Newspaper Page Text
GOVERNMENT begins
probe of postoffice
CHIEFS AT SAVANNAH
SAVANNAH, GA., Sept. 16.—T0 [
thoroughly sift charges which have
W n made against Postmaster Marcus
c Baker, Jr.. Assistant Postmaster W.
(■ Greene and Postoffice Inspector A.
' Knight. Inspector L. A. Johnson, of
Washington. D. C„ has started an of
ficial investigation.
Tl-e investigation is not open to the
blic. Johnson explains that unless
fhp proof develops acts of a criminal
nature which will call for the intcr-
TPntl on of a Federal grand jury, he
conduct the probe quietly.
postmaster Baker is away on his va
cation. He has been recalled, however,
bv a telegram. •
The investigation probably will last
ten days or two weeks.
What We Never Forget
according to science, are the things as
" Lated with our early home lite, such
f Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, that mother
grandmother used to cure our burns,
2! u«' scalds. sores, skin eruptions, cuts,
/rains or bruises. Forty years of
, res prove its merit. Unrivaled for
pilesT corns or cold sores. Only 25 cents
at ail druggists.
(Advertisement.)
■Were all medicines as meritorious
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
n>arrh<>ea Remedy the world would be
much better off and the percentage of
Offering greatly decreased,” writes
WnrNav Scott, of Temple, Ind. For
’■ a " e bv all dealers.
(Advertisement.)
To flavor fancy food deliciously use
SAVER’S PURE FLAVORING EX
TRACTS. Vanilla. Lemon, etc. Thir
teen highest awards and medals.
(Advertisement.)
WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH
TICKETS ON SALE.
To September 19; $lO round trip;
mod ten days, on Thursdays. City
Ticket office, 88 Peachtree. SEA
BOARD.
< Advertisement.)
NOTICE.
September 16, 1912.
The annual meeting of the stockhold
er' of the Atlanta and West Point Rail
road Company will be held at the office
of the company, room 49 In the At
lanta Terminal Station, Atlanta, Ga.. at
]» o’clock noon, Tuesday, October 15,
1912. W. H. BRUCE. Secretary.
(Advertisement.)
CALOMEL
GOiNG OUT OF USE
A Safer, More Reliable Remedy Has
Taken Its Place in the Drug
Store and in the Home.
A few years ago, men, women and
children took calomel for a sluggish
liver and for constipation. They tQok
risks when they did so, for calomel is
a dangerous drug. Your family doctor
will be -he first to tell you this if he.
discovers you dosing yourself with cal
omel.
But the drug trade has found a safer,
more pleasant remedy than calomel in
Dodson’s Liver Tone.
k Atlanta druggists tell us that their
drug stores sell Dodson's Liver Tone
in practically every case of bilious
ness and liver trouble where calomel
used to be taken.
p Dodson 1 ' Liver Tone is a vegetable
liver tonic that is absolutely harmless
for children and grown people. It sells
for 50 c's. a bottle and Is guaranteed to
be entirely satisfactory by all Atlanta
f'rugglets, who will refund your money
with a smile if It does not give quick,
gentle relief without any of calomel’s
unpleasant after-effects.
(Advertisement.)
I How Much Have I
You Saved? I
That question is K
being asked more ||
and more by em- ||
ployers. H
From your abil
ity in h a n d 1 i n g ||
your own income, ||
your ability in B
other directions is H
gauged.
Phe savings ac- ||
count gives you a ||
I standing i n the ||
business wor 1d B
that nothing else |a
can give.
Start now to save ||
and you will soon ||
earn a higher place ■
in the confidence’ffl
of vour business |g
world
Every Dollar Deposited H
Earns More Dollars
Wp Pay 4% on Savings
CITY SAVINGS BANK I
15 E Alabama St.
MISS FARRAR ND!
ILL, SHS FRIEND
Has Been in Sanitarium, But
Has Recovered and Will
Sing in Opera Soon.
By CHARLES HENRY MELTZER.
LONDON, Sept. 16.—What are the facts ,
concerning Geraldine Farrar? For some
weeks past wild stories have been cur
rent. In Paris and Milan the popular
prima donna was reported to be so ill
that there was little nr no hope of saving
her. The announcement that she had
been under treatment is a Munich sanita
rium seemed to give substance to this tale.
\\ hen it became known that she had can
celled all engagements for her projected
concert tour her friends, of course, sup
posed her ease was desperate.
I have learned, however, from an Im
portant employe of the Metropolitan that
Miss Farrar had recovered.
“I saw Miss Farrar only a few days ago
in Munich." said my informant. “She
was then living at the Hotel De Russie
and looked bright and well. It is a fact
that she was lately in a sanitarium, and
at her doctor’s advice, some weeks ago.
she cancelled her concert engagements,
but she assured me she was now- in per
fect health and there appears to be no
doubt that she will be able to appear on
the second night of the approaching opera
season; not in New York, but possibly in
New Haven."
In confirmation of his optimistic state
ments. my informant pointed out that
Miss Farrar’s mother had arrived in
Paris.
“Is it likely,” he concluded, “that she
would leave her daughter’s side if the
reports you mention were justified?"
On the other hand, about a week ago
an artist who till lately would have been
generally accepted as an authority gave
quite alarming news about Miss Farrar
to one of the most Influential persons con
nected with grand opera in America. The
truth may He between the two extremes.
PAY FOR SOLDIERS
IS LONG OVERDUE;
ARMY FLAT BROKE
If regular soldiers had a vote the per
son or persons responsible for adjourning
congress before the army pay appropria
tion was signed and sealed would feel the
wrath of Uncle Sam’s defenders from
Seattle to Key West. For the soldiers
have not received their pay for some time
since It was due, and the army Is flat
broke.
"There Isn't enough coin in the Sev
enteenth to start a penny crap game,”
protested one private from the post today.
“We got a crackerjack baseball team,
too, but what’s the use of baseball when
you've got nothin’ to bet? We got one
satisfaction. The next game's with the
team out at the Federal pen and tlaem
guys are worse broke than us.”
Business firms catering to the especial
demands of the soldiery are feeling the
lack of government coin. too. But they
are consoling themselves with the hope
that when the pay does come It will ar
rive In a bunch. And the night after the
paymaster shows up will be SOME
night. «
WESLEYAN OPENS WEDNESDAY.
MACON, GA., Sept, 16. —The Wes-
Jeyan college, Macon. Ga.. will have a
great opening next Wednesday morn
ling at 10 o’clock. One of the largest
[bodies of students will assemble in the
[chapel that has ever met in the history
[of the institution. Professor M. I.
I Brittain, state superintendent of edit
i cation, will deliver the address.
’ >l l " l l " ■ 1 ' ' “ ~~ ■ ... . - , „ . ■ - -.W™ - T - -T. ’
i j ~ " 1 11 """ "
UNUSUAL OFFER
’197" PIANO
II
. ■■■ ' '
Sold by Others at $350.00t0 $400.00
One carload of new pianos was shipped us, 15 in num
ber, to sell at this wholesale price, $197.00; only a few
pianos are left after our last week’s sale. These will go
with a rush, as such values will attract the attention of
out-of-town dealers. Every piano guaranteed for 10
years. Stool and scarf not included, on easy terms of
Z ! ,00 ONLY THE REMAINING PIANOS $l5O
DOWN WILL BE SOLD AT THIS PRICE | WEEKLY
I,
I Dollar Down, Dollar Week, Buys a Used Piano.
If You Cannot Call, Write. Full Description
I |l Will Be Sent You Immediately
STORY&CLARKPIANOCO.
j 61 North Forsyth Street, Atlanta, Ga.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 16. 1912.
AGRICULTURE BEING
REVIVED IN GEORGIA,
SAYS DR. A. M. SOULE
ATHENS, GA.. Sept. 16.—The Geor
gia College of Agriculture will open on
September 18. with the assurance of tire
largest attendance in its history, in
spite of the fact that last year showed
an increase of 43 per cent over the
previous one.
Dr. A. M. Soule, president, has just
arrived from Detroit, where he ad
dressed the annual meeting of the
American Bankers association by invi
tation Dr. Soule says that there is
abundance of evidence that the state of
Georgia is undergoing a.revival in ag
i riculture. This is attested by the at
tendance of the farmers institutes, the
large number enrolled in the corn and
tomato clubs, the thousands of inqui
ries coming to the college for informa
tion about better grades of stock, about
how to grow other groups than cotton
and corn, and about modern methods in
various lines, and also by the report of
success from those leading the way in
agricultural advancement.
Plans are being launched for cover
ing the state with institutes for uni
versity extension work in various lines
to reach more farmers than ever be
fore.
