Newspaper Page Text
GRACE KNOWS HIS
FATE; CHEERFUL
When Told Operation Failed
the Wounded Man Only Said
“That’s Tough.”
Though Eugene H Grace knows the
operation on which he based his hopes
to regain the power to walk has failed;
though he has been told that It is likely
that death probably will relieve him of
his crippled existence in a few months,
he maintains the stoical cheerfulness
that has marked his demeanor prac
tically all the time since he was shot
last March.
When told at the Georgian hospital
that the work of the surgeons had been
unavailing, he remarked: "It’s tough,”
but uttered no other protest against
his fate. Since then, by his cheerful
ness. he has endeavored to soothe the
grief of his mother, who has beeti al
most constantly at the hospital.
"We have never had a more cheerful
patient,” said the superintendent of the
hospital. "His willingness to accept his
fate has been a marvel to all of us. He
failed absolutely-to show emotion when
told of the operation's failure, and right
now his spirits are high, if you could
say that about a man in his condition.’’
Grace's physical condition is declared
splendid.
BOTH PHYSICIANS
MADE SAME MISTAKE
Place- Hospital in Pueblo. Colo.
Case—Chronic Bright's Disease of fif
teen years development.
Prognosis-—Recovery impossible and pa
tient (a Mr. Gaden) was so advised and
that he could remain or go home.
On arrival at (.'enter, Colo., could not
sit up alone in bed. A local physician
was called. He. too. said he could not
recover and prescribed for his heart.
it did not look like the patient could
live a week when a new agent was added
to the treatment.
In ten days patient was sitting up; in
twenty could walk outdoors. He made a
19o"lb steady recovery. He now weighs
These facts were given us by his wife.
Mrs. .Mary Gaden, of Center, Colo., who
will confirm them.
Both physicians were mistaken as to
the possibilities, and the same mistake is
occurring everywhere—even In the hos
pitals of this city. And these mistakes
are costing human lives.
The new agent employed as above was
l ulton's Renal Compound. It does not
conflict with the physicians’ prescriptions
But it does change the prognosis from
despair to hope. ,
Over nine out of ten of the dead from
kidney trouble show Bright's Disease
This is a census fact that kidnev-troubled
people ought to know.
Prank Edmondson & Bro.. 14 South
Broad st. and 10fi North Pryor st., are
local agents. For literature write John
J. Fulton Co.. K 45 Batterv St., San Fran
cisco.
HON, R. B. BLACKBURN, CANDIDATE FOR THE LEGISLATURE FROM FULTON COUNTY,
STRONGLY INDORSED BY ALL CLASSES OF CITIZENS
We beg to recommend Mr. R. B. Blackburn as a candidate for the L.egislature in Wednesday’s Primary.
We are well satisfied that Mr. Blackburn’s experience and his known capacity are such as to guarantee that he will faith
fully represent all of the varied interests of Fulton County. This County’s interests are so great we deem it exceedingly im
portant that it should be represented by able men as well as by conservative men who will not go off after hasty and ill-advised
legislation. This County’s representation is numerically very much smaller in proportion than its population, hence the greater
reason for selecting good men.
Asa G. Candler,
Alex C. King,
W. L. Peel,
S. B. Turman,
Courtland S. Winn,
J. L Mayson,
Thomas F. Goodwyn,
Jos. E Warren,
J. J. Haverty,
C. E. Currier,
B. M. Grant,
A P. Adams,
R. R. Arnold,
E R. Thomas.
L. Z Rosser, Jr.,
Lowry Arnold,
Thos. Egleston,
Harvey Hill,
W. D. Ellis, Jr.,
A. McD. Wilson,
Sanders McDaniel,
George R. Law,
Robt. C. Clark,
Edwin P. Ansley,
Harvey Johnson,
H M. Patterson,
C. T. Ladson,
Chas. I. Ryan,
J. K. Ottley,
Morris Brandon,
T A. Conger,
J. M. George,
1. N. Blair,
Jno. W. Alexander,
Edgar H. Orr.
