Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, September 27, 1912, FINAL 2, Page 7, Image 7

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IMPATIENTJIiROR MJSTRIIL J. H. James, Recent Candidate for Railway Board, Wants Prisoner to Confess. John H. James, recent candidate for railroad commissioner, acting in the role of superior court juror inadver tently gave Putsy Garey, a negro, charged with burglarizing, a temporary spite from trial in criminal division today. "This prisoner not only pawned the matched involved in this ease, but he was in the pawning business by the o holesale.” shouted Solicitor Dorsey to the jurymen holding aloft a handful of pawn tickets. 'That’s right." agreed James, inter rupting the trial and talking from the jury box. “Why doesn't he plead guil ty?” For a minute the courtroom was si lent and the judge astounded by the unusual proceeding The prisoner’s lawyer, quick to take advantage of the point, moved that Judge Ellis declare a mistrial. . After several minutes of parley be tween lawyers, the judge recognized the technicality. See Nat Goodwin in Oliver Twist at the Forsyth. LAST CALL! Only Two More Days of Our Great FREE $5 RAINCOAT OFFER With Every Suit or Overcoat to Order No Ct 1 E£2 No More JL w Less “Quality, Fit, Style Our Success” CAN YOU BEAT IT? Saturday > and Monday r/ We are now showing 500 r , z -' I\\\\NL ' . new Fall patterns. Come in /, l A / and inspect our line. No ex- I ( S / tra charges for any special ! /'// made garments, including I Norfolk. English or semi- / English for college boys. SPECIAL NOTICE / WeareGENUINESIS // Al / Tailors. When we //, / |/w|l/// say SUITS MADE TO /Z 4 * j/ |L/ / ORDER FOR sls we / /7$ 1U W/ mean just that and / //' i /fL nothing more. You //> Y || can walk into this // j shop, make any se- /// 01 i |ni iljj' lection from our stock Z and have it made up , in any style you de- / sire —knowing that / you won't get ‘stuck’ for extras. f( | REMEMBER; SALE POSITIVELY CLOSES MONDAY NIGHT, SEPTEMBER 30th. National Woolen Mills World’s Largest Tailors Robt. F. Mobley, Mgr. 77 Peachtree 3 Doors from Auburn Ave. Phone M. 126 SEARCHINGSIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS Suppose you had been a candidate for office in the late state primary. And suppose you had been defeated, at that! 81111 Suppose you had X chas. d yourself all over your end of creation, promts- ” ing your const!!- uents together and singular, a F, land of milk and honey, of purpl.- SI and fine linen, of z peace and plenty MT —in the event ol KR your ele tion —and K had snent all your ES Wf'V . savings, and such funds as you could LB® v ’ borrow, in seeking to protect the L* common people jamxo e> from the iron heel of plutocracy and oppression, not to mention the grinding and grasping greed of the predatory trusts. Suppose you had sit up nights writ ing letters and thinking thoughts, all to the glory and advancement of your country. And suppose you had worked stenographers overtime, and had called in the senices of your wife, and your daughter, and your sisters, and your cousins and your aunts, in helping your campaign along. And suppose, after all that, you had been humiliated by defeat and cast into THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1912. By JAMES B. NEVIN. outer darkness by the unreasoning and unthinking cohorts of the enemy—and then, suppose the grand jury should in dict you for not filing property your campaign expenses! WOULDN’T THAT JAR YOU? Well, that is exactly what has hap pened to thirteen —-consistent old hoo doo. thirteen!—defeated candidates for office down in Jeff Davis county. Every blessed one of them has been yanked from the dust of defeat into the big court by the grand jury! This is one of the saddest tales ever chronicled in Georgia politics! Congressman Gordon Lee talking to a group of friends in Atlanta today, discussed the subject of good roads, from the national standpoint, most in terestingly. Among other things, Mr. Lee said: “It is my opinion that congress, with in a few years, will pass annually a good roads appropriation bill, relatively as heavy as the rivers and harbors bill, and that the money under its pro visions will be of far more benefit to the masses of the people than the ap propriations