Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 04, 1912, HOME, Page 5, Image 5
Curiosity to See His First Portrait Nearly Disqualifies Old Buck as Model\ DEER POSE FOR "SKETCH FROM LIFE” r- ' Mhs Carrie May Good- j~~~ / / / ■ ' Sketching Old Buck .AIS _777 • ■■ ( - lyjgßMfea. ■ . ®fe v ift ljr7‘ . •« jHw ” ■A%>- ...wl -y iIHHHKI IHKB W W > Sa • ~n?F* 7 \vi ftrW& S ' . . 7 i ; ’ 308 gHb v \ ■ >s< \ -'w \\ < \ xy^gtßW^OlW^A^iF =:==::: . .. ,\; XJ x x i l«W«| 1 Tp v7 7'', ELECTION PROBE ON AT COLUMBIA South Carolina Executive Com mittee Begins Investigation of Primary Fraud Charge, i . i COLUMBIA, S. c. Sept. 4.—For re lief from file tense political strain un der which the state has been since the recent primary tn which Cole L. Blease, on the face of the returns, was re- 1 nominated for the governorship, the eyes of every man of both factions in ! the state are today looking forward to the state executive committee which is now in session. Nearly all the committeemen are present and an atmosphere of work pre - x vails. The committee was called to order by Chairman John Gary Evans and protests' were submitted from s' v eral counties. Judge l.r. B. Jones, can. | didate for governor. Submitted a pro test of the election and asked that the committee go as far as possible in fer reting out fraud. It is not known what action the com mittee will take in approval or disap proval of the recent election, which is conceded both by the Jones forces and by Governor Biease as having been marked with fraud. It is generally be lieved that between 20,000 and 30,000 fraudulent votes were cast, but wheth er the committee will be able to put its -finger on enough fraudulent votes to declare the election irregular re mains to be seen. The committee will likely be in session several days. It is reported on the streets here that E. S. Reed, thei Burns detective who has figured so prominently in this state recently, is in the city, and there is ex pectancy that sensations will be sprung before the committee has adjourned. The detective could not be found and all that is known of his presence is hearsay. . Mr. W. S. Gunsalus. .1 fa met living near Fleming. Pa.. iy; be is use-, chamberlain’s Colic, c ’■ 41. ra a id ilia fhoea Remedy in his family for four teen years, and 'hat he has found ft to be an excellen' remedy, and sakes treasure in recommending i . For .-;A 'a all deale’ s. i “The White Plague” DR. KING’S Royal Germetuer has . done more to relieve and cure consumption, than any other reme dy. It always cures when a cure is possi ble. It fortifies the lungs against tuber cular germs. Germetuer Strengthens the organs of the body so they are not weakened by attacks of minor diseases. Itkeeps your body strong, healthy, vigorous. It is perma nent, pleasant, quick in action. It is what YOU need. SI.OO per bottle. For sale by leading druggists, or Ellis-Lillybeck Drug Co. MEMPHIS, TENN. Girl Artist Finds Willing Sub jects for Nature Studies in Grant Park. Miss Carrin May Goodson. who lives at 122 Broyles street and is something of an artist, went out to Grant park to do some sketches from nature. And now she’s glad she didn't pick the lion for a subject. Miss Gocdson strolled down to the pad dock and made a sketch of the dear Tittle deer. She drew the fawns and their mothers and then found a cool place on rhe grass and began a portrait of old Buck, the head of the herd. Buck posed like a statue for a while. Then his cujiosity led him to wonder what the girl with the pencil was do ing. Miss Goodson had stopped looking at her subject and was bending over the sketch. I Suddenly she saw a shadow on her pa | per and glanced up There was old Buck, antler’s almost in the artist’s face, taking a .look at his own portrait. And that’s the wax the photographer, who had been trying to catch the deer in a mo ment of repose, got the picture he wanted. TRUCK WRECKED BY FREIGHT TRAIN AT COUNTRY CROSSING The Atlanta Milling Company® huge ,iuto truck. <;iid to be valued at $5,000. was wrecked *in a collision w ith a freight train at Plasters Bridge road and thi' Southern railway tracks today. The approach to the railroad crossing is through a cut and two negroes on I the truck say they were unable to see the freight bearing down upon them until it was too late. Neither of the negroes was hurt se riously. and after having several pain ful cuts and bruises dressed at the Grady hospital, were able to leave. They were Louis Logue, 243 East Lin den street, and Will Wright. 