Marcus Loeb,
I. J. Lowenstine.
Walter Visanski,
R. R. Otis.
R. F. Ingraham,
W E. Dunn,
Carlos Mason,
J. E. Belcher,
Jas E Warren,
Ben Newman,
J. 0 Cochran,
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
One of the shrewdest political ob
servers in northwest Georgia, a man
who has served several terms as a rep
resentative of one of the Utrger counties
of that section, but who, because he is
personally for Wilson and does not
wish to be misunderstood, refuses to
permit his name used, gave it as his
opinion today that Theodore Roosevelt
surely wilt carry the Seventh congres
sional district over both Taft and Wil
son in the November presidential elec
tion.
Discussing the matter today, he said:
“I have recently had occasion to
travel over a largt- part of the Sev
enth district, considerably more than
half of It, and I was astonished to find
the sentiment running so powerfully In
the direction of the former president.
"Farmer after farmer, in Reply to di
rect inquiry, stated that he expected to
vote for Colonel Roosevelt. Numbers
of them said they would vote for Wil
son. Very few expressed an intention
to vote for Taft. "
“Attention constantly is called to the
fact in the Seventh district that it
went for Taft as against Bryan in the
last election, but the votes that went
for Taft then went for him entirely on
Roosevelt's account.
"Mr. Roosevelt’s mother lived in the
Seventh district when she was a young
woman and was married there. That,
while pleasantly recalled in some in
stances, is not, I think, the real rtason
why the Seventh district seemingly in
clines to the former president now. The
people of that vicinity seem impressed
with the idea that of all the candidates
Roosevelt is the most human and
stands most aggressively for human
rights. Neither Wilson nor Taft ap
pears to have the punch’ with the peo
ple of the Seventh that Roosevelt has.
"I do not say these things because 1
am glad that they are so, for I am not.
I am against Colonel Roosevelt and
would not vote for him in any circum
stances. I regard him as a dangerous
man in the place to which he aspires
And I am going to vote for Wilson.
“I merely say what I do because, from
close and personal observation. I be-
Ilevg it is the solemn truth. If Roose
velt comes to Georgia and makes two
or three speeches, and the remainder
of the state is in the receptive mood
the Seventh unquestionably is, the for
mer president will carry the state —
mark the prediction!”
Not a few citizens will take this
man’s statement with generous grains
of salt, and think that, at least, he is
mistaken. z •
The only two guaranteed facts are
that the district unquestionably did go
for Taft as against Bryan last time,
and that the person quoted is an ob
server of great shrewdness and much
common sense and political experience.
F. M. Farley,
Alvin Wellhouse,
B. M. Grant,
Chas. I. Ryan,
Lucien York,
R. E. O 'Donnelly,
Henry Hirsch,
C. H. Essig, •
Mark Hightower,
E. A. Hartsock,
W. L. Peel,
J. D Kilpatrick,
Chas. S. Parker,
Clyde L. King,
E. D. Thomas,
J. F. Alexander,
Jas. L. Wells,
Whitaker Paper Co.,
H L. Smith,
J. F. McMillan,
Morris Brandon,
Chas J. Moore,
Hughes Spalding,
Alex W. Smith,
T. A Hammond,
Fair Dodd,
J. H. Porter,
Marsh Adair,
Frampton E. Ellis,
E V. T. Williams,
Ben J. Conyers,
Stiles Hopkins,
James J. Ragan,
L. P. Sturgeon,
J. V. Blackwell,
B. F. Bernard, Jr.,
Wilson Bros.,
J. F. Slicer,
Mahoney & Manry,
W. T. Manry, Jr.,
Philip S. Holt,
Frank Malone.
H L. Haralson, Jr.,
E. C Lycett,
C. A. Beauchamp, Jr.,
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
There may be some differences of
opinion as to whether the president of
the senate or the, messenger thereof
should appoint the senate pages—and
there are some more or less violent dif
ferences —but there is very little dif
ference of opinion as to whether the
provision for the appointment of pages
should be attached to a general appro
priation bill. e The almost unanimous
opinion is that it should not.
It is not germane to fi general ap
propriation bill—nor to a special ap
propriation bill, either, for that matter
—and It should not be saddled upon the
same, where the entire bill may be
endangered by it. If it be necessary to
enact each year how pages shall be ap
pointed. the bill or resolution provid
ing for the appointment ought, in de
cency and common sense, to stand by
itself. That frees the proposition from
other questions, and permits a settle
ment on the merits of the case.
