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HEAT victim beats and
TRIES TO SHOOT WIFE'
NEW YORK. Sept. 19. —Driven mad
t>v the sight of water, Herman Dun
kPli. overcome with heat, beat his wife
w itn a dipper and shot at her, when a
crowd gathered in front of his home.
He was captured after a battle.
t ,
tax collector robbed.
GADSDEN, ALA., Sept. 19.—While
a ttending a tent show at night pick
pockets stole sl4 from Tax Collector
X. M. Gallant. A sharp knife or razor
na.- used to cut away the hip pocket.
Xo arrests have been Tnade.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh flint can not be
cu-ed hr Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
J-’.’ .1 CHENEY A CO.. Toledo, ().
Wo the undersigned, have known F. J.
, ii»*y for the last 1., years, and believe
I,perfeetl,' honorable in nil business
.rpnsnctions and financially able to carry
n nv obligations made bv his firin
WAI.DING. KINNAX & MARVIN.
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internallv,
siting directly upon the blood and mucous
nn-faees of the system. Testimonials sent
free. Price 75c per hottie. Sold by all
Iruggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation
BREADTH of Service
In addition to providing customers with abso
lute safety and painstaking, individual service,
the Management wall be pleased, at any time, to
render to those seeking advice on financial mat
ters, such assistance as is within their power.
This interest in the welfare of our depositors has
always been so closely allied with our regular
routine work, as to be easily classed as a very
important and influential branch of our service.
Such intelligent advice combined with our
ability to financially assist our customers in the
promotion and development of their business en
terprises recommends this bank to those who
need or desire HELP in their business.
THIRD National Bank
Capital and Surplus $1,700,000.00
FRANK HAWKINS President JOH NW. GRA NT . Vice President
JOS. A. M’CORD Vice President THOMAS C. ERWIN Cashier
R. W. BYERS Assistant Cashier W. B. SYMMERS . Asst. Cashier
A. M. BERGSTROM Asst. Cashier A. J, HANSELL Asst. Cashier
Your Twenty-Year Policy
Can you change it into a fourteen-year, without in
creasing your premiums and without their being any
lien or indebtedness against the policy itself ? You can
do this with a Twenty Payment Life, Guaranteed Div
idend Policy, issued by The Southern States Life Ins.
Co. This policy also contains the liberal disability
clause written only by this Company, under which you
receive in cash one-fourth of the amount insured, in
case of total disability, and your policy is kept in force
for the remainder, without further payments on your
pari, so long as you continue disabled.
Any agent of The Southern States Life will be
pleased to explain to you the attractive policies as is
sued by this Company, without your assuming any
obligation.
General Agents wanted for unfilled territory.
Local Agents wanted in ail territories.
Co-operation of the Company, with their agents, together
with their unmatched policies, make agents’ contracts with
The Southern States Life profitable.
The Southern States Life Insurance Co.
a ATLANTA,
A 7 “
GA.
W. S. McLEOD,
Supervisor of Agents
wilmer l. moore Fre S . for State of Georgia
——w—c—■■» ■w— gull an uyn———
A RESERVE FUND
'pl!E prol’<•-sional or busities-; man who keeps a Savings
* Account separate from his regula.’ business account, and
deposits Five or Ten. Dollars each week or month, will be
surprised to see how quicklx he will accumulate a good
sized Reserve Fund. Tim clerk who -aves systematically
will soon have a fund that will start him in a business of
his own.
Start a Reserve Fund with this
Bank ioday 4 per cent Interest
paid in all deposits.
Georgia Savings Bank & Trust Co
GRANT BUILDING
OPEN SATURDAY AFTERNOONS FROM 4 TO fi
TROOPERS CHARGE
BUDAPEST RIOTERS;
24 ARE NEAR DEATH
BUDAPEST, Sept. 19. —Twenty-four |
person? will probably die as a result ot I
street rioting by members of the anti !
g ivernment political party last night |
and early today.
The parliament building is under
heavy military guard and soldiers pa
trol the streets. The city is virtually I
under martial law. j
Although 80 men and women were I
arrested so participation in the. fight- |
ing, whii’li followed a Socialist mass 1
meeting last nigiit, all but 37 were
liberated today with a reprimand and
warning.
