Newspaper Page Text
2
SPEEDING CYCLES
KILL 7, INJURE 17
Racers Jump Track at Motor
drome. Plunging Into Crowd.
More Likely to Die.
NEWARK. N. J Sept. 1* Will*- .1 '
triple inv, stigmmn «h • going on tu'.i.r
of the motorcycle rtisn*tm yest* ay ' i
the Vailsburp N 1 motoi <lronv >hi t
a iiinaway .y.- cashed from lioj
track Into th. »ta riutn. rhe death i.-i
"is i<> -ven vi-'ilnu-
The .* lento victim of tile tragedy
was W illiam F...'i ■ aged 24. of No
ark, whose skull w.u 1.-««•: u. H. ■
died today in City hosj ita
Sei < nl*«-n o:lie sm e ■ :n i:
Suffer' n* f "in n.j;, .i* s ami i' v :
* therr that smm of '.mm wet. n ■
IV ratt con lition and might ■!>. *'.,..,
Physician \V I>. McKenzie Im- jmi.
Iftrces with th. police and Count '
IToseeutoi Moiling m investig.i ling tn
■Hgic affair
Although it is believed the v.-uii. i I
’• ill exonerate the management of h.
s atrium motordrome. Paul I <’ Bi-rk
1 n. of l,os inj. es. mating. f
the place ■ . ■ ■. ,
I headquarters today and give hit
version. The stadium was supposed io
< omiiine the latest safety appliances
being a in a building It was thrown
nwn to the public for tin first time
T riy 4
Two Racers' Widows Mo u >n.
Mrs. Hasha. wife of Eddie Hasha. tin
. nineteen-y. ar-old sp. ed king of Wm o
n exas. who was one of tin victims i-
POOKtrated over her husband’s d. a
and is uniter tile cure of a phisi. i.iri
She war married a year ago to Hnsh.i
in Denver, after .i toman.', w hich l> •-
gan 11’11.11 the gt I Inide saw hei hits
band riding a damn rac*
The wife of Johnnie Mbriglit, who
wa# Hasha's opitonent in th. race it
likewise suffering today from the- to-a
of aeeing her hu-nand killed Albright
was a Denv.-i man and consider:!m.
rivalry existed Iteiw .-n him .nd hi*
youthful rii al 1 .in Texas
Pn ice I 'aptain Vog. l, wno h In ii
investigating tiecla'ed that in his opt* 1
ion the tragedy wore . a used by x . . |
Hive speed.
"Has.. . .... going 92 n ' ~.
■w hen tile front w heel of h ni<. ».■■.* 11
jumped from the moi tr i. k an .
leepod among t . spe. -it. on 1':.
firs . w bell. . :J'(l \ . g,.' ]
' ■ ■ . :■ ■■ tn, ... . , n ., k i
M” ■' 1 tir I.- futu e i | *'<■ i
not k:io,v b. • Up. : - , .-h,-.. . I
of
.Th, by. i's <»f two of th' victim-, pm 1
II l> of :i):’» .• ; t . :. , p ~. , »’ ii
yeutb aged alt- lit tw< :i ■ I.! in. 1
id lltitii « 111 ;m- mo: - .
DRUID HILLS AL E.
CHURCH OPENS; OLD j
BELL HEARD AGAIN
The hew Imuld Hills Methodis: I
Ciiurvh was opened yesterday morning
, al 11 o'clock, and tin eiiur. h today was
pionmiiK'd one of ihr most beautiful!
edifices in the city.
Aft.-r many month.* of silem, old
Trinity Methodist church's bell pealed
forth In its familial tones a call to
eervices yesterday morning Hut the
call was not to Trinity ehureh. That
old structure is being torn away. The
Druid Hills church has the ..Id bell of
Trinity church, the bell being on. ~f
the few things left undisturbed wh. n
Sherman passed through All.mta in
IRS 4.
Bishop Warren \. I'andler delivered
the opening sermon Hi- tin war I
am not ashamed of the iloshel of
Christ" in W P 1.0v.j0.i presiding
elder of the \tlanti di-iri. i. Hr. \\ c.