The house was "squabbling" with the
senate in its dying hours over the ap-,
polntment of pages, when it should
have been giving its attention to much
more serious matters —notably the gen
eral banking bill, which went to its
death through sheer inattention.
True, the houke was contending for
a principle that was sound and right
eous, but the principle ought not , to
have been made possible of discus
sion in the way it was.
The fault was in attaching the page
amendment to the appropriation bill
under consideration.
It has been suggested, and the sug
gestion has met with much favor, that
hereafter pages and other employees
should be appointed by a committee on
legislative attaches—one for each
house. But, regardless of whether that
Is done, there should be no repetition
of the page "squabble” in the future.
CENTRAL TRAINMEN VOTE
IN FAVOR OF BIG STRIKE
MACON, GA., Aug. 19.—The conduc
tors, trainmen and yardmen of the Cen
tral of Georgia railroad and its connect
ing lines have voted almost unanimously
to call a strike unless they are granted
the 30 per cent increase in wages which
they recently demanded. It is believed
by railroad men here that railroad men
throughout the South will vote the same
way. The ballots are now being col
lected and will be counted in Washing
ton, D. C., next Sunday. More than 5,000
employees will be affected.
Are Ever At War.
There are two things everlastingly at
war, joy and piles But Bucklen’s Ar
nica Salve will banish piles in any form.
It soon subdues the itching, irritation,
inflammation or .welling. It gives com
fort, invites joy. Greatest healer of
burns, boils, ulcers, cuts, bruises, ecze
ma, scalds, pimples, skin eruptions.
Only 25 cts at all druggists. •••
C E. Baker,
A. E. Harless,
Geo. E. Morgan,
C. W. Flishman,
M. L. Thrower,
W. W. Cunningham,
A. S. Adams.
Henry H. Schaul,
P. Mion,
T. J. Eady,
P. H. Jarrell,
H. P. Vademy,
B. F. Boak,
C. J.
W. E. Grogan,
Louis Cohen,
W. C. Craig.
J. G. McCollig,
J. A. Carroll,
H. N. Weatherly,
W H. Peek,
Jno. F Seawell,
Oscar Elsas,
H. E. Laskey,
M. Anderson,
A. L. Beauchamp,
S. C. Forrester,
J. T. Parker,
W. T. Henry,
Chas. D. Honiker,
August Denk,
W. A. Whitley,
B Rosenfeld.
C. E. Jarvis, Jr.,
A. Mion,
Sig Selig,
Chas. J. Moore,
E. E. Lowe.
Jack Malcom.
Dr. Horace Grant,
R. Schmidt.
Thos. L Bishop,
Chas. W Davis,
R. Mion,
Chas. Adler,
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. AUGUST 19. 1912.
