wisdom'of life insurance, I b/hllK .Haughoh.,- and.made application to : your Company I I bn April 13th>'of thiVyear. The policy was issuedT and placed' : in I I forcs-,by the! ■•execution of. a note, for §30.48 tc cover.' the full first I I premium< /the'.insurance thus being in force but 114'days when he I I understand notice of his death reached your, Home I Office only this morning, and it is indeed : gratifying, to know I h-home institution, took immediate I I >tepe to nfiOfeftlement of the claim, disregarding the mail ■ sledding', a'Home. Office representative to Flowery Branch: I EMt'once .t'OClose the matter. The full settlement wae* placed in I I HOURS after' notice was given. I ■ •• While?the loss-of my.dear brother can never be I fcr cr eraaed frOTI ** beart bv a monetary consider- I I1- aim. /glad he had forbthcufeht. to. ..create an estate through:-. 1 ■ the liberal’' I cannot CbmmSnd its ■:■■ • ■ Ifehighly to »y friends and neighbors. '. A L I I W yours, _ 0 j/ I . Estate.,of I SATURDAY, AUGUST 17. 1912. Up and Down Peachtree Pat's Adventures On His First Pullman. W Patterson, the urbane and ef fervescent second mate at the Forsyth theater, to; k :i trip to Chattanooga re cently. The fact that he took a trip to Chattanooga is not significant—but the fact that he rode in a Pullman ear for the first time in his hectic career is both interesting and epochal. "Pat"—as he will be hereinafter called, for the sake of expedience—had consistently abjured Pullman% In the first place, it wasn't democratic that green-cushioned differences in estate should be made manifest on a railway train. In Hie second place, what was seclusion in time of peace might eas ily ,become restriction of liberty in time of wreck. In the third place, he wasn’t exactly certain of what the mode of procedure was when a person entered a Pullman and rather than expose himself to any “up stage" etiquette he stayed care fully outside. Didn't Like Looks of It. But in spite of all this, he rode in one on the above mentioned trip to Chattanooga. Jake Wells was along, and it was nothing but the cushions for him, so “Pat” had to go too. Things fared moderately well with "Pat" until There were quite a number of devices sticking about that worried him a little, but he smeared his uneasiness with a bravado which would have done credit to old Tuan Pullman himself. Finally the porter approached “Pat" and asked if he was ready to have his berth made down. Pat glared at him for a moment — rose and peered curiously into a berth that was already made, but unoccupied. He took note of tile low ceiling formed by the upper berth; lie plucked cu riously at the pillow shams and rattled the wire screen window. Then his eye caught the hammock. “Huh," he said. “The first time that train rounded a curve I’d hang myself in that tiling sure." Stayed Up Until Daylight. “I think I'll stay up for a while,” he told the porter. “I might miss some thing.” And he stayed up till daylight came. When Mr. Wells was preparing Ok TOBACCO HABITsTun V zJv’-7 1 “ genuine, guaranteed remedy for tobacco or snuff habit, in 73 houra. It ia mild, pleasant. I atrengtivuing. Overcomes that peculiar nervousness and craving for cigarettes, cigars, pips, chewing tobacco or snuff. One man in 10 can uae tobacco withost apparent inlary; to tna other 9is nolwonoua and ser 'V, loualy Injure* the health in several wave, causing such disorders aa uervoaa dyapepaia, sleeplessness, gaa, y l . -,. s belching gnuwing, er other uncomfortable mat ion in atumach. constipation, headache, oTD eyes, lorn* of v Igor, red spots on akin, throat irritation, asthma, bronchitis, OT O r* mJ&A iBsC heart failure, luag trouble, entarrh, melancholy, neurasthenia, im potency, ioaaof mem RUINING »ry and will powtr, impure .poisoned; blood, rheumatiam, lumbago, sciatica, neutritis, heartburn, torpid liver, loss of appetite, bad teeth. fowl hrvath, ennervatiou, lassitude, lack of anahltton, weakening and falling out YOUR if bidr and many other disorders. It is unsafe and torturing to attempt to <*ure vouraelf or tobacco or snuff habit I IpF by sudden stopping—don tdo i» The correct method ia to eliminate the nicotine poison from the ayatem & CCO DCT B,ren t theQ the weakened, irritated membrauea and nerves and genuinely overcome the craving. You can quit to VL.V RC I bacco and enjoy yourself a thousand limes better while feeling alwavw in robust health My FREE book telle al C.