carried by the rivers and harbors bill, as meritorious as many of those appropriations are. “I have the very great honor of be ing a member of the special house com. mission having under consideration the entire subject of good roads. We will meet in November, and enter exhaust ively into the subject, particularly with an eye to lending Federal aid in the matter of road construction and their indirect maintenance. The plan to have the government lease, for rural mall delivery purposes, such roads as are kept to a high standard by local au thorities, will enter into the Federal scheme of things after some sort of fashion, eventually. I think. "The question of good roads is one of the most pressing that congress has to consider. The demand for good roads is confined to no one section. It spreads evenly from one end of the nation to the other. “Personally, I know of no finer way to spend the people’s money—no surer, safer, or saner wav to rivs them back their own—than through the encour agement of good roads construction.” Barry Wright, of Floyd, former mem ber of the house of representatives and Democratic nominee for membership in the next, is an Atlanta visitor today. Mr. Wright is at present engaged in the practice of law in Rome, with his distinguished father. Seaborn Wright. The younger Wright is an ardent sup porter of Woodrow Wilson and has made several speeches in his behalf. The senior member of the firm is also a Wilson man, but he is possessed of many repressed Bull Moose sentiments that threaten to break loose now and then, regardless. j Young Mr. Wright ways he hopes, however, to keep his father perfectly regular and shouting for Wilson, be sternly frowning down any suspected inclination upon his part to come to At lanta tomorrow night and hear the colonel orate to the multitude. Governor Joseph M. Brown is fond of young people, and lends usually i most willing ear to their petitions. He does not suspect that all the wis dom of the ages is tucked snugly be neath either bald heads or heads hoar} with age. Particularly is the governor inclined to view with satisfaction the ancient and honorable institution of matrimony, fashioned in the days of man’s inno cency. and perfected for the uplift and betterment of the world. The governor, as a man. doubtless would be only too glad to further love's young dream, now being indulged in b\ i a suitor for the hand of Thomas Edgar I Stripling’s daughter. But he likely will I not be able to help it along, if the only I way he can do it is by pardoning Strip ling. The governor thinks that by and by, perhaps, a further petrtion for Strip ling’s pardon might be in order. Now, however, he can see no reason to change the opinion he formed when the case came before him originally—ana opin ion reached after long, careful, dis criminating and exhaustive investiga tion and consideration The letter from Youngblood to the governor, in which Stripling’s pardon was sought, precipitated a deluge of mall in the executive office—largely from people of a sentimental turn of mind, who saw in Youngblood’s letter a note of pathos and genuine human in terest that appealed tremendously. 1150 Ladies' Suits!!) Secured*at the lowest prices ever sold in the city. These Suits H are made of very fine serge, colors blacks and blues, and a few kj| heavy gray all-wool mixtures. Most of these lined with Yondye satin. The rest with guaranteed satin. These Suits were made in the finest house in New York. Sizes from 14 to 44. Cheapest in the lot is worth $20.00. Will put them on sale while they last at Si 1.50 B MILLINERY I Our Millinery stock is in full bloom This stock is absolutely Pl complete and presents all the latest fall styles. Smart, nobby shapes that will appeal to you in both looks and price. The famous line of Gage Hats added to our collection will in- ■ terest you. Silk and Lisle Hosiery--Silk Hose valued at 79c and Eg SI.OO, for 19c and 25c. MS > . FLATLAND AFLOAT NEWEST LUXURY Rich May Live as at Home While Crossing Atlantic on New Liner. LIVERPOOL, Sept 27. Floating fiats for millionaires are the latest luxury in transatlantic travel, and the vessel on which, it is understood, the provision will be made is the new Cunarder Aqui tania, which will be launched on the Clyde about December and put in commission in the spring or early summer of next year. The Aquitanfa will be the largest ves sel flying the British flag, and probably the largest in the world. "Probably" because the Hamburg-American line has another leviathan on the stocks which is safd to be even bigger than the Im perator. which rniw heads the list of the world’s big ships. Fashion in ocean travel changes pe riodically, and the decision to build flats on the Aquita'nia is said to be the out come of a growing tendency among fam ilies. especially English families, to live on board exactly as they would at home. Already there are in some of the Cu narders a series of walled-off recesses where it is possible for families to take their meals by themselves. "Flatland afloat" is simply an elaboration of this system of private suites Liverpool at present has no dock that will be able comfortably to hold the Aquitania, and the Mersey dock and harbor board is hastening on the con struction of the new Gladstone dock at Seaforth, which is to be opened by the king in July of next year. There will be ample accommodation for the new Cunarder in this dock, and the sugges tion has been made that on the occa sion of the royal visit the king should enter it on one of the largest and latest Atlantic liners. In the absence of official confirmation, it Is not unreasonable to suppose that the vessel selected for this honor will be the Aquitania. U. S. WARSHIP TRAINS GUNS ON FOO CHOW TO PROTECT YANKEES FOO CHOW, Sept. 27.—The United States gunboat Cincinnati arrived here this afternoon from Shanghai. Her guns were trained on the city, which will be shelled at the first chance of an outbreak against Americans. The rebel chief of police has forti fied his position and reiterates his in tention of slaughtering all foreigners if an attempt is made to dislodge him SA6E TEA WIIC DARKENTIIEIIAIH Restore Faded and Gray Hair to Natural C.OIOI Dandruff Quickly Removed. There is nothing new about tin idea of using Sage for restoring the color of the hair. Our grandmothers kept their hair dark, glossy and abundant by the use of a simpb "Sage Tea.” Whenever their hair fell out or took on a dull, faded or streaked appearance, they made a brew of Sage leaves, and applied it to their hair with wonderful ly beneficial effect. Nowadays we don't have to resort to the old-time tiresome method of gath ering the herbs and making the tea. This is done by skillful chemists better than we could do it ourselves; and all we have to do is to call for the ready made product, Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Hair Remedy, containing Sage In the proper strength, with the addition of Sulphur, another old-time scalp rem ed v. This preparation gives youthful col or and beauty to the hair, and is one of the best remedies you can use for dandruff, dry. feverish, itching scalp, and falling hair. Get a fifty cent bot tle from your druggist today, and you will be surprised at .the quick results All druggists sell it, under guarantee that the money will be refunded if the remedy is not exactly as represented. (Advt.) Col. Perry’s New Uniform Arrives in Nine Boxes 10 POUNDS OF GOLD LACE Lieutenant Colonel Jesse Perry, pri vate and military secretary to the gov ernor, is a happy man today! His new uniform has arrived, both full dress and fatigue, along with his sword, and his pistol, and about ten pounds of gold Jaee. Leonard, the capltol porter of colored persuasion, grabbed the various pack ages away from the expressman before that party was well inside the building and bore them in triumph to the gov ernor’s reception room, where Colonel Perry was dispensing hospitality, pend ing the executive’s arrival from his home in Marietta. Colonel Perry s uniform baffles de scription. It beggars the choicest Eng lish and puts all form of rhetorical grandeur strictly on the blink! Whatever the divers and sundry things composing it may or may not be, In plain, everyday language, the tout ensemble Is magnificent anad be wildering. It came in nine boxes, the one con taining the sword being five feet in length. "I don’t see how you is ter wear this sword, cunnel." said Leonard, after the power of articulation had returned to his lips, "unless you hangs it round yer neck! Hit will drag