C. Mion, J L. Anderson,
L B Grime, W. M. Gordon,
I. Fooinshn, George R. Law,
C. Lagomarsino, Thos. C. Law,
R. B. Brightwell, A. L. Day,
L. Picard, W. H Johnson,
J. Chomsky, H Mitchell,
H. F. Askam, M. Robinson,
J. M. Dobbins, Mr. Cefalu,
W. M. Lewis, T. C. Connally,
Russell Johnson, T C. Hughey,
H. L. Harrison, W. C Lawrence,
W. Floyd Johnson, E. P. Mcßurney,
W R. King, L. J. Kohler,
Joseph Lazear, Munday & Cornwall,
A. E. Marcus, Attorneys at Law,
W. N. Moses, Flynn Hargett,
D. C. Lyle, ' Jack Snelling,
S. M. Barnett, AlexKopling,
Wm. Fine, J. E. Newman,
A. B. Levy, Jacob Fox, Jr.,
C. W. Holley, 0. L. Timothy,
J. V. Bachmin, C W. McCrary,
F. G. Liedman, H. J. Travis,
Emil Dittler, R. L. Spain,
Albert Greenberg, A. Fugazzi,
I. Lipstine, J. J. Payne,
C. E. Dodson, Fred Bush.
Mose Straus, W. V. McMillan,
H. P. Steinaur, H. Kaplan,
J. S. Davidson, • Alex Kreisler.
R H Barns. Frank Edmondson,
W D. Jones, J. H. Travis,
Rhodes-Wood Furn. Co.,J. T. Moore,
Walter J. Wood, B. Elreath,
John D. Clarke, W H. Moon,
. H. A Kennedy, T E. Joes,
W. Z. Turner, Robt. M Dimond,
R L. Henley, Jakn E. Wilenski,
H. N. Neer, W J. Riordan,
J. I. Hosford, J. A. Beall,
J E Stewart, R. C. Stanard,
J. B. Woods, F. B. Gardner,
C. G Johnson, Benjamin Elsas,
G. E Matthews, J E. Chambers,
MODEL BAKERY
IS COMPLETED
A capacity of 35.000 loaves of bread a
day is now the . possibhy .output of the
Joseph Rogers' Baking Company. 57
Highland avenue, since the installation
■of the new and modern machinery.
Joseph Rogers entered the bakery
business several years ago in a small
way, and by study, personal supervi
sion and application to business, has
builded a business second to none in
the Southern states.
New and modern machinery has just
been installed, and it is interesting to
follow the process used. First, the flour
and ingredients are placed in the mixer,
with the latest improved double-arm
process. To show how thoroughly this
mixer does its work, half a barrel of
flour was poured in and a tablespoonful
of lampblack dumped on top of it Aft
er the usual process had been finished,
not a trace of the black could be found,
only a slight darkening of the flour be
ing visible.
From the mixer the dough is trans
ferred to a tempering box. this box be
ing the invention of Mr. Rogers, where
it remains for a certain time for fer
mentation. This fermentation is the
life of the bread, where proper care is
taken, the dough being removed before
it becomes too sour, if allowed to re
main too long, the food value of the
SAFER THAN CALOMEL
Dodson's Liver Tone at Night Will
Straighten You Out by Morning.
Calomel May Knock You Out
of a Day’s Work.
If you are a calomel user, next time
you are tempted to buy it ask your
druggist if he can absolutely guararifee
the drug not to harm you He won't
do ft because he CAN'T do it.
But here is a perfect substitute for
calomel which the druggist does guar
antee —the famous Dodsons Liver
Tone. Any Atlanta druggist will re
fund your money without question if
you are not thoroughly satisfied.
Go to any Atlanta druggist whom you
a'e acquainted with—and find out
about the great number of people who
are taking this remarkable remedy and
feeling better, keener, healthier and
better able to enjoy life than they ever
were when taking calomel.
Why? Because calomel is a poison
one that may stay in the system, and
while seeming to benefit you tempo
rarily, may do harm in the end. If you
haven’t felt these ill effects so far, it is
because you are fortunate enough to
have a strong constitution.
Don’t take the risk any longer. Get
a -bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone (50c)
and note how easily and naturally it
clears away that sick headache Xnd
coated tongue, how it sets you right
without ache or gripe. The most won
derful thing in the world for constipa
tion.
All this without the slightest inter
ference with your regular habits.
wheat is lost. Sour bread is a menace
to digestion, and when there is a trace
of sourness found Mr. Rogers does not
bake it up for the trade, but sells it as
hosr food. After the above process, the
dough is automatically sent to the low.
er floor through a popular chute and
run into the divider, which automat
ically cuts and scales 2,700 loaves per
hour. The dough then goes to the
rounding machine, which cuts it into
round balls, and it is then run into
the proofer to proof or rise for about
fifteen minutes, then Into the molding
machine into the oven, the whole proc
ess being by machinery, insuring per
fect cleanliness.
The oven used by Rogers is white en
ameled, no fire, smoke or soot getting
into the oven. This is the only oven
of this kind in Atlanta, and there are
not more than two or three in the en
tire South.
"Were all medicines as meritorious
as Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy, the world would be
much better off and the percentage of
suffering greatly decreased," writes
Lindsay Scott, of Temple, Ind. For
sale by all dealers. •••
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 1180.
I You cannot sell H
a bill of goods or I®
add a column of ||
figures or write a p
business letter if
you are wondering I
where the money I
is coming from to I
meet a note fall- ||
ing due tomorrow. I
A savings ac- K
count pre ven t s I
g those worries and p
I gives you a free fc
H and unhampered p
I mind to devote to I
I business.
