Newspaper Page Text
K K)X visits tomb
)F JAPAN’S RULER;
TOLEAVESATURDAY
( lK 10. Sept. 19—After two days
S ,ght-seetng about the ancient
rinl capitol at Kioto, where he
>d the tomb of Emperor Mutsuhlto
e Momoyama cemetery, Philander
;no:t. special envoy from the
»,5 States, returned here today and
n to prepare for his departure Sat
v 1
Knox was much interested dur
ds trip in the ■‘Abode of the Gods."
] in the center of the Momoyama
tety upon which stands a grove
• ee - which have not been cut for
jr ies. Guides explained to him the
flcance of the traditionary hill and
I the rite- regularly held there.
I Empe’Of Yoshihito today was invest
e/with the insignia of the Order of
the Garter by Prince Arthur of Con
naught. special envoy of King George,
she empress and members of the im
.,erjai imily were present
an w nr
' LITTLE PIMPLES
Spots All tver Like Ringworm,
Itching aid Burning. Couldn't
Sleep for Five Weeks. Cuticura
Soap and Ointment Entirely Cured.
Hyattsville, Md.—“My little boy was
taken with anitching on the scalp and when
1 noticed hint scratching so much 1 looked
and there wss an ashy place on his head
slout the sir of a ten-cent. piece, and the
hair was fallilg from this place by the roots.
In about tet days all over his head were
these ashy spots which looked like ring
worm. but were porous-like. The itching
and burningmade htm scratch a great deal.
His head had gotten so that it was just a
mass of msttery little pimples all heaped
on each otter, and when T took off his
night-cap. tie hair and flesh came off at
She same tine. I really thought he would
lose his whde scaJp. He couldn’t sleep for
five weeks, |lt would itch and burn until I
thought hewould go into convnli-ioss.
I used Jifferent soaps and salves to no
satisfaction Then I decided to use the
Cuticura Ship and Ointment. 1 used to
bathe the scalp every morning with the
Cuticura Slap and water as hot aj he could
stand it, md then massage it thoroughly
with the "uticura Ointment. Finally I
noticed he began to steep all nigat I used
one cake rs Cuticura Soap and one box of
CuticuraOintment and he wa-s entirely cured.
His hair ome back again one month after
be was cu*d. and he has a bet er growth of
hair now than he had at first" tSigued)
Mrs. Idaß. Johnson, Mar. 36 1912.
Cuticira Soap and CuticuraOintment are
sold throughout the world. Literal sample of
each maled free, with 32-p. Hein Book. Ad
dress pot-card “Cuticura, D'Pt T Boston.”
*»”ll>nder-faced men shoild use Cuticura
Boip Slaving Stick, 25c. sample free.
Gentlemen:
We are going to convince you that we'
can give you a Better Fit in High Grade
Ready- o -Wear Clothes than you ve ever
had heFre in your life.
The scientific modern method of hand
tailorng hy which every garment is made that
we <ffer to you this season, assures you a
propjr fit and .workmanship rarely equalled
and aever surpassed.
Several of the finest makes of Mens and
Y<ung Men s Cloth ing in America are repre
•eited in our remarkable assortment of Fall and
X/inter Suits and Overcoats.
We want you to feel at perfect liberty to
.'ome in and ask to see our new garments.
Hats from "Over Yonder —French.
Engluh and Austrian made—Velours. Furs
and Persian effects—s3.oo to $6.00.
Xsk to see our new lines of Fall Sh oes—
s3.sC to $8.50.
Saturday our store will be closed
untl 6 o'clock fr. m., account holiday.
—1 I ■■■' I ■■■■!!— ■■ ■ ■ - ■ - .1 IN | . ..
Exclusive agents for official Scout Out
fts for "The Boy Scouts of America
Eiseman Bros., Inc.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall St.
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
Secretary of State Phil Cook has been
figuring closely of late on how long he
may expect to hold on to his present
z «100
mH
JAMA'S Ex KTVDJ
job. so far as as
saults upon it by
the socialists are
concerned.
Colonel Cook has
been as snug as «
bug in a rug in
the secretaryshir
of state for some
thing like fourteen
years, and he has
given such excel
lent satisfaction
that nobody of a
Democratic turn
of mind has un
dertaken to put
him out of busi
ness.
He has watched
the Socialist
movement in-Georgia tor the past eight
years, however, and lately he has been
sneakingly inclined to view things with
a small measure of alarm—and viewing
with alarm is a novel experience for
Colonel Cook.
Eight years ago the Socialists put
out a candidate for governor, and he
received 12 votes.
Os course, that wasn’t many, but it
was some, nevertheless. It was more
than 7 or 11. anyway!
Last year the Socialists put out a
full ticket, and they rounded up 218
votes.
This year they have put out another
full ticket—a party named W. N. Gibbs
is after Cook's scalp—and the colonel,
to whom the election returns are made,
fears his opponent may round the 300-
vote point this lap!
Colonel Cook has figured that, things
going as they have been and continuing
that way, the Socialists in Georgia
should be able to round up enough
votes to elect somebody in 27 years, 9
months, 3 weeks, 14 days. 2 hours. 20
minutes and 37 ticks!
If the colonel can hold the job he
now has until that time has elapsed, he
w ill not complain if he has to count in
a Socialist secretary of state even
tually!
The thing that really made the colo
nel uneasy today' was two letters h>
received in the morning mail—one from
a Socialist candidate for sheriff in north
Georgia and another from a Socialist
candidate for state senator In the same
section.
"When they get to running for sher
iff, senator, coroner, county surveyor,
and the like, they' are fixing, or wanting,
to get bothersome,” said the secretary.
Tlie Savannah Morning News is se
riously wondering if Governor Brown
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWEL THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 19. 1912.
By JAMES B
. NEVIN.
will not contest the seat in the United
States senate now held by Senator
Hoke Smith, and to retain which the
latter gentleman must go before the
people of Georgia in a Democratic pri
mary in August two yeafs hence.
The News thinks that much of the
late state board of education row may
have sprung from some such notion
upon the part of some of Senator
Smith’s friends, and that it foreshad
ows a "battle royal” over the senator
ship in 1914.
Senator Smith was elected by the
legislature in 1911. after the death of
Senator Clay, and is now filling out the
unexpired term of that lamented states
man. His term of service will end on
March 4, 1915.
A fight between Brown and Smith in
a popular primary would be approxi
mately’ an even thing, so far as the
senatogship is concerned—neither as yet
having sought that office before the
people.
Governor Brown has intimated to no
living soul, so far as anybody will say,
whether he will be a candidate for the
senate.
It is a fact, however, that Governor
Brown prides himself in the governor
ship more because his distinguished
father before him held that high of
fice than because of anything else. He
reveres the memory of the elder Brown
—“the war governor”—-tenderly and
with great respect. It has been said of
"Little Joe" that he would like to fol
low his father in the senate of the
United Stafes —to wear for a time the
toga the famous senator wore so long.
This much alone is certain: If Brown
does decide to fight it out with Smith
in the primaries of 1914,»the fight will
be—well, some fight, anyway!
Joe Hill Hall is quoted as having
said he may have another try at
the governorship, by and by. One
can admire the pluck of the Bibb
county statesman, even if one si
multaneously must ddubt his judg
ment.
Colonel T. Larry Gantt, late of va
rious points in Georgia, has bobbed up
again journalistically In South Caro
lina, and is championing the cause of
Cole L. Blease.
Colonel Gantt once was, politically,
“some pumpkins" in Georgia, and cut
quite a figure In various state cam
paigns, not to mention local- scraps
without number.
He fed upon fire mostly—and he
dined often and with large appetite.
His vocabulary' ran riot in the direc
tion of Invective, and the things he
wrote, if frequently unconvincing, never
were dull or uninteresting.
Colonel Gantt once was a champion
of Benjamin Tillman —but that was be
fore Tillman became a civilized thing.
He Is more ardently the champion of
Cole Blease In South Carolina nowa
days. however, than eves- he was of old
“Pitchfork Ben" in the long ago.
Gantt never seemed able to stay put
for any’ gr.eat length of time in Geor
gia. He flitted hither and yon, stirring
up the monkeys in one town, only to
leave them rowing the while he sought
pastures new with pickings green.
Colonel Gantt is going to feel mighty
bad if Blease. after some or any sort
of fashion, eventually is euchered out
of the South Carolina governorship.
“Roosevelt forgets himself,” reads
a headline in The Dallas New Era.
He must have been asleep, in a
trance, or—something.
- —1
Go to California Now. Low Fare Tickets
Sept. 25th to Oct. 10th. via Rock Island
Lines In comfortable through Tourist
Sleeping Cars. Choice of three best routes.
Dining Cars. For full information call on
or write H. H. Hunt. 18 North Pryor
street, Atlanta. (advt.)
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 11S0.
(Advertisement.)
Are You Prepared
To Care For Those
Who Shop By
Wire?