FIRST COTToTsTEAMER
SAILS FROM BRUNSWICK
BRUNSWICK. GA., Sept. 16.—The
first cotton steamer to leave this port
this season sailed yesterday for Liv
erpool when the Belgian, of the Leyland
line, departed with 8,000 bales and a
big cargo of naval stores Several oth
er steamers now loading cotton for
foreign ports will sail during the next
few days. *
WOMAN RACINGACROSS
SEA TO SURGEONS DIES
PLYMOUTH, ENGLAND, Sept. 16.
Emma Tohrmann, of Cincinnati, Ohio,
lost a race with death today tvhen she
died of cancer of the stomach on board
the liner Kron Prinzess Cecilie, upon
which she was proceeding to Germany
for treatment. The body was not re
moved from the ship here, but was
taken on to Germany.
GLEANSEYOURLIVERANDBDWELS
WITH DELICIOUS "SYRUP OF FIGS”
Removes the sour bile, gases and clogged-up waste
without gripe or nausea. No headache, indiges
tion, constipation, biliousness or coated tongue.
Foul breath, coated tongue, dull,
throbbing headache, stomach sour and
full of gases, indigestion, biliousness
and a sallow complexion, mean that
your thirty feet of bowels are clogged
with waste matter; that these drain
age organs of the body are obstructed;
liver stagnant and stomach full of
poisonous gases, sour bile and undi
gested fermenting food not properly
carried off.
Most of our ills are caused by const!,
pated bowels. We all need a laxative
sometimes; nobody can doubt that. The
only question is: Which one is the
best? and that isn’t a question any
more. Syrup of Figs, being composed
entirely of luscious figs, senna and aro
matics. must act in a harmless, gentle
and natural way. Syrup of Figs can
be constantly used without injury. Its
POST MASCOT IS
IN GUARDHOUSE
“Fiddler” Has Been Perfectly
Good Dog. But Surgeon Fears
Pet May Have Rabies.
It's lonesome on the reservation at
Fort McPherson these days. The reg
iment is all there, and there’s plenty of
baseball, but Fiddler and his friends
are all in close confinement.
Fiddler is the regimental mascot and
has been for twelve years. He is a
brown dog with a tail that never stops
wagging, and he is the best chum of
every man and child on the reserva
tion, He is really the property of Ser
geant Miller, an old Indian fighter, who
picked Fiddler up in Cuba years ago.
But every man at the post is his
friend.
No; it isn’t Fiddler’s fault that he Is
locked up like a refractory private. It’s
because a certain mongrel pup went
mad and chewed the fingers of ten
soldiers a few weeks ago and the sur
geon thinks perhaps the pup bit all the
other dogs before his head was ampu
tated. So Fiddler and all the rest of
the four-legged pets of the post are
held to see what will happen. They
don’t like It, as the chorus of doleful
howls informs every one within ear
shot of the post.
There are lots of dogs, company
mascots and private pets, at the post,
but Fiddler is the favorite. He en
listed in Cuba, has been to the Philip
pines, the Texas border, back to Cuba
and to Washington and home again. In
fact, wherever the Seventeenth goes
there goes Fiddler. He is getting ad
vanced in age, but he isn’t too old to
mascot successfully. And when Fid
dler answers the last roll call there’ll
be a funeral at the post which even a
colonel might envy.
action is the action of fruit —of eating
coarse food—of taking exercise. It is
a true and effective liver and bowel
cleanser and regulator.
Most folks dread physic—they shrink
from the taste, and after effects. Syrup
of Figs is delicious, and. besides, you
don’t realize you have taken anything
until morning, when all the clogged up
waste of the system is gently but thor
oughly moved on and out of the bowels
without griping or weakness.
-Ask your druggist for the full name.
"Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna."
This is the old reliable and only gen
uine Refuse, with contempt, any oth
er Fig Syrup recommended as good.
They are imitations meant to deceive
you. Read the label carefully and look
for the name California Fig Syrup
Company.
(Advertisement.)
GEN. GORDON’S WIDOW
BENEFICIARY OF WILL;
ESTATE WORTH $750,000
SAVANNAH, GA., Sept. 16 —General
William M. Gordon left an estate val
ued at approximately $750,000. The
will has been admitted to probate In
common form in the court of the ordi
nary of Chatham county. Mrs. Nellie
K. Gordon, the widow, and Major IV.
W. Gordon, Jr., and Colonel H. Arthur
Gordon have qualified as executors and
executress, respectively.
General Gordon bequeathed his estate
to Mrs. Gordon during her lifetime. At
her death the five children are to be
come tenants of the estate and share
alike. No inventory or appraisement
of the estate was filed with the will.
The estate consists largely of real es
tate. Most of this is in and around
Savannah. The general owned exten
sive farming interests in Jefferson
county, however.
MUST PRODUCE UNION
CARD TO PAWN TOOLS
NEll YORK, Sept. 16.—A new rul
ing, put into effect by members of the
New York Pawnbrokers association,
provides that hereafter when any me
chanic brings in a set of tools to pledge
he must show his union card.
Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Co.
ATLANTA
This FulTGrown Juvenile Department
Third Floor
Is Ready With Whatever Is NEW for Misses
And Children
The Juvenile Department shows as one with authority the
new styles in suits, in dresses and in coats.
It shows these things with the authority that comes of expe
rience, of knowledge, of good tatse, of specialized effort.
Young folk are its only thought.
A mother with an only daughter could not be more painstak
ing in her selection than we have been with the hundreds and hun
dreds of suits and dresses and coats that makeup this fall stock.
We mention this not in the spirit of boasting, but that moth
ers may get some idea of the real help that the Juvenile Depart
* ment can be to her this fall. We mean those mothers who wish
to dress their daughters with some smartness, some individu
ality--with some thought.
And right now the Juvenile Department is spendidly and
beautifully ready to meet the demands of such mothers. There
is newness and freshness on every side ; styles that accentuate
youthful lines, colorings that glorify bright eyes and lovely faces,
serviceable, dependable materials that presage winter comfort
and satisfaction-—in suits, in dresses, in coats for school and
every day wear and for those occasions when you and daughter
both want something a little different.
But these are only generalities, the spirit, the atmosphere
of the Juvenile Department' We must call your particular at
tention to the
Display of Junior Suits
Never has young Miss Atlanta had such flattering attention
paid to her and to her alone. It is as if her suit were the only
consideration of one great, big store. And it draws no line, ex
cept that of good taste and accepted style, as to what her suit
shall be.
Here are the plain and very serviceable blue serges, the beau
ty of which lies in the fashioning and the tailoring, here are the
“roughish” materials often made into jaunty Norfolks, the more
dressy Bedford cords and velvets and corduroys. One unusual
suit of blue Bedford cord. It has the Robespierre collar and
sash. The coat is belted in EFFECT but not in reality. The but
tons are crystal, the buttonholes—it buttons to the side—are
finished in green, an attractive color combination. The skirt,
otherwise plain, has a wide bias fold of self material.
A corded velvet suit of distinction is in the new taupe
shade. It shows the cutaway coat modified for Misses’ wear.
The back is belted, the long revers and the cuffs are trimmed
with black satin and finished with white braid, the skirt has a
cluster of plaits at the sides.
But your visit to the Third Floor will show you two hun
dred instead of two worthy of special notice.
Chamberlin Johnson Dußose Co.
W. R, KING CHANGES ROADS,
JOHNSON CITY, TENN., Sept. 16.
W. R. King has accepted an appoint
ment as second auditor of the Georgia
80M SLUGGISH, LIVER TORPID,
HEMACHT.BILIOUS’-’CASCARETS”
No odds how bad your liver, stomach
or bowels; how much your head aches;
how miserable and uncomfortable you
are from constipation, Indigestion, bil
iousness and sluggish intestines—you
always get the desired results with Cas
carets.
Clean vour stomach, liver and bow
els tonight; end the headache, bilious
ness, dizziness, nervousness, sick, sour,
CANDY
IO CENT BOXES-ANY DRUG STORE
• ALSO 25 th SO CENT BOXES- _—
(Advertisement.)
NEW YORK
and Florida railroad, with headquar
ters at Augusta. Mr. King has been
here with the Carolina, Clinchfield and
Ohio railroad for five years.
gassy stomach, backache and all other
distress; relieve your torpid liver and
constipated bowels of all the sour bile
gases and clogged-up waste which it
producing the misery.
A 10-cent box of Cascarets keeps
your head clear, stomach sweet, liver
and bowels regular and you feel cheer
ful and bully for months. Don't forget
the children—their little insides need a
good, gentle, cleansing, too.
5
PARIS