A majority of the seriously crippled
were trampled by cavalry horses. The
mob packed the streets leading to pa -
liament hall so tightly that they could
not move The troop rs charged sev
eral times upon the rioters before the
edge of th'> crowd gave way and the
mass of people dissolved into side t
streets.
Many of the central streets around,
the boulevards were -o litte ed with
debris today that traffic had to be dt-«
verted until troops could clean them up, '
THE ATLANTA AND NEWS. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 19. 1912
FIANCEE DEFENDS
ALLEN CLAN CHIEF
"Every Man Has to Draw His
Gun,” Says Pretty Sunday
School Teacher.
i
ROANOKE. VA.. Sept. 19.—She
teaches Sunday school in the little
Dunkard church over the Carolina line
from Hillsville. Va.. and the children
adore her. She’s pretty with the whole
some prettiness of the mountain coun
try. and gentle (with the gentleness of
the educated mountain woman. But
| she stands today as the sole defender
of *\Ves" Edwards, accused as the most
| desperate gunman of the "Allens," ar
| rested in lowa as one of the slayers in
I the Hillsville court house tragedy, and
1 believed by many to be on a swift way
to the prison death house.
She alone defends him Maude Irola
who was engaged to marry him before
he fled with his clansmen.on that dan
gerous night after Judge Thornton
Massie had been shot to death on the
bench and Sheriff Webb and Conpnon
wealth Attorney Foster killed.
She Believes in "Gun Rights.”
She defends him. not as a Northern
woman would do— not saying that he
is innocent, and that, because he is
tender toward her. he could not do so
terrible a deed. She says merely this:
"Do 1 think he was guilty? Why. 1
don’t see how that can make any dif
ference. Once in a while every man
who thinks anything of himself has to
draw his gun, and you can’t always
tell who's right and who’s wrong.
"Anyhow," she adds, "whether Wes’
was right or wrong. I belonged to him,
and. right or wrong. I’ll stick to him.”
It is not one of the dull, half-clois
tered mountain girls who speaks; it is
one of those who have gone out of the
mountains, have gained independence,
even a certain culture. But the blood
of the mountain clans will always tell.
She would teach her Sunday school
pupils the law of the outer world, but
she would tell her sweetheart, it seems,
to kill whomsoever offends his honor.
Didn't Betray Them.
They brought Maude Iroler back from
Des Moines with Wesley Edwards and
Sidna Allen, who were arrested in the
lowa city after being hunted by Bald
win detectives for three months.
The girl—she is only nineteen —de-
nied, almost threateningly, that she
had bestrayed the fugitives. She had
merely gone to Des Moines to wed Ed
wards and show that her faith in him
was supreme. Nobody doubts that this
is true.
"1 didn't tell a soul where I was go
ing.” she said in explaining her flight
from Hillsville. "My mother thought I
was going over to Mount Airy to see
Aunt Jane, I couldn’t have any way
of knowing I was followed, could I? I
allow it just had to be. I don't think
I’ll be a witness, because I don't know
anything about that shooting.”
"DONE WITH MEIV”SAYS
WIFE OF EX-CONVICT
ST. LOUIS. Sept. 19.—"1 am done
with men forever, and particularly with
pillars of the church,” asserted Mrs.
Olga Mayer Siebold, wife No. 1 of
Frank Siebold former convict and al
leged bigamist. Mrs. Siebold wept as
she told how Siebold had wooed her
from behind prison bars, had married
her February 8. after having been re
leased from the penitentiary at Jeffer
son City. January 14. then deserted her,
it is said, to marry Miss Mary Malone,
i Callaway county school teacher. Au
gust 27.
"He fooled me all the way through.”
she declared. "I married him to give
him a new start, and the only fault he
had with me was that I would not sell
my property ami give him the money.”
MACON’S BIG NEW HOTEL
TO BE OPENED JANUARY 1
MAl’oX, GA., Sept. 19.—The Demp
sey. Macon's new ten-story hotel, man
aged by R. S. Hubbell, formerly of the
Waldorf-Astoria, in New York city,
will have a formal opening on January
1. The contractors today notified the
directors that the hotel would be ready
on that date. The Dempsey is the ho
tel built from money, subscribed by
1.100 citizens of Macon, and is regard
ed here somewhat as public enterprise.