This means an adequate
supply of trunk lines and
telephone stations in every
department.
The progressive, enter
prising merchants of Atlan
ta are providing just such
facilities for their telephone
customers, many of whom
use our service exclusively.
Our phone in the home
for only 8 and 1-3 cents per
day has been a great factor
in the rapid growth of
“wire shoppers.”
Atlanta Telephone
and Telegraph Co.
A. B. CONKLIN, lien. Mgr.
TEDDY WILL TESTIFY
BEFORE U. S. SENATE
COMMITTEE OCT. IST
\V ASHINGTON. Sept. 19. —Colonel
Theodore Roosevelt will arrive in
Washington at 2:30 o’clock Tuesday
afternoon, October 1, to attend the
hearings ordered by the campaign ex
penditures committee of which Sen
ator Clapp is chairman.
A telegram to this effect was received
by Frank J. Hogan, Progressive na
tional committeeman for the District of
Columbia.
"Colonel Roosevelt will be met at the
Union station with a band and will be
escorted to his hotel bv an automobile
parade," said Mr. Hogan. “If Colonel
, Roosevelt remains in Washington the
evening of October 1 a mass meeting
will be held for him at Convention
hall.”
DISGRACE OF POUND
KILLS SENSITIVE DOG
NEW YORK, Sept. 19.—Being too
sensitive to endure the humiliation of
arrest, a dog belonging to David J.
Roche, of this city, died after two days
in the pound. /
CHEER UP! IF HEADACHV, BILIOUS,
CONSTIPATED-CASCARETS TONIGHT
No odds how bad your liver, stomach or bowels, how much your head
aches, how miserable and uncomfortable you are from constipation, indiges
tion, biliousness and sluggish intestines—you always get the desired results
with Cascarets.
They end the headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness, sick, sour,
gagsy stomach. They cleanse your Liver and Bowels of all the sour bile, foul
gases and constipated matter which is producing the misery. A Casearet
tonight will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box from your druggist
will keep your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular and make
you feel cheerful and bully for months.
2=3 J- 5=3
A J
10 Cents. Never grips or lichen.
“CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.”
<A4vartisement.)
THE REAL DEPARTME N T STORE] &
lyMSgh ECONOMY WW*
5 >|[ D A QFlVir NT a
3Sc u_ THE BEE RIFE OF BIG STORE ISST’"’™’. tOc J
| l,:IS •” FRIDAY BARGAIN DAY No. 26 12 l-2c Standard Percales Oft
Dresses I full 36 inches wide C# w .
Just Read What the t 2 •
£ Ladies . 19c MweeriMd - creator millinery section 5f and 8 , Torchon
Hosp, 3 pairs for 25c; 4 ft-. , 2?2T r °'L ln _ aS^A? n . e ana Insertions, yard OC 2-
Jg i lUC TAILORED HATS!
-m Smart Snappy Styles $4.98 15c Cotton Serges, black 4 ft
tS Ladies’ 50c Ribbed Union Suits, The Basement Millinery Section tomorrow and colors IUCJ
£ rizeV 1 ’ ‘ eXtra 19c wiU bave on for y° ur approval and se- <
Tg lection a splendid collection of the Fall sea-
to son’s 19p Shepherd Check Suitings JL,
Children’s 75c pretty Seersuck- New Tailored Hats! dressed 01
"to ers Percales and Gingham Dress- At $4 . 98 for choi(;e ig keeping from SLOO to
Xse ° 1 ? ' ars ’ ° 39C 2 -°° in your purse, for these hats are greatly I
underpriced at $4.98. Regular values at $5.00 18c Kimono Flannels, 101/a* 11
yto to $7.00. Made of excellent material and are beautiful designs .... I C/2C "C
t to 50c Middie Blouses, limited positive replicas in styles of models selling for— n *
quantity, to OEft from two to three times the price. AA ~ . ,
£ c °® t'h , ’"? <h!,s v ♦«* r i? 1 he and C”. En E E 25c S
small blocks—velvet and silk combinations—
-5 large All-Over Silk 4 ft_ smartly tailored and a brilliant example of what toL.
* Hair Nets for IUQ good things you are going to get in the Great- 7c Cotton Chailies, for Com- £•
J? or Millinery Section of the Economv Base- forts and Kimonos OC
i t> .. . ment.
5c Pearl Buttons as- 4 -—-- M
sorted sizes, dozen iC Misses’ Felt Hats—sl.9B.