Lovett, editor of The W . sh ian Chris
tian Advocate. Hr. John s Jenkins and
■Rev. H. J. Ellis wen other ministers
present. A special musical program
xvas rendered Hy the choir, with the
accompaniments plai.d on the pipe or
gan to the purchase ~f wlmli Andrew
4'arnegie contributed.
The qew church i.- at th. < orn< r of
Seminole and Blue Itldge aVellUe-
GEORGIA GIDEONS IN
SESSION AT AUGUSTA;
ATLANTANS PREACH
r»f Georgia hrkj thvir annual meeting In
Augusta yesterday leading Gideons con
ducted the srrvi.es in all of tin promi
nent churehes here. .\i 5 o clock vrstrr
da\ afternoon the Gideons had a bust
neas nweding
A i the St .lohi; Methodist >esterda\
mornig <’ E Burge of \tlanta, con
ducted the service
At.the St. lames Metlmrist \ I-' T0.:.1
also of Atlanta, made the address of the
occasion,
\V M William- another \t:an;;in. was!
a t thi Sc. und Bam is*
The welcome a.hires- at the meeting
\ eytrrda.\ afternoon was delivered h> I>r
H .M Puß<«\ of this eity. ai d was re
sponded to I'? Edgar Oliver national vice
pKsidcnl, of Atlanta
l-ast night at St John Methodist. ;|.
religious services woi. . m,. i. d b\ the
visiting Gideons
M. W. A. INTO ALABAMA.
BIRMINGHAM \l..\ s. pt. S t. ,
Al j h.t rii Wood no n . * in» rll a h.. \ •
been granted permi<-i..n to .-ome into 1
Alabama. A et. tat i \. "of th. ,»r
is» now n E. tmu .>> , ( i. | a\ w
short.y put in tj .- p.-Li Ta.- .
state insurance dej-.oinont hi.m.p an
oxa nitration into th* n-u’-am, f.-a - |
tores of the order an - anuai tm- p< r
n; I'•’•si on to coine into tin
GORDON'S FIRST COTTON IN
<’ \LIHHN. GA Sc | • • » oiii.m
county’** first bale o’ . . • < bro i • i '
into town Saturd.i P M Evans, > |
S .unr Valiev. Th« ha < ua ;h g*ad». J
ar.i vas bought lo I, Pots j.-r la’,-
Short Marriage Ends Reincarnated Romance
LOVE 5.000 YRS. OLD DIES
/ z **'■’
I / '
it
Ki* * V *
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1/// ■
z '•* S ' LY / /
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Imljili oh. .iriisi. mu] his w Ic. loTiiici!' Mis* .Imp' Schaiif-
1 101. who now seek | r.'i'iluiii I'roin ih<- mill linioifiul bonds.
Mrs. Ott Charges Cruelty in
Suit for Divorce Against
Her Artist Husband.
S I Lt H FS. Sept <1 Th, stangest i
lomanie ~f moiiern times hilt* gone th,
win of too many modern romances. ,
uni ,\lt Ralph Chesl.y <>t t Is suing
for dlvoVee from the artist whom she
married little mor-- than two y ears
ago and whom sh< said she had met f
and loved some >,<i*m years before that I
in Lgypt.
In that far age <»he was the Princess |
\mneris and lie was an artist in the
employ "f the haughty Pharaoh, het
father, it was a ease of hive at llrst
sight, according to Miss .lane Schaqf
feit. the reincarnated \mneris and an
artist model They met. but alas! Tin t
could not marry ow ing to difference of
rank.
. But m t.hl y< ar of gta. e 1910 out in
Missouri things differed floin the Egyp
tian order. Lei <>tt de.-ci ibe the meet
ing between the Princess \mnoris, now
Mis- S. ha lift el t tnd himse'f
He had returned front a commission
to study the ancient arehite, tm • of
Egypt by E <; Lew is, who desir, ,i its
reproduction in I'nixersity City. Mo.,
where he saw his bride-to-be.
\l tile time of their marriage in St.
I.ouis they det>< ribed their unique sit
uation. After speaking of the strange
day dreams of Egypt that had been
his. Mr. Ott i ontinucd .
Met in Pyramid.'
'Always >heie was till Princess Am
ni is who is now ny b dt We met tn
tin im en's chamber of the great pyra.
mid. Teat was the beginning of our
Im e. In the evenings 1 met her tn the
Ipa a<< gardens-, and together we would
j fiend our xx.-ix to the river, where site
would throw sweetmeats to tile sacred
crocodiles.
"I e. .ci a night that brought great
trag, : , my if. . I’h.i aob discovered
Ins tin i, w er, lotah, s, and guards who
s< ized me \f;. t t at tin impressions
are ita x I. an recall wandering about
tirougii . iti.ix wish with strange
I" "P .nd • hat is xnd now,
w lien I -aw lint Sc hail ft' rt elite! the
queen's chamber something inside me
I seemed snap and I was back in an
-1 lent E-txpi and in the pr< sen.■< ot the
I Prine. >s \ miens
I "It Was the sam< la., the sam. flg
un as ili.t ~f m, oi.-atn princess -the
I princess th i n those day*
long. -■ cast. ..nd when she told
jmt of her strange impressions of a
I previous .Xis- i: . | knew and know
■ i."w th.,- . • \ . ether . . nti
; ya .ir« ag<
Thus Spoke the Bride.
I Mr* Ott was q.. 0, ~s tirm-x emi
i viricod of-
- know as s
inn. : at 1 lived l>,
• >lt ,11 ■' ill I I-' X |>!
* ■:
THE \TLAXTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 9. 1912.
••(•••■•eceeacegagaeaeaaac
• Facts in the World’s ■
: Strangest Romance •
• Characters. a
• Ralph Chesly Ott Artist •
• Jane Schauffert Model a
• They first met, she as Princess a
• Amneris, he as an artisan, in the a
• great Pyramid. 3088 B. C. a
• They loved, but were unable to a
a wed, owmg to difference in rank, a
• Reincarnated, they met again at a
a University City, Missouri, i n 1910 a
• A. D. ,
• They were married on Feb. 5, a
• 1910. sure of eternal happiness, a
• after a 5,000-year wait. •
' • But 5.000 years of idealization a
• were as nothing to TWO YEARS a
• and SIX MONTHS of actual mar- a
• riage—so SHE SUES FOR DI a
• VORCE. ,
•••••••oaaeaaaaeeaeaaaaaaa
tin Princess Amneris. 1 have dreamed
" my artist sweetheart thousands of
times. I can remember distinctly how
w. used to go down to the river to
gethe to feed the crocodiles. | rt >-
memb. r as though it were yesterday
mil- first meeting in the great' pyramid.
1 had accompanied my father on a
tour of inspection, and as 1 looked into
the queens chamber I saw the most
handsome man in the world, i i O ve<l
him at once and saw that he loved me.
I hat . xening he came to the palace
garden and mu love that has lasted
the ft nturirs began
■l. too. have recollections nf beautf
iul nights upon the royal barge, and I
recall quite vividly my fathers anger
■ - n w■■ w.-re dis. ov< ed toget \-t
I know la that here my recollections
break oft sharply, and I always feel a
heaviness of hear!
■ Xoxx i understand It all. Isis the
indent Egyptians great god dew
watched ove: us through the .. nturies
and brought us together at last."
Mrs. ott charges .ruelty in he di
v..r. e application
WOMAN LIVES FOR SIX
HOURS AFTER HER-DEATH’
SHEi ; .MAX TT7T7 s,.p. , lu<)
'■'id.! takers, s L. Talley and Charles
> nth. w.-i, star,',-d almost out of
their wits today when a "dead" wom
“n '■ 9 Stovaka \\, hba whom they
'.' er ' : ' hg Lt' burtal. raised up
iron, t ~ cooling board and united ai
them.
I W".h.ui .ixed for six hours -
war. S'i. w,<s an Assyrian
I.’ th, undertakers g,.t over their
surprise ti.ex sent for pnysleians. who
■ ■ ’he w,,m.m. She showed
•wiry ii ..i, ,m of re, ov.-ry this a!'t-
• ! bat latet Si. i aim qp-alter and
■l'*' H.r fi s-t ".bath" was due <■>
i- :S.-<■ if.;x ,-s f,,,.;r ehil •
BIBLE STUDENTS'
HEM NOTED MEN
•Dr. C. M, Cobern and Dr. W. M. .
