Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, August 31, 1912, EXTRA 2, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

4 ONIO SUFFRAGE CAMPAIGN ENDS Women. After Strenuous Fight for Ballot. Await Anxiously Tuesday's Election. 1 COLUMBUS. OHIO, Aug. 31.—The 1 women of Ohio today reached the , height of their pre-election campaign I for the adoption of the equal suffrage ' plank included in the new Ohio con stitution to be submitted to the voters of the state Tuesday. In every town and hamlet advocates t of equal suffrage addressed interested ■ throngs of townspeople and farmers. 1 Postal cards were dispatched to the 31 lit voters nf the state entreating them to vote for the suffrage plank. ’ which provides for "the removal of the ' words ’white male’ from the provisions 1 of the constitution prescribing who may ’ exercise the franchise in Ohio." This clause, if adopted, will give the n omen of Ohio a voice at the polls and ' will add over 100,000 voters to the na- i tional electorate in time for the presi- < dential election. ' Many Reforms Provided. ' The manner of placing the constitu- 1 tion before the voters favors the adop- 1 tfon of this plan, every clause with the 1 exception of the liquor license plank 1 being printed under one head The l liquor clause is to be set at one side on , the ballot. The proposals of the new constitu tion for Ohio cover almost every sub ject of political discussion in the last ten years. Among these proposals are the initia tive and referendum without the re call, the licensing of the liquor busi ness. the giving of home rule to munic ipalities. the reform of the civil jury system by allowing nine jurors to re turn a verdict, the reform of the judi cial system to provide one trial and one review in most cases, the taxing of Incomes, inheritances, mineral produc tion and franchises, simplification of the method of amending the constitu tion and provisions for the issuance of bonds for the state highways. Other Issues to Be Decided. The constitution also contains these clauses; To require al! nominations, state, county, district and city, to be made at direct primaries. To forbid contract labor in pend! in stitutions. To abolish capital punishment. To give authority for minimum wages and limitation of hours of labor. To make eight hours a work day on public works To require compulsory compensation for employees and to recognize "occu pational disease." To require the civil service in all state and county offices. Flying Men Fall victims to Stomach, liver and kidnev troubles just like other people, with like results in loss of appetite ’back ache. nervousness, headache, and tired listless, run down feeling. But there's no need to feel Uke that, as T I> Pee bles, Henry. Tenn., proved. "SIjJ bot tles of Electric Bitters," he writes "did more to give me new strength and good appetite than all other stomach reme dies I used." So they help everybody. ' it s folly to stiffer when this great remedy will help you from the first dose. Try it. Only 50 cents at all druggists. ••• Mr. W. S. Gunsaltts, a farmer living near Fleming, Pa., says he has used ' 'hamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy in his family for four teen years, and that he has found it to be an excellent remedy, and takes pleasure in recommending it. For sale • * • CARE OF THE TEETH IMPORTANT TO HEALTH Without perfect teeth one can not enjoy perfect health. Decaved or Im perfect teeth are not only painful and continuously annoying, but a positive menace to health and even life. Do not neglect your teeth. Upon the first sign of decay have them treated and save suffering. Or. if the teeth are idy In bad condition, have them at tended to at once. rhe modern scientific painless meth ods in use by the Atlanta Dental Par lent try of its former terrors, am: the rm-s: difficult operations are performed quickly and without pain. Tills handsome establishment is lo cated at the corner of Peachtree and Decatur streets, entrance at 19 1-2 i • Peachtree. •»» EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS AND DECORATIONS. ATLANTA FLORAL CO.. Call Main 1130. “Initials Only,” by Anna Katharine Green, author of "The Leavenworth Case." “The Fili gree Ball.'' one of the most en thralling mystery stories ever written, will begin in The Geor gian next Tuesday, Be sure to read it. Men and Women I CURE YOU TO STAY CURED. all chronic. nervous, I ,b'lvatc. blood and ' *7 *kin diseases I use g ,r " kites! meth i’ oos. therefore getting tlx \ iie-tred results I give . jw 606. the celebrated German preparation. i J for blood poison, wlth- /.'v out cutting or deten ? y \ tion from business 1 •'/ntitlrntml. C jtne to me without de- i . .i’.'-J let nu- • ♦ ?id 'iistrate how 1 £iv-- you results where other I pl ?>:. ina have fa led I cure Vari- 1 < - b Stricture, Piles. Nervous De Lilitx Kidney, Bladder and profttatic i troubles Acute discharges and in- ; flaminatn n and all contracted dis ease* FREE consultation and exam- ' 1 rs, Ba. in. to 7 p In . ; Sundays. V to 1. Dr J. D HUGHES, Specialist i >|.po-ite Third National Batik. T Broth Bread st.. Atlanta. Ga. Would Hold Parents Responsible for Girls FINES IF DAUGHTERS ERR As an effective means of safeguard ing Atlanta's young girls. Chief of De tectives Newport Lanford, whose de partment is daily confronted by this problem, today announced his advocacy of a stringent law to hold parents le gally responsible for the conduct of girls between the ages of 12 and 16 years. "This is the only solution of the prob lem.” said the chief. "We must reach erring girls through their parents. If the parents will not keep girls off the streets and away from evil associates, then the law should handle the parents and impose on them a severe penalty.” If parents throw up their hands in helplessness and admit they are incom petent and unable to control their girls, then they would he relieved of the pen alty of the law, according to the plan of Chief Lanford. Instead of dealing with the parents, the courts would then proceed against the offending girls, using the parents as witnesses against them, and placing them in an institu tion of correction where the parents would exercise no authority over them, 12 to 16 Period the Worst. "The majority of girls going to ruin in Atlanta are between the ages of 12 and 16 years,” said Mr. Hanford, "and our energies must be directed to this class. For this reason I am in favor of holding parents specifically respon sible for the conduct of girls between these ages. This law should be strin gent and be vigorously enforced. It should provide that girls between 12 and 16 years must not go upon the SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. DEAF CHILDREN S Taught to Speak Hearing Developed r Miss Arbaugh’s Private School f j| MACON, GA. » This is the only private school in the South for children with defective hearing; W aHH ie onl - v school where speech is taught S wEI si«?ns and hearing developed. The pupils learn to use and to understand spoken l.’tnguage tts reailil' ns hearing rhil ;A,' dri’ti. They tire given the best educational • Rj-i advantages and social training, wk Fall Term Opens October 7th « | WASHINGTON SEMINARY ATLANTA, GA NEW LOCATION 1374 Peachtree road, just beyond Ansley Park. GROUNDS AND BUILDINGS; private park; beautifully shaded and landscaped, affording privacy of the country. BUILDINGS Boarding department (limited), one of the most beautiful homes in the entire city. N*’.v Academic building a model of school construction in lighting, ventilation, heating, with open-air class rooms, gymnasiums, audito rium, etc. Tennis courts and other outdoor gam s. DEPARTMENTS Kindergarten, primary, academic, college preparatory, domes tic science, physical culture, piano, pipe organ, voice, \iolin, art. expression. METHODS Small classes; last year 235 pupils and 18 teachers, allowing one teat her for every 13 pupils. ACCESSIBILITY—-Three car lines, Peachtree, West Peachtree and Buckhead lines; 20 minutes from center of city PROTECTION Special police officer at 2:30 ami 1:30 to protect students get ting on and off cars. CATALOGUE and views on request; thirty-fifth year begins September 12. LLEWELLYN D. AND EMMA B. SCOTT, Principals. 1 hone Ivy 647. RIVERSIDE r MILITARY ACADEMY W i • 1 J* PEARCE, President. F. J. Mci’OY, Superintendent. , W \ H’ I N addition to the most modern buildings, an excellent faculty and superb ' I > e< l9 , P me , n t, Riverside offers several features in respect to which compari- (Juj / / i x ‘‘si son with other schools is invited. <1 > Mountain climate and scenery. For q? (A D Y A r* 1 / * nd inspiration of soul no other environment is comparable to V7r\ in\\' l 8 ‘ ' • .illustrated by the Song of the Chattahoochee" —the call of duty 1 I lhlM to service. (3) Athletics, in which Riverside claims Championship of Georgia. |\ i 11 \ For illu V ratod catalogue and information, address II i RIVERSIDE, Box 16 GAINESVILLE, GA. j| GEORGIA Send for Bulletins of the University of Georgia describing courses in Law, Agriculture, Forestry, Education, Pharmacy, Engineering, Literary and Scientific studies and Graduate Work Address THE CHANCELLOR. Athens, Ga -—SOUTHERN COLLEGE OF PHARMACY Largest Pharmacy School South. Drug store in the college. Free books, sav- I ling S2O book expenses Large now building and equipment, three laboratories. [Demand for our graduates exceeds supply. Fall Session begins October Ist J [Write for catalogue. Address 1 w. B. FREEMAN, Sec., 81 Luckie St., Atlanta, Ga.—— THE ATLANTA KINDERGARTEN NORMAL AND ELEMENTARY SCHOOL Will open <m September !>, with three departments, continuing its normal de partment and its elementary depart ment for children from three to six years and adding an open air First tirade for graduates of the kindergar ten in which a limited number of other children may be accepted. Applications should l» made by Sep tember 1 to MISS WILLETTE ALLEN. 639 Peachtree Street. Phone ivy 687-J. IMPORTANT NOTICE. Change of Schedule. Effective Sunday, September 1. ISli. Atlanta and West Point Railroad compant will make following changes of arrival ami departure of trains Train No 19 for t'olumbus tvia New rat i. leave Atlanta 6 4.’. a. in . instead of 6:30 a m Train No 41 for West Point isceommo dationi, leave Athnita 5:40 p m. instead of 5 45 p tn. Train No 20 from t'olumbus ivia New nan'. arrive Atlanta 7:40 p m . Instead of 7 55 p ni. All trains between Atlanta and Colum bus i via New mmi. will be improved in servo , and running time reduced ,i P HII.I.IPS. 1 1« neral Passenger .Agent. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AXD NEWS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1912. streets and to pleasure resorts unless accompanied by their parents, or other grown members of the family, or some other reputable person. This will not prevent the girls from having sweet hearts, as any respectable young man, acceptable to the family, will be per mitted. "The law should provide a warning for parents for the first offense. If a girl is found trotting the streets alone the second time, following this warn ing. then it would be up to the par ents. _They would be haled to court, where the penalty should be a heavy fine. It wouldn't be long. then, until our streets would be free many of these little flirting girls—at least, they wouldn’t roam the streets alone to do as they please and fall into bad company." War on Corner Mashers. Chief Lanford .says the situation in Atlanta is serious and is daily growing worse. He says the detective depart ment is doing its best to handle it, hut that. In the absence of a home of cor rection or any law bearing on the sub ject, the problem is difficult. The chief also advocate's a provision in the law to strike at the street corner mashers, particularly during the hours when Atlanta's high school girls and hundreds of other school girls are on the streets on their way to and from school, “This flirting between mashers and school girls is a menace to the girls that we should look to without further delay,” he said. "We must drive the mashers from the streets, for the inno cent school girl is at their mercy." SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CONVERSE COLLEGE Spartanburg, S. C. fl Standard Endowed College for Women. No Preparatory School or Department F4LL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 24, 1912 I he Efficiency of a College Depends upon : 1. The Home Life. Converse offers kindh super vision, refined, moral and social atmosphere, taste ful domestic arrangements, artistic environment and every material comfort. 2. The Personnel of Its Faculty. Converse empha sizes in the selection of its teachers, sympathetic, sensible, genteel, cultivated and humane person ality. 