Newspaper Page Text
6
ATTORNEY GENERAL
RULES LORD'S PRAYER
IS O. K. FOR SCHOOLS
OKLAHOMA CITY. Aug. -- Attorney
General Charles West. ..f Oklahoma. b..s
come to the conclusion that it is proper
ths- s b< permitted to
have the Lord's prayer rtad or recited in
the schools.
He made the announcement today when
Kiting out an opinion rendered at the re
quest of A. V. Hamilton, superintendent
of schools at Coal Gate. Okla., where a
controversy has binged on '.tie question of
repeating the prayer in the si bools.
FLYING FOR CUP.
CHARLES. FRANCE. Aug. 22 -Avi
ator Frantz l>ft here today to fly to
Hamburg for the Pommety cup \ dis
patch from Mon- -aid lie h id arrived
there safely and later li ft on hi- jour
ney.
Have You
Reached the
Age of 40
Without a Bank
Account in Your Name ?
HHKW'
11' so. (101 l 4 Im <I: sent I r;t o-fi |. ,
.Manx men luive started at forty
sat no stmimedi <1 in am-iiiniilatinir
and l>\ pirsistonl ami systematic
a moot) substantial hank account .
to provide Im- their old asi'e.
Yun can d i the same if you be- !
it ill to save \< >\V
11 you are not \< t forty you i
bat ■ a still better mlvantase to!
prot ide for your future. But
don't wait until tomorrow or
next week start now.
We pay 4 per cent interest on
Savings Accounts one dollar!
will start tom Call today.
Open Saturday afternoons from i
4 to 6 in addition to morning
hours.
Georgia Savings
Bank & Trust Co.
Atlanta’s O dest
Savings Bank
Grant Bidg.
111 IM I■■ ■ ■ iiibj - -« f’OiluZK 1 W.?JLM*S 'TTUHBMIIT T~l «■!! in II ■ ■ l ll■■— —i —I I I ■!—■ —!■ 1 ■ 1111 ■!■■ 11. ■■ mill nil II —II—I II 111 LI I— IB^—————————
Goldsmith-Acton-Witherspoon Co.
; Save Money in Our August Furniture Sale
; August Sale of Bed Room Furniture p Your August Sale of Dining Room Furniture
[ SjQ furniture . ... '- E3
WAffl While You G 'I
hr- 11 “*Little ’^ === )J
“ I t'* 1 * *
>•' Colonial Chiffoniers St 3 TllUfi ' Serving China Closets. Dining Tables. Buffets.
Du ci.-. T i i|. ... Beds Tables,
$25 and up. $12.50 and up. $lB and up. sls and up. $8 and up. sls and up. $11.50 and up. sl6 and up.
\ mist Sal(> means much to you. coming as it does just before the busy moving season. The saving to you is
•■oils;* l, r;. ,;s tlie ]>ri-< reduction is great. During this sale, as heretofore, we extend the courtesy of our Divided
Payment Plan. < 'ine in today and select your furniture. We will ston* same free of charge and deliver the dav you
move if requested.
•'M- 00 Mahoganvei DO IPOR
V I f s "’ ne hi,vv onl ' paper li 11. |
A K «f marks from In ine wrapped IiLX-XJL ti HE/ Ji I OHsU I
. . $1 , 98 "W"/{““V
Br!lss Bed Outfits29.4B
Our Bug ami Drapm Department is u .. .
replete with new fal arrivals in Cur- Ste P Ladders, Park Go-Carts, Tabourettes, Braßß Bed 1800
tains. Rugs mid I•> ■ - <fr 1 f\O At\ National Spring 3.5*8
A full line ft n-.m V « and DUC $1.98 49C Felt Mattress 7.50
Drapery Goods fresh Iniri the Eastern
mills. " ~~ " ' The outfit completes29.4B
, , Lace Curtains, W i n d o w Hassocks, car-
Our Dr.iperv Department is n < harg'
zru -e /z v Shades. all P<’t covered.
...... $1.49 .., . SPEC L\?\ TEN ™ K To
| r Goldsmith-Acton-Witherspoon Co.
Pf 62 Peachtree Lif< time Furniture, Rugs and Draperies 61 N. Broad
SWTIDNW
HERE 10 IMM
Atlanta Corps to Join in World-
Wide Memorial to General
Booth.
The Atlanta corps of the Salvation
army will join with the entire aimy in
the memorial services to the life and
drills of it- late commander. General
William Booth. September 1 has been
tentatively decided on.
The local corps will act under order
fit this respect. Major Andrew Craw
foul. division commander, stated this
morning that ns soon as official advices
were received preparations would be
i egun for the services.
The local post received notification
only thi- iiimning of the general’s
hath, though, of course, it was known
unofficially as soon as it occurred.
The most prominent speakers and
■ingi- s in the division pr< baldy will be
brought to Atlanta for the celebration.
Gen. Booth’s Body
Lies in State
l.tiNlxi.X, Aug. 22. Funeral arrange.
I merits for the late General William
Booth, patriarch and founder of the
i Salvation Army , were completed today.