* ST the wonderfill * days Method. Inexpensive, reliable. Also Secret Method for conquering habit it • Fa lEt* *»• another wit h out his knowledge. Full particulars including mv book <>u Tobacco and **nuff Habit mailed in plain wrapper free. Don't delay. Keep thia, show to others This adv mar not appear again Mention if you amok* ldr ‘ EDWARD J. WOODS, 534 Sixth Av., 748 K NewYork.N.Y. FLYER. AT SIXTY-MILE SPEED.IN DITCH;NONE KILLED, BUT SIX HURT LIMA, OHIO, Aug. 17.—Five Pull mans of the Pennsylvania railroad eighteen-lmur train between New York and Chicago were ditched near Middle Point, Ohio, twenty miles from here, today. Half a dozen persons were in jured and all on the train were shaken up and bruised. Fifty-nine passengers were aboard the flyer. All of th-m were more or less bruised and shaken up. but none was killed. One man was probably fa tally injured. The train was running at 60 miles an hour when the accident occurred The wreck was caused from spread ing rails. GIRLS TO BE MESSENGERS FOR TELEGRAPH COMPANY PITTSBURG, PA.. Aug. 17.—The Western Union Telegraph Company soon will put girls In as messengers in Pittsburg offices. The company is using girls as messengers in Connellsville. Greensburg and some of the smaller cities. In Pittsburg the girls will be put first in the branch offices. Girls are more conscientious and less liable to Interruption on delivery trips, Superintendent Diehl says. to leave the train the next morning, the porter approached him. made a few ineffectual dabs at his coat, and then looked unconcerned at the ceiling. Mr. Wells handed the negro a half-dollar. "What's that for?" asked "Pat” in amazement. “Didn’t you pay your fare before you left Atlanta?” “Oh, that’s for brushing off my clothes," answered Mr. Wells. "Pat” gasped. Then, turning to the negro and shaking his forefinger, he said, "You keep out of here. The next time there’s any brushing off to be done, I’m the guy that’s goin' to do it.” Back in the Day Coach. And so saying, he wrathfully left the train, bitterly pondering all the while Pullmanic tyrannies and the general inequalities of life. The next day a railway official asked “Pat” if he should reserve a Pullman berth for the return trip. “Not if I know myself!” said “Pat.” “The day coach for mine. I’ve got tu get some sleep on the way back.” MRS. ARMOR AT FITZGERALD. FITZGERALD, GA., Aug. 17.—Mrs. Mary Armor, national organizer for the W. C. T. U.. spoke here last night at the Central Methodist church to a large audience. She was introduced by I Rev. Guyton Fisher, pastor of the Cen tral Methodist church. O m FULL OFDANDRUFF Hair Came Out by Handfuls, Head Itched So Nearly Scratched Skin Off. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cure;. Hair Now Thick. 1802 Reynolds A 34th St., Savannah. Ga. —"My head began to get sore and all ’ around the edges got white with the disease until I was quite scared. I thought all my hair would drop out. It came out by handfuls, and my head itched so I nearly scratched the skin off. It was full of dan druff which showed plainly in my hair. “I also had trouble with my hand. It peeled every time I put it in *ater. and it was so badly disfigured that everybody noticed it and asked me what it was. It was red. and burned awfully. My mother tried several things but they were unsuc cessful. and it seemed as if nothing did it any good until I started to use Cutfcnra Soap and Ointment. I washed my hair with the Cuticura Soap and applied the Cuticura Ointment, afterward. It bad lasted about, four weeks, but then it started getting well and my hair stopped fafiing completely. Now it is cured. My hair Is now nice and thick and is growing to a nice length. Lots of people tell me how thick my hair is getting. I also used the Cuticura Soap and Ointment for my hand and completely cured it." (Signed) Miss Hattie M. Jones. Nov. 8. 1911. A single hot bath with Cuticura Soap and a gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointment are often sufficient to afford immediate relief in the most distressing eases of skin and scalp diseases when aJI else fails. Sold throughout the world. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Rook Ad dress post-card "Cuticura. Dept.T. Ronton.” WTender-faced men should use Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick, 25c. Sample free. If you intend to move, September 1 call at our ■ Main or Ivy office at once and sign contract for tele phone service. Be sure andj give at least two weeks’ no tice in advance and state present location and address to which you are moving. With advance notice we will move your telephone to new location on date desired or as soon thereafter as is pos jsible. Southern Bell Tele phone and Telegraph Co. 7