Start no w t o I
save and you are B
I on the high road
H to success. 3
I Every Dollar Deposited I
Earns More Dollars
Il V Pay 4 per cent
on Savings
| City Savings Bank I
|| 15 E. Alabama St. I
B. F. Barnes, Jr.,
W. T. Walker,
E A. Cronheim,
J. W. Kelly,
A J. Gibbs,
J. Lienhard,
Chas. D. Boling,
H. M. Garner,
B. Stahl,
L. J Elsas,
T. S. Florence,
G. N. Meinert,
T. L. Bond,
H. M. Spitz,
Jake H. Hirsch,
M. A. Liedman,
Chas. Franklin,
J. E. Daniel,
J. E. DeLorme,
F R. Andrus,
J. P. Hills,
J. K. Owen,
C W. Owen,
Frank James,
L. W. Harbuck,
H C McCord,
R H. Shaw,
George R. Law,
T. V. Dennison,
Maurice Haas,
John E. Freeman,
H. S Smith,
A. Crawford,
W. Morrison,
0 Donehoo,
C. C. Singleton,
I S. Hirsch,
C. R. Robetson,
A D. Enzor,
F 0 Sappington,
J. H McGee,
R. Hilsman,
B Rosenfeld,
B P Butler,
D Shalloway,
Tom Hatton,
Dan Pappa,
,H. Bliem,
Ph. Schwartz,
Chas. Hirsch,
B. B. Owen,
Frederick Thimas,
R. L. Norton,
W. £. Walker,
J. 0 Ellis,
Silas M. Truitt,
M. A. DuPree, Jr.,
T. M. Backus,
H J. Dowdy,
D. Shumate,
R. D Wescott,
J. Gaunt,
J. C. Rather,
E. T. Murphy,
E C. Lambert,
G. W. Humphries,
A. Gerard,
A. L. Curtis,
H. G. Andrews,
P 0. Hagerty,
E M. Cason,
C. G. Turner,
John Fisher,
P. W. Smith,
M. Brady,
Thos. C. Spalding,
George Foster,
Jacob Vogt.
E. T. Harvel,
W. W. Thurman,
T. H. English,
Burton Bishop,
G A Smith,
J. S. Hall,
J C. Marks,
Ph. Dietz.
John Peacock.
A A Teitlebaum,
R H. Caldwell, Jr.,
L. H. Fair,
More sold than al) other brands com
bined. SAFER’S PITRE FLAVORING
EXTRACTS. Because they flavor
BEST. Ask the housekeeper.
During Walter McEl
reath’s four years of serv
ice the institutions of Ful
ton county did not suffer.
The increasing feebleness of
the old soldiers at the Sol
diers’ Home demands better
maintenance. In 1911 the
committee of which Mr. Mc-
Elreath was chairman rec
ommended and the general
assembly granted an in
crease of $2,500 in the main
tenance, and an appropria
tion of $5,000 for building
the hospital. At the pres
ent session his committee se
cured a further increase of
$2,500 in maintenance and
of SI,OOO for furnishing the
hospital. Take care of the
institutions of the county by
voting for McElreath for re
election to the legislature.
WALTER McELREATH.
WHY YOU SHOULD VOTE FOR
J. D. PRICE
For Commissioner of Agriculture.
To the Voters of Georgia:
The law of Georgia specifically re
quires that the Conlmissioner of Agri
culture shall be a PRACTICAL FARM
ER.
Mr. Price Is the ONLY practical
farmer in the rart>—the only candidate
who actually gets his livelihood from
his farm.
Mr. Price has been a farmer all his
life and has made agriculture a study.
He has traveled all over the state, vis
iting more than 80 Georgia counties in
the interest of his campaign, and has
made this an opportunity to see and
learn just what Georgia farmers need.
Mr. Price believes it the duty of the
state to afford every possible encour
agement to the small farmer, who Is
largely the state's agricultural depend
ence.
If elected. Mr. Price will see to it
that the department stands as a pro
tecting bulwark between the people and
the manufacturers of fertilizers, foods
and oils, to the end that they may
know, when they read the label on the
package, that It tells them exactly what
they are getting.
YOIT CAN FILL THE OFFICE AS
THE LAW DIRECTS ONLY BY
VOTING FOR
J. D. PRICE,
Os Farmington,
Oconee County, Ga.
A. J. Stewart,
Louis Hirschburg,
J. E. EchoLs,
W H Baker,
G W. Madario,
W. Hircshberg,
C. G. Nolen,
J. C. Legg,
I. A. Hirschberg,
Gordon Nash,
Emanuel Kaufmann,
M. Winer,
J. W. Wells,
W. J. Ogburn,
W. J. Wooding,
A J. Foster,
E. R. Hughey,
S. N. Martin,
I. S. Moss,
J. H. Bulloch.
C. R. Chapman,
Morris Steinheimer,
J. I. Glous,
W M. Talley,
M. Klein,
L. G. Thompson,
N. T. Gann,
W. W. Cunningham,
W. T. Davis,
M. A. Regenstein,
J. E. Harrison,
J B. Smith,
H. Bressler,
W. B. Evans.
J. M. Bernard,
N. P. Anchison,
R. H. Crump,
J. C. Lankford,
L. Kahnweiler,
G. T. Henning,
J. T. Hanney,
W C. Allen,
Jos. J. Donnelly,
G L. Carey,
W B. Talley,
John Y. Smith has receiv
ed almost the unanimous in
dorsement of the people who
know him best.
I A JI ■ Opium. Whiskey and Drug Habit treat
¥ id at Hstna or at Sanitarium Baok oa
auWact Free. DR. B. M. WOOLUTT,
24 -N Viciur Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga.
Chronic Diseases
T* HE reason many doctors do not have
1 success tn treating chronic, or long
standing (('.senses Is because thej- do not
PEL 1
■■ o
''''
failed I have some
DR. WM. M. BAIRD original Ideas re-
Brown-Randolph Bld a .gardlng the die.
Atlanta, Qa. eases In which 1
specialize which are set forth In my mon.
| ographe They're free bv mall In plain,
sealed wrapper My offloe hours are S te
7; Bundays and holidays. 18 te 1. ■*.
amißatloa la Dee.
YaOIIII
JK - -rtk&SsEs
J
. iH||
th-? WMTx JR
Hl
J. M. Morris,
Louis J. Regensteii
Marks Hightower,
L. B. Lilienthal,
Gus Hoffman,
R. B. Buttim,
John J. Kelly,
Albert Kaufman,
George M. Kohn,
Thos. Sheils,
J. J. Nahert,
M. W Estes,
C. B Ray,
J. M. Hoyle.
W. B Batchelor,
A I. Blair,
F. I. Stanford,
M. L. Daniel,
S. M. Milam,
T. I. Ball,
J. H Burk,
C. B. Norton,
W. G Brown,
J. B. Hale,
T. A. Conger,
M. Maxwelle,
C. F. Echols,
T. L. Smith,
R. C. Nulger,
E. W. Estes,
W. 0. Jones,
E. G. Everitt,
S. A James,
A. A. Urwin.
C. P Groover,
W. J. Dunn,
» get to the cause of
; the trouble- incor
h root diagnosis. I
B have helped many
■ a chronic invalid
by being able to
find the cause and
I removing It. That's
why I nave been
■ called a crank on
| diagnosis. My 3S
E years of experience
In such diseases, in-
■ cludtng diseases of
men and nervous
| dI s o’r d e rs. have
made it possible for
J me to obtain suc-
S cess In many cases
3 where others have
R. T. Moon,
in, James Duffy,
B. F. Joel,
W. Montag,
A. Montag,
J. R. Jordan,
E. A. Gordon,
T C. Goodwyn,
James Bettie,
C. H. Heflin,
Thomas Bettie,
R. W. Cameron & Co.,
W. W. Rice,
Edwin I. Cooledge,
W. P. Stotte,
S. Athens,
Nick Backus,
C. J. Baisden & Co.,
J. W. Conley,
Turner Bros.,
F. M. Brotherton,
P. E. Turner,
Hugh Willett,
J. R. Carmichael,
B. H Treadwell,
A. H. McMillan,
Ed McDonald,
D. W Stewart,
Jas. N. Sewell,
0. B Wyatt,
John C West,
J. C McMillan, Sr.,
M. C. Kiser.
H. J Thurman,
H G. Parks.
7