Requiem services will he held at
i >lynt[ i i on Wednesday evening of next
! week. They will be conducted by
Bramwell Booth, son of the late found
er and successor as head of tile Salva
tion Army. Burial will follow on the
j following day. Thursday. Interment will
I be inaili at Abney Park, where the wife
: f General Booth is butied. The funer
al cortege will leave Salvation Army
I niadqiiiitei sal noon on Thursday. It i
lis expected that thousands will take
part.
Moutning Friends Pass Bier.
General Booth’s body, robed in full
uniform. was borne from his home at
i 11 nlley wood today to Salvation Army
{headquarters in Clapton Hail, Clapton
| where it now lies In state.
Throughout the afternoon thousands
■ of mourning friends and many stran
-1 ger- passed before the bier and looked
upon the serene face of the late evan
gelist.
Hundreds of messages of congratula
tion were received by Bramwell Bootli
who wis designated to succeed his
■ lather as commander-in-chief of the
army.
Eva Booth Sails
For Funeral
NEW YORK. Aug. 22. Eva Booth,
daughter of the late William Booth,
commander of the Salvation Army,
-ailed on the LaFrance today In the
hope that she could reach London be
fore her father is bulled.
Miss Booth was accompanied by of
lieers of the Salvation Army, who, with
het, will represent America.
Eva Booth is not in good health and
was deeply affected at the news of
Iter fathers death. She is not, how
< ver. believed to he in danger of a
bl eakcow n.
I lIE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 22. 1912.
Elopers Led Through Jeering Lane
AFFINITY PAIR IN CHAINS
CARROLTON, ILL., Aug. 22.—Hand
cuffed together, William Burley, a mer
chant, and Mrs. Walter Evans, another
man's wife, with whom he eloped, were
paraded through the main street here
w hile crowds jeered them.
The line of march of the strange pa
rade led from the railroad station to the
Gteen county jail. Burley is 53 years
old. the woman 27.
The captured elopers were chained to
Sheriff Morrow, who had run them
down after a chase through two states.
I.ike captives chained to a Roman
chariot, the pair marched through a
double file of men and worm , their hu
miliation the greater because they were
acquainted personally with all of the
onlookers. The chase had been on ten
days. Burley, a bachelor, had been a
close friend of Evans, whose home he
frequently visited. Evans did not sus
pect his friend.
Tw o weeks ago Evens sold a house in
(’arrolton. He received nearly SSOO and
kept the money. Four days later Mrs.
BULL FIGHT IS GIVEN I
TO RAISE CHURCH FUNDS
LA JUNTA, COLO., Aug. 22.—A bull
tight with all the usual stage settings,
except that the picadors’ and matadors’
lances were tipped with rubber, wa.s
held here to raise funds for a New Mex
ican church.
BABY FALLS 3 STORIES
ON A PILLOW: UNHURT
NEW YORK. Aug. 22.—A one-hour
old baby who was blown out of a win
dow was protected by a pillow and fell
three stories to tin ground unhurt.
IF THE TOO MUCH CALOMEL
TOO WILL BRIHG ON RHEUMATISM
Because the Mercury in the
Calomel Attacks the Bones
and Develops a Painful
Mercurial Rheumatism.
Calomel is a powerful mercurial drug.
That is why it Is used as a strong pur
gative in obstinate biliousness. The
mercury will crash into the sour bile,
break it up and throw it off forcibly,
and it is the shock of the mercury and
tlie bile coming together that causes the
awful nausea, vomiting and sometimes
even salivation. A shock such as this
always weakens the system and in a
few weeks there is another bilious at
tack and another dose of calomel is
necessary. It does not require much
reasoning to prove that each bilious at
tack roots into the system a little deep
er and a greater shock is necessary to
dislodge it. And every dose of calomel
that you take is putting mercury into
your system, and mercury is a powerful
chemical which attacks the bones and
causes a gradual wasting away. This
is necrosis of the bone, or mercurial
rheumatism, the most painful anil the
most dangerous form of rheumatism.
Evans and Burley' disappeared. When
Evans looked for his money he found it
also was gone.
Sheriff Morrow learned that Mrs.
Evans and Burley had been seen to
gether at Grafton, 111., and had crossed
the river there in a skiff and landed on
the Missouri shore. He learned also
that Mrs. Evans' trunk had been sent to
Jerseyville and went from there to
Lynn, Mo., opposite Grafton. He took
with him a warrant charging Burley
with grand larceny. Evans had said
that he was most anxious to recover his
missing money.
Morrow found the couple in Lynn.
He obtained requisition papers, then
arrested the pair as they were return
ing to the hotel from a picnic.
After Mrs. Evans and Burley were
placed In jail Evans visited his wife in
her cell. After a short conference they
hugged and kissed each other. Mrs.
Evans was then released. Burley
waived a preliminary hearing and was
held under SSOO bond for the September
grand jury.
ALTHOUGH SHE’S DIVORCED.
WOMAN ASKS FOR SIOO,OOO
MILWAUKEE, WIS., Aug. 22.—1 n a
suit asking SIOO,OOO damages, Mrs.