3. The Training of Its Faculty. Converse num bers among its teachers former assistant profes sors. Instructors and fellows In the Leland Stan ford. Jr.. Cornell. Chicago. Illinois. North Car olina and Virginia universities. Bryn Mawr and Mt. Holyoke colleges and doctors of philosophy of Goettingen. Yale and Illinois universities. Address ROB I . P. PELL, Litt D., President FINDS MISSING HUSBAND TELLING OF “HIS” DEATH | JOPLIN, MO. Aug. 31.—Coming to Joplin in mourning in the expectation of finding her husband, Joseph F. Dan iels. dead. Mrs. Jesse Cisana Daniels, of Wellington, Kans., came face to face with the missing 'husband as the latter was testifying at an inquest in the case of a man who fell from a street car fol lowing a quarrel with the conductor and whose skull was fractured. He said th,' man was "Joseph Daniels." The wife's grief quickly turned to fury when she saw her missing husband still alive, and tears gave way to bitter words as she rushed to his side and, seizing him by the shoulder, accused him of deserting her and trying to give testimony that would have led her to believe that he was dead. Leaving the chapel, the wife and the subdued husband entered a cab and were driven to a railroad station. The identity of the dead man has not been established. RIDES RACE WITH RABIES: VICTIM USES MOTORCYCLE AUSTIN, TEXAS, Aug. 31.—A. D. Anderson, of Dallas, made a record breaking trip of 175 miles by motor cycle and 50 miles by train, arriving here to be treated for rabies at the state hydrophobia institute. He was bitten by a mad dog in the country near Dallas and immediately set out for this city, believing he could make better time by motorcycle than by rail. He got as far as Rogers. 175 miles, when his machine became dis abled. He caught a train and arrived here in the morning. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. ATLANTA COLLEGE OF PHARMACY I wenty-one years of remarkably successful work. Greater demand for our gradu ates than we can supply. Best attendance south of Philadelphia. Begins October 1 Address GEORGE F. PAYNE, PH. G. 38 1 5 Edgewood Ave., Atlanta, Ga. % A High Grade Institution For Young Women. 5 1 Beautifully located neat the Mountains, in the most healthful section of / ___ South—not a death in the College during the forty years of its ex!stence - Every convenience of modern home. Only two girls to a room with large study between every two rooms. Every building 3k re-enforced concrete, absolutely fire-proof, thorouglily modern, / 155 acres in grounds and campus. Faculty chosen from finest A' American and European Universities. Full Literary Course lead ingtoA. B. degree; unexcelled advantages in Music, Art, Expres- ff' Wy\ ■» sion - Special attention to Physical Development. Catalog on re- Quest. A. W. VAN HOOSE, President, Rome, Ga. SCHOOL FOR BOYSI STONE MOUNTAIN, GA. ■■■ W A UNIV ERSITY SCHOOL FOR BOYS ia a regular school where boys arc taught and not just compelled to attend classes. A school fashioned after the old style system of tutoring where in dividual instruction is given each student; where the finer attributes of a gentleman, not tau/Jit by books, are inculcated; where a Bound, healthy body is developed coincident with a broad, | quick mind. A school where boys are transformed into men equipped, mentally and physically + o take up Life’s duties or given a firm foundation on which to build their education in the higher institu tions of learning. This is done by limiting the students to 96; one instructor for every ten boj a. More than Twenty percent, of the student body, each year, are brothers of former students. Give us a boy; tve'll give you a man. Handsome illustrated catalogand information furnished. Address SANDY BEAVER, Principal. Box 53 STONE MOUNTAIN, CA. i «3*ikrL- GEORGIA MILITARY ACADEMY THE SOUTHS MOST SPLENDIDLY EQUIPPED PREP SCHOOL College Park, Eight Miles From Atlanta, Georgia Fills every hour of a boy’s I.fe with wholesome mental development, body building, moral and social training, and preparation for a man’s part in the world s work. A thoroughly disciplined, modernly appointed, attractive school for boys and young men—a gentleman’s school, limited to about 125 boarding pupils, sogrouped. as to give every teacher about 12 Cadets for tutoring and over sight at night. Delightful home life—a big happy family of successful, cultured teachers anti pupils. Every sanitary convenience. Electric lights, steam heat artesian water. Elevation nearly 1,200 feet, no malaria, perfect health. Best Table Fare and Prettiest School Campus in the South. Three regular Courses- Classical, Engineering, Commercial. Member Southern Association of Colleges and Preparatory Schools. Active U. S. Officer in Charge of Military Department. Classed A by U. S. War Department. Parents nr<ed to visit and compare the School with the hestin America. COL. J. C WOODWARD, t. M.. PfBS. ADMITS THEFT TO SAVE RECORD FOR VERACITY PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 31.—"1 never I told a lie in my life and I don't propose I doing it now." said Myer Myerson, a i young man, when asked at the central | police court whether it was true that he had stolen a watch and chain and S4O in cash from Benjamin Udis, by whom he.was formerly employed. “Certainly I stole the watch and chain,” said the prisoner, "and as it is incumbent on me to tel! the truth, I may say that I sold the watch for $12.50." The man's statement was veri fied by an investigation made by De tective Timlin. Myerson was held in S6OO bail for trial. 4. The Equipment for Service. Converse lias rooms single, double and en suite: well equipped labo ratories and library; auditorium with 2.500 seats; chapel: large music building with pipe organ and pianos; seven art studios; up-to-date gymnasium; athletic field and infirmary. 5. The Provisions for Health and Safety. Con verse provides a resident physician, trained nurse, physical director t formerly assistant to Dr. Sar gent. of Harvard i: complete water and sanitari arrangements; 50 acres of beautiful grounds: w;i ter pipes with hose on every fiohr. chemical ex tinguishers. automatic water sprinklers in boiler room and kitchen; and tire escapes. Location. In a cit.x of 25,000. eight hundred feet above sea level. 35 miles from Blue Ridge moun tains. accessible by six lines of railway, delight ful winter climate, no tnal.U’ia, Puts Stomach ? Liver and Bowels in Fine Condition To promptly end the misery of constipation, torpid liver, sick headache, indigestion, dizzi ness and nausea, you must use CARTER’S LITTLE -dT/' LIVER PILLS. ? X. They never fail— tvrrrte that's why millions prlylf. use them. Vim, H ivVi"? vigor, vitality, Sill ■nd a clear NV- :omplexion are die result of their use. You need them. Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Prica. rhe GENUINE must bear signature SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. Georgia Farm Loans We want an active, honest and capable young lawyer in each of the following counties to send us applications for farm loans: Baldwin Gordon Murray Burke Gwinnett Pike Campbell Hancock Putnam < atoosa Haralson Rockdale Chattahoochee Henrv Sehkv, ( herokee t Jasper Spalding ('la’vToj) Meriwether Warren Coweta ’Milton Washington Klbert Monroe Whitfield • This work should appeal • espe cially to young attorneys just entering the practice. It will en able them to avoid the “lean years” that usually fall to the lot of young professional men. The work is strictly in the line of a lawyer’s practice, as it has to do largely with matters of real estate law. In a hundred other counties we have correspondents who are mak ing the business pay them well. We have many years’ experience in farm loans, and our financial connections are the very best .We can always negotiate good farm loans promptly, and our rates are attractive. We have several hun dred individual customers for these loans, and a number of Eastern Savings Banks and Trust Companies also. W e number among our clients the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, which was the first of all the life insurance companies in the whole country to lend money to Georgia farmers. W e began sending applications to this company fifteen years ago, and it has never discontinued even temporarily, and is still taking our loans freely where they come up to the proper standard. W’rite us, or better still, come to Atlanta and go over the matter fully with us. The Mongage Company J. T. HOLLEMAN. W. L. KEMP tw a x,r. t >T,-?,o S “' ent ' „ „ Vice President. J, W. ANDREWS, E. R. HUNT, Treasurer. *