Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 24, 1912, FINAL, Page 6, Image 6

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6 TEDDY TO MAKE 3 TALKS IN GEORGIA Local Bull Moose Prepare for Overflow Meeting in Atlanta Saturday Night. Theodore* Roosevelt likely will de liver three addresses in Georgia, after all. He will speak briefly, if circumstances permit, at Columbus and Macon He will deliver the one big address of his Georgia tour in Atlauita. of course, at the Auditorium-Armory Sat urday night. Colonel Roosevelt enters Georgia at Columbus about 1 o’clock Saturday aft ernoon. His train will be stopped there for a short while, and he "will speak from the rear end of his private ear. From Columbus he goes to Macon reaching that city about 3 p nt. His train will --top there about 30 minutes. He hopes to be able to get in a 20- minute talk at that point. Front Ma con he eome« direct to Atlanta. The Bull Moosers ar. preparing to give the colonel >< great reception here Snuiilay night. Letters to the faithfu' throughout the state hav- been sent out in proCish n. l-'o loweit- of the Roose velt banner haw practically been sum nton< dto Atlanta. Leaders in this city sat they are <<tming in large numbers, too! "’i’h. Auditorium Armors will not hold th' in S turila night," said a well known local Bull Moo’er today. "Colonel Roosevelt will get the big g st nond any speaker ' tet got In Georgia. Woodrow Wilson had some crowd ~yc.« But it was not an ovet flow trowtl Well, Roosevelt will turn gwav thousands Saturday night mark the prediction Indeed, we are prepar. It." f"i an overflow meeting -and vve n. ■ going to have it." SOCIETY DEFENDER OF “HORSE TROT” DANCE; NO BAN AT NEWPORT NE\VI‘<»RT. Sept. 24 PreMon Gibson ■nd his wife, who hold an influential position in Washington societx. have en tered the ranks of the enemies of mod ern fantastic dances Mr. G'i»s»»n «:r<l recently that he would use his influence to ban the turkey trot" and ’ horse trot ’ in society ball rooms of the capital city this w inter. Nevertheless, the Gibsons saw these two dances at Mrs Richard Wilson s costume party recently, and Newport in general does not seem inclined to oppose the mod ern steps. Uriel Davis, of Washington, who origi nated the “horse trot” and introduced it in Newport, took vigorous exception to Mr Gibsor. a criticism. Why,” said he. ”the ' dance *s a running walk, that is all ”We shall continue the ‘horse trot’ and make it a feature of our winter dances, regardless of Mr Gibson's views, said a New York soviets woman As a matter of fact, the censors of most of these latest dances approve the horse trot’ and wel come it as a wholesome change HE WIPED HIS SHOES ON HER HAIR. WOMAN SAYS ... T SI. Lol IS, Sept. 24 A complaint that William ReinliiKci. of Alton, had wiped th. .soles of his shoes agnln-t the hah of a woman sitting in fiont of him slatted a free-for-all tlgnt on an Interurban street car near Alton. O, <Mary, superintendent of the Al. ton. Granite City & East St. Louis Traction Company. was on the ear and attempted to eject Relninger. Several friends of Reining, took i hand in the fight, the cat was stopped and the crowd made a rush to get oft. Two nt. it «<■> put off by Miiey Relnlnger w.t- ar: .sled l.y Roy Hardy, a deputy sheriff TO HEAD HOWARD COLLEGE. BRISTOL \A Sept. 21 Ret _.l M Ph. burn w i. sign th- pastorate of the F st Baptist (hutch of Btistol to acre! : the pr< sitJenev of Howard col lege ~t tbrmingham. Ala ' » »■' I ..I ...'? OGN’T PULL OUT THE GRAY HIS A Few Applications of a Simple Remedy Will Bring Back the Nat ural Color. “Pull out one gtax hail and a dozen Will taki its i ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ saying, xxhich is. to a great extent. tiu>. if no steps hk taken to stop the cause When guiv hails ai , • it is a sign that Na ture needs assistant-, li Is Nature's < all tor help Grax hair. dull, lifeless hair, or hair that Is falling out. Is not necessarily a sign of advancing age. for there are thousands of elder \ peop’e with perfect heads of halt without a single streak of grax W h*ti gru> halts come. 01 when tin hail seems to be lifeless 01 dead, omc good, reliable hail-restoring t ■ .iimen*. should he resorted to st once Special ists say that one of the best prepara tions to use is tlie old-fashioned "sage tea" which ou g andparents used The ht.-t preparation of this kind Is Wyeth's Sage and Sul phut Hal: Remedy, a prep. :<■ »ti< n of domestic sage and sulphur, entifi' uly compounded with latei discovered hair tonics and stimulants 1 wlioli mixture being carefully bal »o ed and tested by experts Wyeth s Sag, and Sulphur is titan and wholesome and pe -fectly ha'-mlcss It refreshes dry. parched ha . . removes t.andruff and graduuliv restores fade-1 o giav hair to its natuial color. Don't delax another minut' Start using Wx eth's Sage and Sulphut at on-■ and -ee wha: a difference a few Cays tieattnent will make In you l hair b> preparation is offered tn the 1 ■’ flftx cents a bottle, and is B r ' 'ended and sold by 1 -' ug- SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS By JAMES B. NEVIN. Georgia is more or less fortunate in that it has an executive seereta y to the governor and a secretary to the state Uy JESS »O-3 » Democratic exec utive committee, all combined in one and the Sam? person Colonel Hardy Ulm. This is a great convenience, as well as a shod: absorber, at times. While all of this hullabaloo is go ing on as to why. when, how and wherefore presi dential eleetots shall be b'ought to the attention of t h e authorities charged with the duty of sending out election blanks, it is a comfort to rest secure in the knowledge that dm Is right there on the job, ready to file o list or whateveritls. the Democratic electors before it is too late, if it ever gets to be 100 late for that sort of thing. Nobody yet has filed with the gov ernor a list of D‘ mocratic electors. II la contended in some quarters that no body has to do that, under the law . bu‘. it is admitted that now and then some body ju.-t "butts in" and does it any way, In w hich event service of notice is respectfully acknowledged, and the list Is filed for reference. The law requires, It seems, that the governor send out tally sheets 30 days befote the presidential election—on or before October 5, to be exact. To in sure proper listing the Democratic elec tors ought, perhaps, to be filed with the governor a few days before the 30 days' limit in which he must send out the tally sheets. So fa nobody had tiled a list of the Democratic electors Presumably, nev ertheless, there is a desire In some body’s heart that they be "insured" .gainst improper listing—hence, -onte patriot ought to "butt tn" and file them. • Time is pressing, and nobody has chi ped about the Democratic electors, notwithstanding the fact that every other party to enter the contest tn Georgia has filed a list. Rut. to hark back to the beginning, it is a comfort to know that if, at the eventful minute, nobody else tushes In where Democrat!, angels apparently feur to tread, why. Secrets ry-to-the- Govetnor - Sv. .(.tnto-the-Executive- Committee t’im may tile this list with hlm-elf, and thus save the day against disaster ! Therefore, why worry? The cause of woman's suffrage lias never been agitated extensively In Georgia, but In as much as it may be eventually, its progress throughout the nation by no means slow is interest ing In the West the < arise of woman's suffrage has made wonderful strides. I In t’alifo tiia the women vole on mos everything, as they do all along the Pa father and sister PLEAD IN VAIN FOR MORPHINE SELLER Pleading’' <>f father and sister in po lice court failed to save Hay \V. Klapper of 42 Auburn avenue, who was fined $100.75 nr 30 days by’ Recorder Rrn\ on the charge of selling mor phine. Klapper gives his Novation as an actor W hen Ids room was raided by detec tives they found nineteen hotties of morphine and a lot of empty "dope” boxes, h was also shown to the court that the officers sent a young man, .John Thomas, to the room and that lie bought “dope” from Klapper. Roth father and sister of Klapper made an earnest plea that the young man be given another chance and be illowpd to leave the city. Klapper said he had taken treatment for the mor i phine habit, and asserted that the j “dope ’ found in his room was on hand .before he quit the habit. When he was ■ eseo* ted back to the prisoners’ room his sister wept hysterically. KNIFE AND HEART ARE BROUGHT INTO COURT Hl NTLNGDON. PA., Sept. 24. Pro ducing the knife seen by witnesses In ‘lie poi ket of Frank Roneilo on the day that Joe Wilson met his death by stabbing. just below Huntingdon, the district attorney knocked tiie props from under Ronello’s attorney’s de ■ felise. The knife had disappeared, Ronello claiming lie had thrown it from a ear : window above Huntingdon, but railroad ' detectives found it last Sunday in the Juniata river. Coroner Schum exhib ited the murdered man's heart in court, showing three openings when the as sassin’s knife had plunged. GIRL IS -BEST MAN” AT REALTY MAN'S WEDDING . ST. LOTTS, Sept. 24 -The story ot how a girl was "beat man" at the vved- . ding of Oliver J Grace, secretary of 1 the P. F. Grace k Sons Realty Com pany, and Miss Rose E Murphy, a waitress, was revealed today. Miss , ' .Mona Shaughnessy was passing Holy 1 Angels Catholic church at fl p m. when ’ ! she obsetved a marriage was being 1 celebrated inside She went in out of . curiosity. There was an embarrassing t halt in the services when it was dis > covered that the gtootnsman was late. The officiating pi bsi nvited Miss , Shaughnessy to stand up with the t-i-- . ty and she took her plate at Grace's 1 side. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1912. clfic roast, for that matter. In Venice (Cal.) the women are pret ty much in control of things, and they have required of the policemen on duty that they go constantly equipped, not wdth guns and ■‘billies." hut w ith dainty little "vanity boxes" with which to render quick and instant aid to females in distress along such lines -as suggest "vanity boxes." Not a great while ago a young man in Atlanta was reported to have van quished a howling mob, bent upon de molishing his straw hat, with a box of talcum powde . The mob fled before the scattering of that powder even fast er than it would have scattered before a gun. perhaps! When policemen universally are re quired to swap their arsenals for "van ity box's" and talcum powder "squiit gunv" it may help some, all the way around. Anticipating an "overflow" meeting; at the Auditorium-Armory Saturday night, when Colonel Theodore Roose velt comes to town to tally the faithful of the Bull Moose persuasion, it Is whispered that an effort is being made to get Hon. Seaborn Wright—or. at least, either Is being made or will be—■ to come to Atlanta and provide the ora tory on the outside for those who can not get inside where the Big Noise is to hold forth. Mr Wright is known to be an ardent and sincere admirer of Colonel Roose velt. At one time he very seriously considered the idea of taking the stump in Georgia for him. Indeed, it was an open secret that the nomination of any man in Baltimore other than Wilson surely would have put Mr. Wright at once into the ranks of the Roosevelt ites. If Mr. Wright does come down to take charge of that overflow meeting he will be a drawing card. He is an orator of remarkable power, and he be lieves in much that Roosevelt stands for and is advocating Os course, it is not written in the stars that Wright will be on hand Sat urday night, but It is a fact that an in vitation to come likely will be extended him, if it hasn’t already been extended. Governor Joseph M. Brown is spend ing a few days on his farm in Cherokee county. The governor enjcAs nothing quite so much as slipping away from his execu tive duties for a day or so now and then and buckboarding it to the tall timbers for a look around Governor Blown abhors an automo bile that is, he abhors it for his own ( use He has no prejudice against automo biles. but lie is willing that oilier folks ride in them, while he jogs along be hind horses, afser the ancient and ap < proved fashion of old-time folks. i The governor always rides from Ma • rietta to his farm In a buekboard. He ■ might go in a spring-seated wagon, if the buekboard were not handy. But he would not go in an automobile—never! The hands on that Cherokee county farm would faint, one and all. no doubt. If the governor some day should "chug chug" Into camp in a benzine buggy. CHILLY DRIZZLE TO CONTINUE; WHOLE SOUTH RAIN SOAKED "No relief is in sight,” says the weath er man ’’The cold, misty drizzle which ! has hung over the city for the past few days ts still coming and the weather will get colder with