Katherine T. White, of Milwaukee and
New York, charges Mrs. Catherine
Scammon. Mrs. Helen Tuttle, Charles
H. Gillman and her former husband,
Arthur C. White, with conspiracy and
charges the defendants other than het
husband with alienation of affections.
Mrs. White alleges that her husband
fraudulently got hi- decree while she
was visiting friends in New York on
May 20. 1910.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is better than
calomel every way. It contains no mer
cury; it flushes stomach and bowels
and cleanses of all sourness and clog
ging waste; and it dissolves the uric
acid which the fermenting waste has
generated and passes it off in the urine.
When the blood is freed, from this
thickening, poisonous acid, and the
pressure of clogging waste removed,
liver and bowels will resume their mrf--
mal activity, naturally, without forcing.
The action of JACOBS’ LIVER SALT
is quick but mild. It contains the same
sulphates that are in the system to di
gest food, and consequently combines
most easily with the juices of the stom
ach and acts naturally, without griping,
nausea or vomiting.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is the best
liver stimulant made. If you are bil
ious. it will cure you. If you are well,
take it and keep well, for every one's
liver is apt to get sluggish occasionally,
and prevention is always better than
cure. A glass of Jacobs’ Liver Salt is
bubbling and pleasant—a fine before
breakfast habit. No substitute can
have the same uric acid solvent action.
1-2 pound jar, 25 cents at druggists
(16c extra by mail). For sale by all
Jacobs' Pharmacy Stores and druggists
generally.
To Drive Out Malaria
and Build up the System
Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTE
LESS CHILL TONIC You know what
you are taking. The formula is plainly
printed on every bottle, showing it is
simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless
form, and the most effectual form. For
grown people and children. 50c.
HUNDREDS GO TO SEE
‘THE WOMAN DOCTOR’
AT BONITA THEATER
If you want to see an up-to-date,
high-class musical comedy, with plenty
of fun, dancing, singing, good come
dians and pretty chorus girls, go to the
Bonita, 32 Peachtree street, this week
and see "The Woman Doctor.” The
play is presented by the King-Murray-
Jones Musical Comedy Company, which
is without doubt the best aggregation
of polite entertainers that has been
seen in Atlanta in months. This little
theater is rapidly becoming known as
the leader of all the popular priced
houses in the South. Continuous per
formances afternoons and evenings,
with motion pictures between times.
Adults 10c, children sc. **•
ESSIG BROS. CO. “Correct Dress for Men” I
Final August Reductions
Men’s and Young Men’s Fine Suits
LOT 1 LOT 2
Your choice of all Black Unfinisli- Your choice, a lot of nice snappy
ed Worsted Suits
patterns,
$15.00 SIO.OO
M orth from $22.50 to $27.50. Most-
ly large sizes in this lot. Sizes 42 . v , ...
an j 44 Worth from slo.oo to $22. >O. a
Splendid values for $15.00 for the few of aH sizes 111 this lot
big men. Some exceptional values for SIO.OO.
ESSIG BROS. CO.
“Correct Dress for Men’’
26 Whitehall Street
| TODAY’S PREMIUM |
| COUPON |
(Printed on page 2) and $2.00 in cash will purchase this
26-Piece Berkshire Silverware Set §
-
Jr • / /« « Am 11 As 11 iM 11 11 Fk M
« Jw -W W1 'w /$! : w OMU jM ; '?ft
w 7/ JI ‘wJt W
V ' W W w> ~ w w '
L '~ •
The set consists of six Knives, six Forks, six Teaspoons, six Table
spoons, a Butter Spreader and a Sugar Shell.
fajg The ware is standard make, prettily designed and equal, both as to
beauty and utility, to the higher priced silverware.
J Atlanta Georgian Premium Room i
Open Evenings. 20 E. Alabama St. rag
am—— wmbhhl
The Trials of a Traveler.
"I am a traveling salesman." writes
E. E. Youngs, E. Berkshire, Vt„ “and
was often troubled with constipation
and indigestion till I negan to use Dr.
King's New Life Pills, which I have
found an excellent remedy.” For all
stomach, liver or kidney troubles they
are unequaied. Only 25 cents at all
druggists.
$2.50 Chattanooga and
return via Southern Rail
way, Saturday, August 24.
Tickets on sale for 3 p. m.
and 5:10 p. m. trains. Good
to return from Chattanooga
any train following date of
sale or morning trains leav
ing Chattanooga Monday,
August 26.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
White on the Pacific
Coast read the
San Francisco Examiner
CURED OF ECZEMA
AFTER TEN YEARS
Mr. P. S. Early writes us that after
suffering for ten years with the most ter
rible case of eczema, during which time
he had taken every blood purifier, skin
salve, etc., he read the testimonial of a
lady who had been cured bj- Tetterine.
He tells that two or three applications
showed results and by continuing its use
completely cured himself. He says he
has known of many very bad cases of ec
zema that Tetterins has cured since.
rrananKsi
I A M ■ Opium. Whiskey and Drug Habit treat*
1 ff ** ,l Uome or at Sanitarium Hook o«
Mibject Frw. DB. B. M. WOQLLKT.
24-N Victor Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga.