Newspaper Page Text
IT R„IN DESERT,
URGES SUFFRAGE
I Yells Arizonans They Erred in
f Not Allowing Women Privi
f lege of Voting.
9 WIXSI.oW. ARIZ.. Sept. 18. At this
■ liinr . n the arid Arizona desert Colo-
B velt today reiterated his idea
B ;.o suffrage ought to be given to
B t)ip nom.-n of all states.
■I '..y,, u people of Arizona are progres
-9 FIVP and that is why you entered the
B von did. with a model consti-
9 tn p„ n that other states I know of
9 might d" well to pattern after." said
B , hP ,n. >nel. "But there is. one thing
B >)( ..; „ut of your constitution—you
9 r - tn give your women the right to
Ha v °t p
■ sn-A it has been tried in California.
9 Washington and other states. and
9 shf-xer the women have had the
9 .. £ h: of- iffrage they have voted the
9 right ".-it There Is no stronger Influ
-9 r ,. r fn the solution of the industrial
9 problem aS it ought to be worked out
9 than thfft of the women.
9 Th r Progressive party is committed
9 | P woman's suffrage. Let me make a
9 ( .r,.,::'tlnn Inside of a very few years
9 mu "hi see every state in the Union,
9 rm-'' .very state, giving the voting
9 j.-h.'.g. to its women. It is bound to
9 rnme. I hope Arizona will get in the
9 ' n f the procession and amend
9:•= 1 - itution before another year has
j me:”
•i Popular in Arizona.
9 While Roosevelt is not over-confident
M that he can carry off the three elec
-9 mra' 'n’es of Arizona, he is assured by
■ .ftp Progressive leaders of the state
9 i •' exactly what he will do. The
9 state, normally Democratic, has a
9 scong Progressive leaning and Roose
-9 'r t is personally popular in It.
9 I "ant to htteak Into the hitherto
9 s" id South." said Roosevelt on his
9 ft" 'ml train today. "It is time the old
9 line Democratic party voters woke up
m the fact that we are being mlsgov
-9 erneti hv the bosses. The South has a
9 ’ ■one 'lament of Progressive voters. I
9 shall t-v to get them Intodlne with our
9 party from all that I have been told.
■ ,ve are reasonably certain of carrying
KI two or three of the Southern states."
9 Roosevelt’s Southern itinerary takes
B him Into New Mexico, Alabama, Mis-
K slssippl, Izmfstana. South and North
9 fttmllna. Georgia, Tennessee and Ar
-9 Kansas. He goes to New Mexico to
-9 night and starts from there to Denver.
H after which he turns south again.
Bourne Cast Out by
G. 0. P. and Moose
K SALEM. ..reg., Sept. IX.—Jonathan
K Bourne. ( nited States senator from
■ "regun, who failed of renomination by
K Republicans, was defeated for the
j same office by the Progressives. A. E.
E ''" rk a Portland attorney, wag homi-
■ ' fnr t,le senatorship. A number
E f speakers denounced Bourne as not
B a true Progressive.
Eberhart Renamed
In Minnesota
II >r F’Al'L, MINN.. Sept. 18.—Ea>rly
| ’’‘’urns from the state-wide primary
E I yesterday today Indicate that Governor
■ merhart has been renominated, and
K tnat I nited States Senator Knute Nel
-9 s bpen indorsed for re-election.
Bl .eturns are coming in slowly. The polls
9 i'i not close until 9 o’clock at night.
MO FLIES IN BOHEMIA,
DECLARES U. S. CONSUL
II n ’V SK,XGTON^e P<- 18.-Thereare
K ’ speak of on the Bohemians,
9 a fifing to an official report turned
9 io the department of commerce and
| Wby the I’ntled States consul. .1.1
|l Bnttatn, stationed at Prague. Austria.