the falling rain.” it is the first cold snap of the autumn ! season, and w hile not really cold enough to be noticed during the winter, it is making its presence felt after the hot , (lavs of August and early September. All through the South the same con ditions prevail, and more or less heavy rains have fallen from Knoxville to Mo bile In the Gulf coast cities a wind ‘ storm, which became a gale, blew for many hours early today, hut it did not serve to drive any moisture away from , this section. MACON'S POLICE CHIEF TO STICK TO HIS JOB i , MACON. GA . Sept 24. Despite the ! persistent criticism leveled at hint and the police department, the open desire of the city administration for him to resign. Chief W B. Chapman declares that he will serve out his present term of office, j which does not expire until December ' 1913 Chief Chapman was appointed by the Moore administration nearly three years ago. and ins official career has been ! stormy throughout. READ THIS. The Texas Wonder cures kidney and Madder troubles, removing gravel, cures i diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheutna . tlsm. and all Irregularities of the kidneys and bladder In both men and women Regulates o'.adder troubles in children If not sold by your druggist, will be by mall on receipt of JI.OO. One small bottle is two months treatment and sel dom (alls to perfect a cure Send for tea tlmonlalr from this and other states Dr E XV Dall. Z 926 Olivo-st., St. Louts U« sold by druggists. (Advt i • $2 50 TO CHATTANOOGA AND RETURN. The W. & A. R. R. will r sell round-trip tickets At lanta to Chattanooga and return for train leaving At lanta at 8:35 a. m., Thurs day, September 26. 1912, > good returning not later than train arriving Atlanta 7:35 p. m., Sunday, Septem ber 29, 1912. C. E. HARMON. General Passenger Agent. MEN AND RELIGION BULLETIN NO. 21 “ rhe Houses In Our Midst” NIGHT, MORNING, NIGHT ~ r M w| L • ■ (Kwg jwA a i / I V J yUtl 0 . LEJI/ej Tonight, a mistake in addition may cause tears. You kiss them away and show your daughter how to work her sums. Tomorrow, you may be dead. She will miss your tender guiding hand. She will have far more difficult problems to solve. An error in them brings the Beast. His foul fingers clutch her? They may. She fights for life. Strength ebbs. Clawed and crushed, her quivering, weakening arms relax. You can not help. Hope that you may neither see nor dream in your grave- Other men may tear her from his embrace. But thoughtless, unfeeling Pharisees say that Christ can scarcely cleanse one so unclean. And with the brutal bludgeon of Public Indifference,” our Beast, “Protected Vice ” beats her back into the pits, when she moans, “Where shall I go? What shall I do?” Lord God, forbid I This morning, on her father s door-step, a tiny golden haired tot too small for school sat nursing her doll 7 the huTdreSh time n l e n;t f ?S te d ed b °° k T^ 618 SmaU Sh ° Ulders ’ kissed face for buX S’r X go o f:rth\' a (SLtaX o ‘' ey and mo,or cars ' and Watching mothe '’ The Beast does not wait long. Which of these are being reared for him’’ Atlanta's Police Matron says: “I saw from the Police Station the face of a young girl at the window of a resort across the street “She was so young. I reported it to the chief." oss tne slree He summoned the child to his office. With the marks of our Beast in her soul, she was sent home. Shall the future of our child-women depend on chance looks out of windows 9 All of them are not carried to resorts so near our Police Station Whose daughter next? The Beast still hunts. In the secret places doth he murder the innocent. “His eyes are privily set against the helpless. “He liefh in wait to catch the poor. He doth catch the poor, when he draweth fiim in his nets. “He croucheth, he boweth down ana the helpless fall.” Their fathers and mothers cry: Our flesh is as tlie flesh of our brethren, our children as their children 1 r j are brought into bondage already.” r chlldren ’ and - 10. some of our daughters Jesus of Nazareth died for these. Shall the Beast, this Protected Vice,” continue to defile and enslavp them in ej. , • n Atlanta should and will close the Houses in Our Midst ™ in hIS dens and lairß ' The Executive Committee of the Men and Religion Forward Movement