Ainsworth Speakers at Con
ference at St. Pauls.
With He i' M c.ibein the arvheolo-!
gist, and Hr. W. N. Ainsworth, forme.
Pirsid. nt "f W.<lr-\an uni*, r.-ily 'o
feature the e.xer. i-rs. tl - annual Bible
conference at St. Pauls Methodist
church is in progress today, with the
largest ittendanc. of it., history.
To large congregations yesterday Hr
it'obetn preached two sermons. Today!
the will lecture on th; ri'c-nt discovol - !
lies in the llolv Land. In Ainsworth
w ill deliver four b i lures - during the
wi-"k. Ik will speak on "Tile Book of ’
Ephe-ians."
The Sunday school wotk of the con
ference is in charge of George M .W, .
Pier, president of the state board. Pro
fessor W. J. Ramsey will conduit the
music,
Kspe< ial interest is being atta bed to
Dr, t'obern' lectures on the Hebrew
prophets, whicli will-be delivered every
morning during the week, n li o'c'- -. k.
Hr. t'obein's foimer appearance in At
lanta, in connection with the Baptist
] Tabernacle conferences, has won him a ,
large following here.
The speakers who will take part in
'he Sunday school institute coinciden
tal with the conference arc Rev. B. I-'.
Eraser. Rev. \V. B. Hillard. Rev. <'harles
l>. Bulla Ro\. Nath Thompson and It' \.
Henry B. Mais.
SERGEANT WALSH
ON RETURN LAP 01
SEA TO SEA WALK
SAVANNAH, GA., Sept. 9. IVIt king
from ttakland. i'ui.. to New York and
return on a wager of s2,o<i". Sergeant I
John Walsh has reached Savannah on I
his ’eturn trip to the Paeltic oast
Sergeant Wais!: says he has broken 1
the world's record for one way across
|he continent. He wins his wager if I
he walks from coast to eoast-and back I
to his starting point within 200 days.
Weston walked from the Pacific coast
to New York in 105 days, and then '
footed it back, after waiting a .’.tar. in
I 71> days.
Si rgeant Walsh, who declares he-:
. tlked ’li" miles farther on the way |
lout, covered the distance via the I I
'Ni . i lie’ n route in S 6 da.\.-. Every one
I of the seventeen Sundays in this tiim-ii
,'u’ - ted. and on ten other days he
■ mln't walk because he was sick His > <
| 'it’.ml walking time was 5-. I days.
Wai-h is i>2 years old. just ten years
youngei titan Weston ’.as when he
made his memorable walk from sea to
sea.
DETECTIVE OF SAVANNAH
MYSTERIOUSLY MISSING
SAVANNAH, GA.. S- pt. 9. -William
i R. Mitii’ill. for three y ais a menilii-r
lof the Savannah dete-live force, Ims
been missing from his lioim and th'-|
barracks since Tuesday night. Mrs. |
. Mitchell is almost c azed with grief a' j
the disappearance of her husband. Sip j
has appealed to his fellow officers and
I the public to try to find some trace of [
I him.
"Tin re is no reason in the world w iiy i
I Mr. Mitchell should have deserted me" |
I she said. "As a liasbanii. lie was kind
ness itself. I can not imagine what
has becom.- of him. unless Im should
| have become suddenly deranged or 'nave I
been killed. My little children' and !!'
have watched in vain for him."
| At police barracks they are as much i
itt the dark as Mis. Mlt'lieil. Mitchell!
was last seen m hegdquarii t Tues-'
day night. He is 111 years old.
[TO RUY SCHOOL BOOKS FOR
CHILDREN OF ROME'S POOR
ROME. GA.. Sept |i. A movement i
has been startid here which, if suc
cessful. w ill result in placing praellctti
!y ever) poor child of .the city in
school.
At a mas* meeting i f citizens, the ,
Association forth.- Promotion of Edu
cation of the Poor was organized.
There are hundreds’ of children in the
eity who are unable to attend school
because their parents are too poor to
buy school books. It is the purpose of
the organization to bu\ books forth- so
children.
SALOON IN TOWN HURTS
BUSINESS OF MERCHANTS
SEATTLE. Sept !l. Tile t’ha 1.-sto i
gat* of Hie Puget Sound n.tv\ yari'.
wliii.ii was closed beeiiu.se Hie council
of t'lmrleston issued an additional sa-j
loon license in viol ation of an agree |
inent with the navy yard, will remain],
closed. Tile navy department at AVash
ington lias sustained Admiral Cottman. ,
commandant of the raid, in his tight I
.'.gainst tlie new saloon.
Tile new marine bnrraeks is close to
the Charleston end of the said and |
Charleston merchants :,:e deprived
of the trade of tin men because of ac
tion of tin council. i
TO NAME GORDON LEE.
ROME. 'LA.. Sept. •< The Si Velli ,
congressional convention will be held
in Rome on St pten bi tl4 at thi Eloj 11!
county court house. t'ongiessinan
Gordon Lee was unoppos< d in the re- :
< ent pi imar.s and he wHI bi una 1- |
mously renominated.
HIGH TAX RATE IN TALIAFERRO.
CRAWFORDA ILI.E GA Sept. ;i.
The county commission' - imv, tix d
the count' tax :ate at sl2 p, r limit-|
■ -and t.; th- 'ear. This, with Ihe|
State tax. g'.' s Tai'.al'i rr > about tm
hiu h« r.i G ’: i < .
NG SI DELIGHTS’ ’
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
Tin grand old town of Quitman has
.lust "m. tged ftom its annual sttenu
i 's battle of the cow, and still the cow
is regnant an d ‘ ■'
iih W l '
I - jn.
it "u— :
w w
s ®
supreme!
Evet since Quit
man was a wee.
small thing town
wise the fe-tive
cow has roamed
the streets at will
and when sue
listeth.
Th* people of
Quitman are lirni
friends of the bo
\ ilt'-s. and - well,
that is. .i majori
ty of Quitmanites
ate -iii'i’g for thi
cow.anyway!
■ There is an «>b
-i repel mis minor
ity in Quitman.
annually to put
hei iow ship out.of busjm-s-. to keep her
off the streets—part iculurij in those
pans of town where the glazing is
go.id.
This jiestiferops minority, too. suc
ceeds in making the e.iw ill- paramount
issue in Quitman polite s, yeat after
ye:',, world without > nd. 'ament
Th i " embattled Quitm.tnites inclined
io th- cow si.de. of the argument re
duced rheir platform tn the recent cam-,
paign to three cotnp'-lling pl inks, read
ing as foll.ow s:
1; The poor widow woman needs
the cow. She can not afford to
keep -ohe in a pen on an exclusive
diei of bought fond.
2. The -cow is a, line scavenger,
weed cutter and grass mower.
They keep down sand .-purs and
other object ionabl- grasses ant!
weeds.
3. Our good - ountiy friends hav*
cows they, can not control, and
these take an occasional notion to
come to town. You prejudice th"
fa: m,r 011(1 lose his trade viien \ou
pat liis stiu k in pound ami impose
a fine.
Thus simply ii-dueed. tin pro-cow
I'laiiorm w ",i tiie hearts of niaii> wab
liling Quilmanites whose previous
friendlim *• io tin- cow had been sur
reptitlou-’ly unde, mim’d by the plot
ting anti-cow hosts, ami on election
day tlie cow once more was retutned a
vi' tot in Quitman by tin- handsome
margin of 11 votes over her chagrined
and disappointed enemies.
All lovers of the cow —: n»l th* i num
is legion will rejoice riml witx •■xc< d
ing g'ad Ilia 1 Quitman *taV.<:' pht anil
unshakable in its pro-i Owness
I tie c<_.w ma;, talo an* -> rt of lib
erty -he u.leasky in.-Quitmun nowadays.’
■nd no 'im sttQhs iislo d 1
- * .V •
Tin H.’-nmelP tie stat. ..•.■.ecutivv (.'ell
mirtii- ii| insist upon strict parit reg
ularity tn tub ’pt’f'sjder.tial eRi filin'tills
fall. 'l’h' :c is’to In no deriei’tiqn t*> t ic
"Bull Moose” or' ollu r political outfit
that will not ettriy with it 'a future
reckoning.
At its recent m■ eting in Atlanta, the
■ "inmitt< e 11 . foilow ing '. i
lution:
Resolved, by tin state exei-utit,
committee of Georgia. That in the
approaching pr. sldential election all
Ijualiflcd elector- casting their bal
lot f V r th- l)i moci'arii' nominees
for president and vice president of
the I nited tSatdk shall lie entitled
to participate in the Dentmiatic
primary two yem ■ heme, Unless by
their public (letdurations litek ' -.as
to bo I iia.i erats
Tlie situation could not. bi expressed
in more ladtlike words—the iron li.ml
CMS TffltO, BILIOIJS, HtIDJCHT,
UVERTORFID?-GASCIfIETSSURE
’in' iiis.'itls out -tli, i-r-adaehe. biliousne-s, eonstipat ioh. tue sick,
sour slomiiji and foul gaets turn them out tonight with f’aecarets.
Hon'l P" in aimthirday of distress. Let f'lisearets sweeten and reguiute
- rejnoi the sont undigested and fetinenting food and that
■i: isi iy - in., i-. ,m.-. gas: take the , s~- bile from your liv< r and entry off th*' d*--
couc imt'd wasp matter and i-oti. ti- nion pois>;m tr-m tin bowels. Then von
will feel g'-i-at.
' ' as'.iret tonight will st: a igiitcu you out by morning -a !■ nt ,ox
1 t' drug store will keep yom head clear. .stomach sweet: 11 vei and be\v.
e.s r. giil.ar and m.il-.,- on f. , 1 bully and .me. f”! fur months. Don't fm-get the
child ten.
J .gs A
r—
-1 V. •» k J
10 Cents. Never gripe or sicken.
“CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.”
Dr. E. G. Griffin’s 1
I Souths Largest, Best
| Equipped Dental Rooms. S
? s et i® 6lll ■ • ss.co I
I Delivered Day Ordered.
Crown.. . $3.03 I
I Per^ect Br^B Wor}( • • s4 -0° I
Phone 1708. Lady Attendant k
g Over Brown & Allen s Drug' Store—24l-2 Whitehall.
: The Atlanta Georgian—Premium Coupon
Thi» coupon wdl be accepted at our Premium Parlor, 20 East Alabama st.,
I as part.al payment for any of the beaut ful premium goods displayed there.
! See Premiun Parlor Announcement on Another Page
t could be no nmre cleverly -concealed in
• "the velvet glove.
If jou want to wander off after the
"Bail Moose" m- other strange gods, all
right, says the committee—but in the
subsequent Democratic primaries, "if
you ain't got no Democratic creden
tials, you n* edn’t come, around I"
’ ’h. dear, the Move-the-f’apital-to-
■ Ala* on idea is hardly at home ift its
gray. , and spmebodj has started a Di-
I vrde-tlie-state-in-Haii' movement down
| south (;, otgia-way!
Several south .Georgia senators and
ici-r. -eir itives are said to be consid
| ering seriously the idea of asking the
next legislature to memorialize congress
to submit u I- i-deral constitutional
amendment < l eating tlie states of South
tiootgia and North Georgia, tin. dividing
line to run from about 'lusgogee and
Harris on the one side to Screven and
Burke on the other!
This is not altogether a new idea.
■ tniguivi r as some people will recall.
• Not so very long ago, J. L. Crawley, of
■ Waycross, won a measure of flitting
lame b\ advancing this suggestion, but
it never s -emed to get anywhere.
Mr. Crawley's notion was that north
Georgia ' noggert" ftom south Georgia
everything byway of state offices, ieg
i isiative appropriations, -ind so forth,
trial -was worth having, ami that di
vorce was ihe enl\ remedy guaranteed
• to cure!
lais time, however, the movement is
a iiedulcd io-get somewhere—whether
;t does or not. really!
indignation meetings and assemblies
Os protest have not yet been started in
noi.ii Georgia, of course -but the news
is young!
Ilu more oi less pictui esque Mr.
Kent, ot Montgomery county, host
known to fame, perhaps, as the author
of the bill from which came the new
(ounty of Wheeler, was di seated for
I* i lion to (he house of representa
tives by J. c Johnson.
Mr. Kent ran, of course, as a repre
sentative from Montgomery county, a
liie m-w county of Wheeler is not yet in
. existence, and will not be until after
s the eonstitutional amendment creut
. mg it is ratified by the people in No
. vember. Tit*' people of that section of
, Montgomery front which i« to com*,
i V ? VQt< d foi Kept, hut the voters
. of tlie old section overwhelmed them.
I Mr. Kent is very enterprising, how
eyei and extremely so. it appears—fm
lie now has i plan up his -locve t*.
whack off still anothi r slice of old
; MtmtgQ.mery, ami set. up mt additional
new vomit;., with Soperton as 'he coun
ty seat.
Mr. Keni. so the rumor goes, has *le
. tided that the new county shall be
. named "Cleveland. " in honor of the last
.1 Deinm-rstic president .if the I'nited
. Statis.
j Eventually. iiethaps. Montgomery
.. county wiil he represented on rite m:i|
• Ilf Georgia by a pale blue speck, about
. the side of a pinitead.
P.-forc pa-sing finally from th,- cm--
rm-nt upon the Morris-Patti tson con
troversy. it should be- recalled that a
young A lama attorney Carl Hulche
so», assembled, almost sipgle-handed
and .done, all -of the evidence by which
the Patterson allegations of fraud and
intimidation in Gilmer county were sus
tained.
Mt. Hutcheson spent several dies in
Gilmer going over the situation, look
ing up witnesses, taking their de'po.ri
tfiir.s. rind ;v ranging to hav tln ni pres
ent at th" it* aring in Atlanta.
Much i f the credit fin the Pat t* I son
1 vietoiy unquestionably goes to Hutehe
l son.
Itis ® BED
10 SEE OEM TOT
Child Killed by Car While
. Mother Is in Hospital—Par
ent Suffers Relapse.
Baby Grace Mayfield, killed by a •:
ley ear near the Federal prison, wi
! buried this afternoon, but her mm',
will not be able to follow jp,. : ...
w hite hearse to the cemetery sin ,
from her bed in Grady hospital * |.
■ site heard of her baby's death, ami w. .
, home to clasp the tiny body j n .
arms, hut after this she collapsed
Baby Grace, the three-year-old .
of Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Mayfield
live near thejtrisott, tried to f0i1,.,
elder sister across tlie trolley ,- ii: u
near the prison. Her sister di.l i
the baby, nor did the motorman V
. Vitrce. notice the,< hild in time to
• his car. The wheels struck h-t
killed her instantly.
Mrs. Mayfield was slowly rer*, V( .
from an operation at Grady h*. •
W hen the news of het baby 's demh
broken to her she pleaded piteously •
sh" might go home, ar.d tiie h.
authorities permitted /mr to le iv* s . ,
ing ht r home in an ambulant t
«as so broken by the shot k and '■
journey home that she will i,..: |,
to rise from her bed again for
. weeks.
FAINTS WHEN SHE Gi~TS
BUT $lO MONTH ALIMONY
A( Gl STA. GA.. S t .pp 9 . Ti]( ,
or nearing the announcement t r
■'ns to get only Sit) a month ail n,,,','-
caused Mrs. Ellen Rrvant ■> ,
Young divorcee, to faint in t
room here.
HERE IM REAL
DYSPEPSIA CURE
"Pape's Diapepsin” Settles
Sour. Upset Stomachs in
Five Minutes.
i
I'o some foods you cat hit hack
mste gtuul. but work badly : f<
■ ii.o stubborn lumps and cau* ( ..
Y.' 1 -' «°'paeh ' Now’; m '
Ms. H.. spept ic. jot this (town. I’ap,
Diapt pstn digests everything .tv J
nothing to sour and up set \ou Th. .
never was anything su safeL uuick
rmmly effective. Nn di : . . .
badly your stomach is di.-i.i u, ;, .
h,! fr , ha p |, y relit f in tie,- minutes.