M •ew Yorker wrote asking about the
ft market for fly paper In Bohemia. The
9‘| r onsul replied:
|| It is not possible to work up an ex-
K ' ,ra( le in Bohemia, as there are
9 uffleient flies to exterminate. In
E ,he dining rooms, perhaps,
I •- are very few flies. Here screen
9 dl ’'_rs are unknown. There are no flies
9 e mieinia, because everything is made
1 1 Mone or concrete, and the
El are cleaned several times a
■ HR-V. ’
GIRL asleep three weeks
IS A PUZZLE TO PHYSICIANS
; I .J”’ h p’ ox ’ Sept- 19.—What has
■ I A .gnes Hea, daughter of
■ : 'rthur Hea, of Medford, and a student
K high school there, to remain
■ ' three weeks Is puzzling the doc-
B n H Brookline hospital, who are
| to awaken her.
9 ' malady, which is thought to have
9 t-u.-ded f r ,,| B a speH )lf hyHtel . i . l
E U| "’H the young woman in a ho-
K ’ Bar Harbor, where she was
■ rung the summer *she smiles con.
" ÜB,y. even when pins are stuck
■t'o her body.
FIRST TRAIN RIDE AT 89
WOMAN IN MISSOURI
11,1 LIN. MO.. Sept. 18. Mrs. Aman
-B<t yegrs old, had her fit st
board a railway train yesterday,
she made a trip from het home at
1 It.'. Mo., to Joplin. BO mile'
‘Sth she had lived within a feu
"f a railroad for several year .
■‘Ver befoi,. could be indued to
: V, I •>> rail. x
’• w s flip wh.w made with a non
iiuut Mhv was < H route tu -
Laii'., to live on a farm.
BUYING THE NEW DERBY
By HAL COFFMAN.
(wwr hat) | IS'
7-e- —N Z - \ O '"•> //TBi ■ maoauascar-
. / f —— U , *~— U /al block
o
/ Taese ARe. N A-Sk /this is Th»
. . A \ biPfecT FROM ] U " // B\ picMMU-Y PICKLE.
v , // ai \ Afghanistan / x ' * 1/ B \ i 'sea*. ot *E_
t 2 Lsl " ” z~;
; C A / IIL w.. }R. TflE OLb \
* // «l S' s' — k ■ £ ' T^W another. )
_'• . 9 ( S ’ 4T '' ) / Jl v/etK 7
/ a -* I se&sb J | ” I "
COUNTIES OF EAST
GEORGIA HARD HIT
BY CROP SHORTAGE
HARLEM, GA., Sept. 18.—The out
look for the farmer In Columbia county
is anything but encouraging. Reports
from all over the county indicate that
the cotton crop will be the smallest
ever produced. It is estimated by good
judges that the county will not average
more than three bales of cotton to the
horse.
The corn crop. too. will be short. In
many places the farmers will not get
more than enough corn to do them
until Christmas.
The bankers and merchants through
out this section are feeling blue over
the prospects, as.many farmers will not
be able, to meet the outstanding notes
held by banks.
The guano companies also will suf
fer. as many farmers who bought guano
to make the present crop will not make
enough to pay up the guano bills.
The same condition prevails in the
adjoining counties of Richmond, Jef
ferson, McDuffie and Warren.
There are many farmers who will nol
be able to plant another year, and al
ready many are making preparations
to leave the farms and move to cities to
seek employment.
MARRIAGE TO A JAPANESE
DELAYED. KILLS HERSELF
HOUSTON. TEXAS. Sept. IS.—Be
cause the courts were slow in granting
her a divorce so she could marry her
Japanese suitor. Mrs. Ida Shawley. a
magazine writer, committed suicide
here.
An Atlanta Man Tells It
Backache makes life a ATLANTA PROOF
burden. Headaches, dizzy \.V, H
spells and distressing uri- A X'/-9tV¥ \\l I T , d j . r
j- j \ 1 estimony ot a Kesident oj
narv disorders are a con- \ tW. nit/
stunt trial. Take warning! ’
Suspect kidney trouble. UY 'OWf William K. .i<»iin>..n. e.irp-nhT.
K J HiS Richardson street. Atlant.’!
neyremedy. W! u/r A ! (i «- —: ‘ I have used Doan's
Take an Atlanta mans A 1 I ...
. r • > f —r 7 Sx Kidney rills on two Occasions
word for it. Learn from \' \ ' W K '
one who has found relief \\ \
from the same suffering. \ A th i,,,.-:,
Get Doan’s Kidney Pills LZjy A the ki.lnei secretions were
—the Same that Mr. John- too frequent and broke nn rest
son had. at I noticed a change for
Atlanta testimony is the better in my condition soon
good proof. It’S local and .. Every p Hlu , e Tcl/s a Stol , Hfter using Doan 's Kidney Pills,
can be veritied. ' ami before long I was well.”
j _ “When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name” j
A DOAN ’S KIDNEY PILLS <gk
k ‘ S ° W by Dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y., Proprietors
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.WEDNESDAY. SHi’l K.MBER IR. 1912.
LOVE LETTERS TO GIRL
OF NINETEEN CAUSE
MINISTER TO RESIGN
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 18.—Love letters
written to a young unmarried woman
and containing such ardent assertions as
"I love you better than Jesus," have
caused the Rev. W. T. Dunn, father of
eight children, to resign from the pas
torate of the Dewey Avenue Methodist
Episcopal church, in Granite City, and to
withdraw from the Southern Illinois con
ference of the church.
The letters were written to Miss Es
telle Massey. nineteen years old. and were
unsigned. The young woman’s mother,
Mrs. Joseph Mikschl. of Granite City,
found the letters and took them to the
Rev. Dr E H. Knight, of Edwardsville,
superintendent of the district. A meet
ing of the R*v. Dunn. Dr. Knight. Miss
Massey and Mrs. Mikschl followed, and
the pastor admitted having written the
letters, Dr Knight said.
LODGE ROOM SLAYER
ACQUITTED BY JURY
ANDERSON. S. C„ Sept. 18.—A ver
dict of not guilty was returned here
late yesterday In the trial of Emmian
Bagwell, charged with killing Miltoh
Taylor here last July.
Bagwell shot and mortally wounded
Taylor when the former was being
initiated into the Order of the Wood
men of the World. He became excited
when Taylor and other members of the
degree team began firing pistols. Rush
ing to his coat, he secured a revolver
and fired several shots. Taylor was
the only’ person fatally wounded. Be
fore death Taylor requested that Bag
well should not be prosecuted.
PEDDLERS, VICTIMS
OF NEGRO BANDITS,
RETURN TO HOMES
SAVANNAH, GA„ Sept. 18—With
their clothes torn by bushes and briars,
and covered with mud, Leon Elsher and
P. Gorowitch, the two peddlers who
were held up and robbed of their sam
ple trunks by negroes near Dorchester,
are now in Savannah.
Frightened by the shots fired by the
•negro bandits. Fisher and Gorowlßih
fled from the wagon into the woods It
was daylight before they found a hu
man habitation and secured food and
rest. They were afraid to go back to
•the road, for fear of meeting some of
the robbers. So they plunged directly
into the deep woods. All sense of di
rection they lost, and how far their
wanderings may have taken them they
have no idea.
They declare they walked and ran
from 8 o’clock in the evening until abou>
4:30 o’clock the following morning.
No arrests have been made.
17 KILLED, 50 INJURED
BY WRECK IN ENGLAND
LIVERPOOL, Sept. 18.—The death
list in the wreck of the Liverpool Ex
press on the London and -Northwestern
railway near here last night reached
seventeen today, with the prospect that
it would reach twenty within 24 hours.
Fifty were injured.
The train had just passed over the
long bridge spanning the Mersey and
was running down an inclined stretch
of track when it left the rails
MOULTRIE PLANS
COTTON CARNIVAL
AND BARGAIN WEEK
MOULTRIE. GA., Sept. 18. Moultrie
business men are enthusiastic over the
proposed cotton carnival and bargain
week, beginning September 23.
The advertising campaign, which will
take place on the 19th, will be a novel
one. The business men will furnish their
cars and a complete canvass of the en
tire county will he made with circulars
and other advertising matter.
ELECTRIC LIGHTS FOR DARIEN.
DARIEN, Sept. 18. - The Darien
lee and Light Company has contracted
with the council to light the city with
electricity. The machinery has been
ordered and is expected at once. Men
are here to put the plant in operation
as soon as it arrives. William H. Blount
wijl hpve charge of the lights.
As soon as the streets are lighted the
work will begin on installing the lights
in the homes of the people.
Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company
Atlanta
Just Bargains
We are very careful with the use of the word Bar
gain. we never use it without good reason. So that
when we do label merchandise as bargains we draw no
line between our viewpoint and yours.
You will quickly see that these values are bar
gains. They will be found in Wash Goods Depart
ment.
Renaissance Squares and Scarfs
ißxiß-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly 50c at 29c
32X32-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly SI.OO at 65c
ißxs4-inch Renaissance Scarfs, formerly $1.25 at 69c
18x54-inch Renaissance Scarfs, formerly $1.50 at 89c
30X30-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly $1.50 at sl.lO
30X30-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly $2.25 at $1 50
54X54-inch Renaissance Squares, formerly $4.50 at $3.75
Sheets and Pillow Cases
/
They are at these prices because they will have to
be laundered once before they will be as good as those
at regular prices.
45x36-wich hemstitched Pillow Cases, formerly 22 i-2c at 19c
45x36-1 nch hemstitched Pillow Cases, formerly 27 i-2c at 23c
Bix9O-inch hemstitched Pepperell Sheets, formerly 95c at 79c
72x99-inch hemstitched Anchor Sheets, formerly 90c at 79c
Bix9O-inch hemstitched Pepperell Sheets, formerly 95c at 80c
90X99-inch hemstitched Pepperell Sheets, formerly $1 at 85c
Umbrellas and Fancy Parasols
A little lot of colored silk—solid colors—umbrellas,
with paragon frames should quickly disappear now
that they are half price.
Those that were $1.50 are 75c
'Those that were $3.00 are $1.50
Those that were 53.50 are $1.75
Those that were $5.00 are $2.50
And black silk umbrellas with paragon frames'
and natural wood handles—often mounted with gold
are converted into extraordinary bargains by these
changes in prices.
$2.50 Umbrellas are SI.OO $5.00 Umbrellas are $3.00
$4.00 Umbrellas are $2.00 $6.50 Umbrellas are $3.50
$4.50 Umbrellas are $2.50 57.50 Umbrellas are $3.75
All the richly colored and flowered and stripedand
and bordered parasols, with their beautifully stained
carved wood handles—parasols that it would be wise
to buy noW and put away for next spring—are marked
at exactly
Half Price
«
Chainberliii=Jolinson=Diißose Co.
FDR DANDRUFF, FALLING Hi OR
ITCHY SMLF-25 CENT DANDEDINE
Save your hair! Danderine destroys dandruff and stops
falling hair at once—G rows hair, we prove it.
If you care for heavy hair, that glis
tens with beauty and is radiant with
lift# has an incomparable softness and
is fluffy and lustrous, you must use
Danderine, because nothing else accom
plishes so much for the hair.
Just one application of Knowlton’s
Danderine will double the beauty
of your hair,, be ides it imme
diately dissolves every particle, of
dandruff; you can not have nice, heavy,
healthy hair if you have dandruff. This
destructive scurf robs the hair of its
luster, its strength and its very life, and
if not overcome it produces a fever
ishness and Itching of the scalp; the
hair roots famish, loosen and die; thfn
(Advert
New York
the hair falls out fast.
If your hair has been neglected and
is thin, faded, dry. scraggy or too oily,
don't hesitate, but get a 25 cent bottle
of Knowlton's Danderine at any drug
store or toilet counter; apply a little
as directed and ten minutes after you
will say this was the best investment
you ever made.
We sincerely believe, regardless of
everything else advertised, that if you
desire soft, lustrous, beautiful hair and
lots of it—no dandruff—no itching
scalp and no more falling hair—you
must use Knowlton’s Danderine. If
eventually—why not now? A 25 cent
bottle will truly amaze you.
Isement.»
Paris
7