NEGRO WHO GIVES AWAY
SSOO IS PUT IN ASYLUM
NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—William
N< wsome, a negro, walked down First
avenue distributing $5 bills, to "make
people 'hink well of his race.” He dis
tributed SSOO and is now in an asylum.
ICO WITNESSES IN GOFORTH CASE
GADSDEN, ALA.. Sept. 19.—1 tis
doubtful if the trial of Wiley Goforth,
for the murder of Nicholas Shentzen.
can be completed this week. Most of
yesterday afternoon and today was
taken up in arguments of the attorneys
representing the defense foi- a continu
ation of the case and of selecting a
jury. There are about 100 witnesses
to be examined.
The Men Who Succeed
as heads of large enterprises are men
of great energy. Success, today, de
mands health. To ail is to fail. It’s
utter folly for a man to endure a weak,
run-down, half-alive condition when
Electric Bitters will put him right on
hi:; feet in short order. "Four bottles
did me more real good than any other
medicine I ever took," writes ('has. B.
Allen, Sylvania. Ga. “After years of
suffering with rheumatism, liver trou
ble. stomach disorders and deranged
kidneys. I am again, thanks to Electric
Bitters sound and well.” Try them
(inly 50 rents at all druggists. ***
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Is there anything you could
I use a WANT AD for today? Both
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JEWISH PRISONERS
IN FEDERAL PRISON
OBSERVE HOLY DAY
Jewish prisoners in the Federal pris
on are planning an elaborate observ
ance of Yom Kippur, the Day of Atone
ment, second of the Jewish holy days,
falling this year on Saturday.
Atlantans of the Jewish faith have
been in the habit of aiding the pris
oners in their observance of the holi
days. A set of resolutions has been
drawn up by the prisoners expressing
their appreciation of the efforts of co
religionists in assisting in the celebra
tion of New Year. September 12 and
13. The resolutions are:
Resolved, That thanks are due to
the co-religionists of Atlanta for
providing meals during the holi
days—a custom that is traditional
of our race; to Mrs. Springer, who
favored us with her presence at our
services: to Dr. David Marx for the
delivery of an instructive lecture on
Friday, the second day of the feast,
and to Mr. Rothenberg, who Is our
regular Sunday visitor.
AGED ALDERMEN OF
MACON WHO CAME
TO BLOWS‘MAKE UP’
MACON. GA.. Sept. 19. Mayor
Moore and several aldermen today ef
fected a reconciliation between Alder
men W. W. Williams and T. O. Chest
ney. The former struck the latter in
the face at a committee meeting just
prior to the session of council.
Both men are over 60 years of age
and have been friends for more than 40
years. Alderman Chestney laughed at
Aiderman Williams when the latter re
fused to sign a report, and .Mr. Wil
liams. construing the laugh as deri
sive and taunting, struck his colleague
squarely in the face, and also sought to
hit him with a walking stick, saying:
"I've told you before not to laugh at me
like that.”
DEATH BY DYNAMITE
NEWEST THREAT FOR
GIRL VICE CRUSADER
CHICAGO, Sept. 19. Detectives and
postal authorities today joined in a
search for the writer of anonymous
letters that threatened death by dyna
mite to Miss Virginia Brooks, leader
of the West Hammond anti-vice cru
sade, and to the mayor and a number
of the members of the city council
The writer of lhe letter had only pa -
tially effaced a return address on the
envelope of the letter mailed Miss
Brooks. With this as a clew the de
tectives believe they can locate the
writer. The letter was written by some
other person than the writer of former
threatening letters to Miss Brooks.
FATHER’GETS YEAR FOR
SLAYING: SON IS FREED
LEXINGTON, GA., Sept. 19. At the
trial of E. H. Binns and son. William
Binns, who shot P. A. Bush, the town
marshal of this place, last February,
in superior court here the jury returned
a verdict freelhg'the boy and finding
the father guilty, he being sentenced
to twelve months in the chaingarlg or
SSOO fine.
DRIVEN INSANE By FEVER.
GADSDEN. ALA . Sept. 19.—80 h
Pruitt, a prominent East Gadsden
farmer, has been driven insane by a
prolonged attack of maJaria fever. He
has been taken to the srate insane asy
lum. Hopes are entertained that his
reason can be restored.
mW
UPSET STOMACH
“Pape’s Diapepsin” Over
comes Your Indigestion
in Five Minutes.