, Pl' ast s ; .m most
stn ngtht ns and regulates y out sto
:ieh so you can eat your favorite food
without fear.
.Most remedies giv you r. lief smi
times —they are slow, bin nut -m.
Diapepsin is quick, positive and puts
your stomach in a healthy condition - .
, urn misery won’t come bark.
You feel different as soon as Diape;
' sm comes in contact w ith th.- stum.,. ■
aisti ess just vanishes— your ston t
gets sweet, no gases, no beiehins. no
eructations of undigested food, voirn
head clears and you feel fine.
1 <**> now. make the best investme. -
you ever made by getting a large ti.’
cent case of Papes Hiapi’psin f.um
drug store. You realize in fit. mr
how needless it is to sutf< i 1. mn n
digestion, dyspepsia or am - . iii.v
1 disordc .
Honest Advice to
Consumptives
Somehow there exists a \ast amouii* <.
siri piic’sm as io th. possibihI \ <-i ■h
mg consumption. Wr state none bi
laris, and arc sincere in what we assi- ,,:
If we were amici cd with tuberculosi.--
we should do precisely what wr ask oil;
‘‘ rs ,o do take Hekman’s Alteratv
promptly and faithfully. Th. reason w.
should do this and warrant wr l.;i\
asking all consumptives tn take H. is
we ftax e (hr reports of manv rccowro
“lie of which follows:
161 H SusouehannH. Ave . Phila . I'a
’’Gentlemen: For two \ears I was
flicted With !i»'ir.orrhage< *»f the lungs,
th.- numhrr totaled nearl> on.- .
<hti famil> piixsi. ian advised .-mother < i
pnai.’, as to lemain would prol»abl\ h»
* fatal. Howrvt r, I remained, and in i '•
i ruary of |j)o2. I was taken with a see.
attack of pneumonia. When •’ recover,
sufficient!) in walk about th< hou I
was left will) a frightful hacking ■ • sDi
which no medicine i had taken <nuld *■'
leviatc. It was at this iime. March. ' * -
i that I learned of and started taking IL
man’s Alteratix e. In a short tiinn in:
cough was gone and I was pronoun.’. <1
wcil. Sin<n that lime I have had
slight attacks of pneumonia and hav- rc
sorted to no other medicine t<« effe.
“I am at present in exeelhut health ai l
feel that as long as I ran obtain IL -
inan s Alterative 1 l ave no four of '■< •
sumption. I <an not speak too highl? f
the go kI it has done.”
• Signe.lt HOWARD L K L‘»'LZ
Kckman’s Alterative is effertivp m
bronchitis, asthma, hay fever, throat and
troubles, and in upbuilding the Ds
item. Does not contain poisons. «i»iaie/
or habit-formmg drugs. For sale I>\ a '
i .1■ ’ . ■ ■ • ■■ •
cowries, and writ.' Io Eckman labor
J’tor.', Philadelphia, la.. fur ad.iii i ,, n.tl
I > evidence.
MW TO CW HEAITHY FLESH
Jacobs’ Advise Use Os Samose.
j While thinness mav not b< • diw<-’
I'yd it is in. reality a . ouditton ir-‘
I’m < ' attention. I’nd. r inc nmni-'.-ii
[lp.rvwT of S iiDosr healthy, natu-a’ 1’
I i wrii >oon i • atfaeT.'-r.
Titis enrirkabH fle.Gwfoi ming
I -ir ngtmms' the s stem generally tin
j* builds up tlie ll< say w.-sues so
I good, natural p’uinpm >s results.
I An fl. -h is h. tt. r than *-
Impound of theory. Jacobs’ boliev.s* Tl
the best possible <•« n’f.mst ration of T
flesh-foi Hing power- of Samost- is <■
! ha'.- it Died by hi - cu-tomcrs ar.
induce them to use it. H offers io !
I<>r the Samos? in ”a>e it does n.M -
-at’sfaction. No strong’s proof I; ■:
is can b< giveh »»f his faiih ki It H
has se» n bund’, vos who weie \wak. ''
and sera w ii.v become plump. to.ni*i
long. S' . y through the us. of