Practical, jauntv styles, suitable for street 35c bleached Sheeting, 97*4
lie Spool Darning « - S " h "" 1 "" al ' : “«<“'»» wid <; br .™ s ,»«•<«
2? Cotton IC ' s< ‘°P e crown; neatly trimmed with band and —■ ■ Sy
bow—onh $1.98. o T > , St
to i 121-2 c Pajama Checks, Q
5c Extra Good Corset Specials! f '‘" W i>fb " ~g
Corset Bargains in the Basement jjG
'to tomorrow will take on an extra touch 35 c A. C. A. Ticking, OE«i 2 '
LB* Ladies' and Men’s $2.0(1 I’m- "f value at the prices asked. There will yard fcOC g^- 2
brellas. imported ff» 4 4ft he a lot of specially good long hip,
3" handles I . I V medium and low bust models, made of
.*• ■■■ i ■ ■■ splendid quaJity heavy and medium 39c Mercerized Table OEa®-
Men's 10c Half Hose. Cft / weight coutil, lace trimmed. These are Damask, lustre finish.... faiUV
»=sff black and colorswC / the regular $1.50 and $2.00 values that T , , ■'
'—! ” /X'K A fegularly for that price. They El ! g llah ( loth - 36
Lad.es ..Oc I ure Silk Hose, black i ar „ Sp ,. i|l( , Mo(l ,. ]s and a ,. p ( . orrppt inches w.de Bookfold. ft g R
and tan. high spliced heel, QE A vi,iu g and in every wav desirable. l~ y«rd bolts vOC •
~jto double sole and toe... WWW / '/ ————to ,
Jto 3 for SI.OO f Tomorrow $1.29 55c Bleached Sheets.
Bovs'39e Percale Blouses. 'V f-1 V 5 Tables Chockful 7
>» C of Excellent 45s3fi'linen «S ....1 2j4c
■ £ ff m T , Bargains -
' // 7/\\ /// /Oi llti these are an assortment zsTTx. .
lit ''i "I Ko °d models that sold •
'to V n // ‘ r< gularl vat from 50e to $2. (( 41// )”
"i to f kJ Tlicn will be on sale Kridny, ~ Sc
*\ 2/ ( 29e-50e-7 9 e-9 ?c j)\ «
$l7O IN CASH PRIZES
OFFERED BOY CORN
GROWERS OF DODGE
I
EASTMAN. GA.. Sept. 19.—8. T.
Burch, president of the Boys Corn club
of Dodge county, has announced the
folio wing prizes: Best yield per acre,
SSO. best showing of profit on invest
ment. S2O; best ten ears, S2O, best 100
ears, S2O; best ten ears of prolific, S2O;
best written account showing history
of crop, S2O.
An additional prize of S2O is guar
anteed by Professor N. W. Hurst for
the second best yield of corn per acre.
Corn will be displayed at the court
house on October 12 and all prizes will
be awarded on that day.
MRS. J. 0. ARMOUR, UNDER
KNIFE, REVIVES QUICKLY
CHICAGO, Sept. 19.—Mrs. J. Ogden
Armour, operated on yesterday for the
removal of fibroid tumor, is resting
easy at the St. Lukes hospital today,
according to statements of hospital at
taches this morning. The operation
was performed by Dr. Thomas J. Wat
kins and Dr. Frank Cary.
Mrs. Armour revived quickly from
the effects of the anesthetic and her
condition today was such that physi-
cians believe danger of any complica
tion has already passed.
JELLICO LUMP, $4.50.
Piedmont Coal Company,
Both Phones M. 3648.
“NEWPORT” Model
Stylish “Swing-toe”
shoe.
High Arch, and up-
curved Toe.
Lower Cuban Heel than
on “Spanish” model.
Fancy perforation
around top of vamp. etc.
A decidedly “Smart”
shoe, with considerable xug
(/t st ion of that high-toe
/■hi'tlnon which has lately
ruled in advanced foot
wear for men.
But, for all this, a
dainty icomanZy type,—
with individuality.
SPECIFICATIONS
—Russet Calf No. 3—3/4
Foxed Button—
Russ. Top.
—Soles 8 Sa. —Heels
17/8 inch Cuban *
carry th is
style in button
and lace—in
all leathers.
Regal Shoe Store
L. J. WING, Proprietor 6 WHITEHALL ST.
7o Drive Out Malaria
and Build up the System
Take the Old. Standard GROVE’S TASTE
LESS CHILL TONIC. You know what
you are taking. The formula Is plainlv
printed on every bottle, showing it Is
simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless
form, and the most effectual form. For
grown people and children. 50c.
(Advertisement.)
7