Wonder what upset your stomach—
which portion of the food did the dam
age—do you? Well, don’t bother. If
your stomach is in a revolt; if sour,
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food: breath foul, tongue coated—just
take a little Diapepsin and in five min
utes you truly will wonder what be
came of the indigestion and distress.
Millions of men and women today
know that it is needless to have a bad
stomach A little Diapepsin occasion
ally keeps the stomach regulated and
they eat their favorite foods without
fear.
If your\stomai h doesn't take care of
your liberal limit without rebellion; if
your food is a damage instead of a
help remember the quickest, surest,
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sin which costs only fifty cents for a
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wonderful —it digests food and sets
things straight, so gently and easily
that ii is astonishing. Please for your
sake, don’t go on and on with a weak,
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(Advertisement. i
*
1
COURT DEFIED 81
OIL WITNESSES
Standard Officials Refuse to
Answer Questions— Dissolu-
Is Called Farce.
.—_
; NEW YORK. Sept. 19 -That the
I "dissolution" of the Standard Oil t'oni-
i pany was a farce and will be proved
I such was the declaration made today
'by Samuel I’ntermeyer. counsel for the
| Waters-Pierce Oil Company', defend
ant in a suit brought to force it to
recognize as directors three men elect
ed last February and rejected from the
board on the claim that they were rep
resentatives of the old Standard Oil
Company, who sought by such a meth-
I od to regain control of the company.
"We have subpenaed over thirty- wit
nesses and before we have finished with
them we expect to show that the so
called dissolution of the Standard Oil
I Company as ordered by lhe courts was
a dissolution in name only.” asserted
Mr. I’ntermeyer.
I About ten witnesses had testified
when the hearing was resumed, today.
All of them are, or were, former em
ployees of the Standard Qil or its sub
sidiaries.
In nearly every ease they have shown
a defiance to the instructions of Com
missioner Jacobs when told to answer
questions, the correct replies to which,
the attorney said, would go a long way
to prove tiiat the dissolution tjas a
farce.
Change Only in Directors.
One of the acts brought out at the
hearing so far is that when the order
for dissolution came the only real
change was the resignation of three or
four of the old directors from each
of the subsidiaries and the filling of
their places with minor employees of
the company, recruited from the shops,
the sales departments or the general
office. In one instance, when the re
maining directors were in a quandary
as to the final election to the board, a
real estate man was invited to "come
upstairs" at 26 Broadway, and cime
down with the title of director.
WAITER S PUP.E FLAVORING EX
TRACTS have no equal. Sold every
where 10c and 25c the bottle, at your
grocer’s.
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We have been so fortunate as to secure the Atlanta, selling agency for the b i'l
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All the Best Colors in all the Best Combinations.
Goldstein’s Famous Stout Suits
It is a pleasure to fit the “hard-to-fit” woman here. Such a thing as a fail
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cause we sell the famous extra size or stout Suits made by J. A. Goldstein &
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—for big women.
GOLDSTEIN S STOUT SUITS AT $25.00
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GOLDSTEIN S STOUT SUITS AT $35.00
I Shown in Best Materials in Black, Brown, Blue and Gray.
Special Suit Sale Tomorrow
We offer about 255 new models in the season's best style Suits at most re
markably low prices These Suits are made of plain and two-tone fabrics
in very smartest and we have made two assortments and two prices
of the ent ire lot.
REGULAR $25.00 SUITS AT sl9 75
REGULAR $30.00 SUITS AT $25.00
dJgf Having bought these out of the regular way makes such selling possible
* “nd we urge an early inspection of this showing
j? or infants and Children,
i SfflSX
ggOK ALCOHOL 3JEU CENT - *
Es 0 - Preparation forts . - Z
BeaiS 1116 /. \
fngfiteStomachsandßowdsaf ° Z O/ T\f
Signature / /LU
Promotes Digeslion.Chcerftd' A t r
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Brar, Opium .Morphine norMineraL \| ir*
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JtMfccfOhlDcSAMCTLHiuttA. | %
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F’“. A UMlcUlt- I t In
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Worras.Couvulsioiis, Feverish 1 If rAF IiVDI*
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KASTORIA
Exact Copy of Wrapper. THI vo „ eiTr
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GEORGIAN WANT ADS
5