93 Fort street. Th; i uck was tossed to one side when the rear end of the freight car struck it and. according to an on look, j. landed 20 feet from the' tracks. GOES BACK TO THE FARM IN HIS EIGHTIETH YEAR BRISTOL, \'A. Sept. 4.--It is not ott> n that a man goes back to the farm at the age of 80.. and yet that is what William L. Rice, mayor of Bristol. Va., , mother of Mrs. Roger A. Pryor, of New ■ York, purposes doing when he com ; .fetes his term as mayor. Elected to this position in’ 1902. h< has held It consecutively ever since. 1 Recently he was defeated for re-elev .'ion in a three-cornered race. So he i nnmini o.< that he will return to his i truck farm near this city and devote ais lime exclusively to agricultural pursuits. He is reputed to be one of the best truck growers of this section. IHEAVyTaLL DOCKET IN UPSON SUPERIOR COURT THOM \STON, GA.. Sept. 4. Sheriff <’. 1,. Howell and Bailiff W \V Johnston : '.. ;’g4<l ten negroes in north Thomaston. ! just outside the city limits, in an old ash oned "skin'' game Another negro stole a cow. and after ■dressing it. sold the meat. After an all- Hay chast he was arrested. In a ipiutrel about a negro revival. Jesse I I.'alias was* shot in the stomach xxith a • shotgun by Will Atwat r. and died in : thirty minutes, Atwater was arrested in !• ss than an hour. He was badly out. Tiiesc and about fifty other cases will i be tried at the fail term of I pson su- I peri' r court. ITALIANS SNEAK UP ON AND SEIZE TURKISH SHIP CONSTANTINOPLE. Sept. 4 —An Italian ci tiser entered the harbor of Makri. Asia Minor, today -and seized 'a Turkish ship lying at anchor there. Because of the excellence of the har. ~..>• a’ Makri, ’he Italians art keeping Ijt < instantly under guard. Makri Iles ‘ n the Vilayet of Smyrna upon a guif of the same name IHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1912. ill OEM IN GREAT FIRE H RESORT Ocean Park. Famous Califor nia Beach. Destroyed. With 'Loss of $2,500,000. OCEAN PARK, CAL., Sept. 4.—Fire yvhich swept Ocean Park, threatened to destroy Venice, caused the death of ’ one man and is believed to have killed seven others, and entailed a property . loss estimated at $2,500,000, was put , under control today. The fire swept . the famous beach pleasure resorts, de- I stroying the Frazier pier. It yvas burn. 1 ing its yv.ay furiously toward Venice, another of the Los Angeles beach re sorts. when a shift in the wind saved the place. Today firemen with lines of hose ex tending to the ocean were pumping water on the smouldering ruins. It I was estimated that it would tak< least all tonight to extinguish the flames, one hundred and fifty police and militiamen stood on sentry duty . about the burned district, watching i lest Hie fire brertk out again. A gen j tie breeze toward the ocean lessened the danger of a further outburst of the ' flames. ’ In the parks along the beach and in i the automobile driveways household > goods and stocks from stores were piled high. Special guards watched for vandals Scores Leap Into Ocean. Scores of persons had perilous es capes from the flames, many leaping , from the burning Frazier pier into the ocean, yvhiie. others leaped from the ‘ upper stories of buildings yvhich were ■ burning beneath them. t Six square blocks were burned over, and the ocean front from the Frazier , pier to the end of Dragons Gorge, 1,300 feet, yvas swept clean. The known dead is J. F. Locke, cash ier of the Casino restaurant. lie yvas . drowned after leaping off the Frazier pier after the flames had Ignited his clothing. Others r< ported dead were three ' Japanese, who ire believed to have been burned to death in their sleeping quarters over the restaurant in which L the fire started. The other four, also 1 Japanese, it yvas reported. were caught : at the end of the pier and forced into the ocean by the flames ' . - ’ ■ J I / S “T Health is the foundation of all good looks. The wise woman realizes this 1 and takes precautions to preserve her health and strength through the pe riod of child bearing. She remains a | pretty mother by avoiding as far as ■ possible the suffering and dangers of such occasions. This every woman may do through the use of Mother’s Erlend, a remedy that has been so long in use, and accomplished so much good, that it is in no sense an experi ment. but a preparation which always : produces the best results. It is for external application and so penetrating in Its nature as to thoroughly lubricate every muscle, nerve and tendon in ' volved during the period before baby I comes. It aids nature by expanding i ' the skin and tissues, relieves tender- ■ ness and soreness, and perfectly pre pares the system for natural and safe motherhood. Mother’s Friend has been used and endorsed by thousands of ‘ mothers, and its use will prove a com fort and benefit > I to any woman in f,need of such a-. - 9 ' » i remedy. Mother’s fl/j Friend is sold at drug stores. Write for free book for ;; expectant mothers, which contains ; much valuable information IRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atl.»t., G». DIVORCED HUSBAND OF RUTH BRYAN WEDS A MUSIC INSTRUCTOR BEItLEFONTAINE. OHIO. Sept. 4. \V H. Leavitt, divorced husband of Miss Ruth Bryan, daughter of William Jen nings Bryan, was married secretly last night to Miss Gertrude H. Leeper, daugh ter of Rev. Edward Leeper, of Fort Re covery. The bride is a well-known musical in structor. The couple will reside at New port. • ; The Liver is the Road to Health If the liver is right the whole system is right CARTER’S Lil TLE LIVER PILLS will gently eweken your A I \ sluggish, clogged- ■ -A* , up liver and cure CAPTERS constipation, CP 1T TL. K upset stom- » IBIVER ach,,n ‘lgWLLS. active I sSxiwH bowels, A loss of appetite, sick headache and dizziness. Purely vegetable. You need them Small Pill. Small Dose. Small Priee. The GENUINE must bear signature USEFUL FOR THE AVERAGE AMERICAN The Modern Handy Volume Which Contains Ready Reference of Every-Day Use to Everybody. Is there a man. woman or child in Atlanta, that would not like to oyvn a , book which describes the chief char ; acteristics of every principal city in the . yvorld .’ Would it not be enjoyable to follow the routes of intrepid aviators . who fly through the air from Paris to London, or from New York to San ; Francisco? Is it possible to get a book ■ that gives such information? Yes; The , Georgian is presenting just such a book to its readers, it Is the Standard , Atlas and Chronological History of the World. It takes up the history of the world at the very beginning, tvhen the t first Babylonian cities were founded in I the valley of the Euphrates, and fol : >ws it oh down to the lates4-4jnportant i. vents of the year 1911, when Madero | was Inaugurated president or Mexico. i The Georgian's Allas is modern in I every’respect and contains many fea tures entirely new to a yvork of this kind. In a chapter devoted to the offi -1 cial machinery of our government at I Washington, D C., it gives the salaries , of the president, vice president, cabi net officers and other Federal officials, • as well as their powers and duties, it j is replete yvith colored maps of every state of the Union ami .-ry country of ' Jh>- entire world. giving the names of ' rat oads and atea nah p routes. Much as well as instruction may be I gained from the maps of the polar re- ■ j gions which give the.routes of explor- I ' ers. The Panama canal is also an in teresting subject witich is fully taken leare of yvith colored maps am! . harts. The Standard Atlas is complete in ; every respect. It is beautifully bound Jn silk-tinished <loth, is printed from | new plates, and is of convenient size I for school use or for the home or of- I flee. No other Atlas published com prises so many new and useful fea | lures, and it is our desire to place a i copy in every home in Atlanta. We I have arranged yvith the publishers for | tin entire edition to be distributed by the following plan: As announced else where, only a small expense fee. Is re quired. All you need to do is to clip the heading from the first page of to day's Georgian, ineluding the date line; present six of these headings of con secutive dates, together yvith the small I fee which goes tow arri defraying the I expense Items of distribution, and get I I youi Atlas at th< office of The OeoF- ' gian. Everybody needs this book, and it is I I hoped that all will avail themselves of 111 he oppot t init y besot e the off< r is I yvithdra yx n. Read the display an- I nouncment on another page of today's ' issue. ILLINOIS WOMEN IN HOPELESS FIGHT FOR SUFFRAGE ELECTION CHICAGO, Sept. 4.—lllinois women ap parently have lost in their effort to get women suffrage before the people in the coming election. it requires 96,000 names to get a place on the ticket. Only three questions are allowed. Those indorsed by the civic federation dealing with tax reform, legis lative action on the short ballot and pri i <nar_> law changes already have received | over 100,000 signatures. Mrs. Catherine Waugh McCulloch, head i mg the campaign of the women, admit | ted today that unless thousands of signa ttires were received today and tomorrow • there was no chance that the suffrage ’question would go to the people for a A Hidden Danger | It is a duty of the kid neys to rid the blood of uric acid, an irritating poison that is constantly forming inside. When the kidneys fail, uric acid causes rheumatic attacks, headache, diz ziness, gravel, urinary troubles, weak eyes,dropsy or heart disease. Doan’s Kidney Pills help the kidneys fight off uric acid—b ringing new strength to weak kidneys and relief from backache and urinary ills. Here’s home proof— •When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name" U»DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS A Os Tremendous Interest to Atlanta Women A Sale of Ostrich Feathers and French Tips at About Half Their Real Value Here's news of a sale that will cause a ripple of excitement through out Atlanta and vicinity. 'l'he most unusual and unique bargain sale of its kind of recent years. This sale, coming just at a time when the hat subject is uppermost in the minds and thoughts of Atlanta's smart dressers, makes this occasion all the more interesting. Here's the price range for this sale, which takes place in our millinery parlors tomorrow, Thursday, morning, 9 o’clock. $1.49 for $3.00 Tips $2.95 for $5.00 Tips $4.45 for $7.50 Tips $4.95 for SB.OO Tips $5.95 for SIO.OO Tips $6.95 for $12.00 Tips $10.98 for $17.50 Novelty Feathers $17.50 for $30.00 Novelty Feathers $25.00 for $40.00 Novelty Feathers $29.75 for $50.00 Novelty Feathers See big window display and come sure. The latest “whisper'' from Paris, London and New York regarding ostrich .feathers denotes that French tips in exquisite two-toned or col ored effects are the vogue this fall and winter. Having noted this fashion mandate, we set out to procure these beau tiful and fashionable feathers for our trade. Our millinery corps made a wonderfully clever coup, purchasing a large collection of these beauti ful feathers in a most advantageous manner: therefore, we announce a sale of these handsome ostrich feathers at about half their real value. What a glorious opportunity offered thrifty buyers to secure feathers to trim their new fall and winter hats! YOU MAKE ABSOLUTELY NO MISTAKI’ IN SUPPLYING YOl’R FEATHER WANTS AT THIS SALE. AS THESE TIPS ARE SURE TO BE IN GREAT HEMANI) THIS FALL AND WINTER. J.M.HIGH COMBVNY. COUNTERFEITER JAILED: SERVED TIME IN ATLANTA RICHMOND, VA., Sept. 4. —John Allen Johnson, a confirmed counterfeiter, who has served several terms in the Atlanta and other Federal prisons, is again in the toils. He was arrested here after passing several spurious coins. He was released from the Atlanta prison only a few' months ago. after serving a term of eighteen months. Johnsen makes a specialty of confess ing as soon as he is arrested, so as to get the lightest sentence possible. He con fessed to Chief Detective McMahon just after being jailed here. 1,000 MINERS STRIKE. DECATI’R. IkL.. Sept. 4.—.A thousand miners employed in four coal mines at Pana. 11l . one of the largest mining towns of the state, are on strike today. The walk-out was ordered by a sub-dis trict official, on the ground that the operators are not keeping their part of the recently signed contracts. A ’ , • “ I HA 1 —\ BlwW w\ </ —A- —BnlW Wk — —' \ ,jS Wwi ■■ *'Every Picture Tells a Story." DIPLOMATS ASK CUBA TO STOP ATTACKS BY ISLAND NEWSPAPERS HAVANA, Sept. 4 —ln consequence of the recent atack upon H. M. Gib9on, ( United States charge de affaires, here, Senor Fosalba. Uruguayan minister to Cuba, and dean of the diplomatic corps., today formally asked the Cuban govern ment to take measures to prohibit Cuban newspaper from attacking foreign diplo mats in future. The Cuban secretary of state replied 5 : that no law exists at present under which the government will act. Senor Fosalba acted upon the request of the diplomatic corps. "Were all medicines as meritorious as Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy the world would ba much better off and the percentage of suffering greatly decreased,” writes Lindsay Scott, of Temple, Ind. For] sale by all dealers. ATLANTA PROOF Testimony oj a Resident of Glenntvood Avenue. Mrs. T. C. Fincher, 412 Glenn-] wood avenue. Atlanta. Ga., says: “ I suffered from aches, and was in misery for about a year. The kidney action was irregular and the secretions unnatural. There were dark circles and swellings under my eyes. Recently I was so bad I had to stay in bed. Hear ing about Doan's Kidney Pills. I began taking them, and contin ued use strengthened my back and did me worlds of good.” 5