the ground sho. es you fastens hit to that gold belly band ! ” After the colonel had donned his re galia, the display was so loud that a class of deaf-mutes, down from Cave Springs to take in the sights of the l -AMC - PHILLIPS & CREW CO. I We will sell you a good new Piano for $225.00. Easy monthly payments. A 1 We will rent you a good upright Piano for $4.00 per month. We have Victor Victrolas from $15.00 to $250.00, and every Victor rec- I H ord in stock. We offer Steinway, Knabe, Hardman, Fischer, Sterling and our Phil- I H lips & Crew Pianos , I 1 PHILLIPS & CREW CO. I 82-84-86 N. Pryor Street I ESTABLISHED 1865 s iM. RICH & BROS.CO. i I ■ 1 > y 2. * “The Real Department Store” •g r" . SIE J [ GREATER MILLINERY SECTION ' > t gZ 2 n d Floor 5 ,S Dashing Effects in g Tailored Hats Sj 1 Absolute SIO.OO Qg- J 3j Values tomorrow / J .-*• With II View „f making this a memorable sale, we have gotten together a collection of won- rz J* derfui salues in CLEVERLY TAILORED HATS for street wear. The shapes used in the J&P nuking of thi Hi- handsome Tailored Hats are of extra fine quality erect pile silk velvet. I hese hat;, ere . xtreimdy effective and complete the smartness of your tailored toilet. rhe hats are striking!' and spi itedlv trimmed, and have the "snap” and Jaunty grace so much sought by . cultured 'tastes i. r strictly tailored effects. Bows of wide loop edged ribbons, W mgs—fancy - T®® feather "Perky" stick-ups, and other dasliy garnishments. These are models you would nat- LMP rally expect to see priced at SIO.OO, and that’s their value, and they look "La every penny the price; but for tomorrow, Saturday, we have repriced them M ’ Second Floor, Opposite Elevator '~~AP ” k W| « Brilliant Bag Values Glove Glories « IjE L* The Center Aisle is proverbial *’7"'! gioves are the final and ■ Tfcß telling touch of well groomed nicety. Rl _ for its remarkable value-giving They are as necessary to the comple- 3? in Bags of all descriptions, and tion of her toilet as her neckwear, hat ~ or shoes. They are a telling point in the bargain offered you ill this the ultimate estimate of a woman’s re- i®_ item is one of the strongest val- * ar<s for her appearance. J "•5 ues we have ever been able to w « carr >' the complete lines of the r world’s most reputable makers —names secure for you. I hes< Bags are a8 familiar to women ns the members Ji 3 ' real leather in seal grain, fresh, °f their own family. ‘Jte* bright, crisp, new goods, just out Fownes, Trefousse, Fisk, Clark and I . Flagg, Ireland Bros, and so on. These | t 1P tissiH* lohis <>i tilt 1 eat tons Gloves are now ready to show you. You that held them. They are made may be fitted at the counter. JJC with German silver frames. Me- Here are qualities you are familiar : (imm sizes. < rease bottoms, top ’“S strap handles. .fx Two Clas ” ' ram, ’ i ‘ s » 100 •J 5 These are pos- fl |L> (J >'" chas ” * tivelv *1.50 Fownes; Cape Kid $1.50 I ■ Trefousse two-clasp Dorothy .. $1.50 ** y j talms. toluol Fownes’two-clasp Eugenia $1.50 ! TOW Olllj .... Trefousse IS button $3 50 fcß (Center Aisle.) I I Main Floor—Left Aisle. WL ■*V J < J .» ' L, s < J SE J/ WESkai:c9j capitol, came trooping 1n to see what the noise in the governor's reception room was all about! Colonel Perry will make his first American appearance in his new uni form when the governor visits the state fair in Macon next month. FORETELLS DEATH, PREPARES TO DIE, KILLED IN QUARREL LOUISVILLE, KY.. Sept. 27.—When Frank Laswell was visiting his sister here last week he told her he had a presenti ment that he would die as did his father, who was shot to death six years ago. ijaswell made all his preparations for death, despite efforts of his family to cheer him. He returned to his home in Glasgow, Ky., and was shot and killed by John Ritchey In an altercation late last night. ATLANTAN, IN TWO WRECKS ONE DAY, ESCAPES UNHURT To have been in two wreck in one days is the expcrienc of Charles Simms, of Atlanta, who escaped uninjured in both. Mr. Simms went up Wednesday morning to Chattanooga on Southern train No 13 and was jarred consider ably by the wreck of that train at Co hutta. On his return to Atlanta. Wed nesday night he was In the smashup near Plainville. See Nat Goodwin in Oliver Twist at the Forsyth. SLAYER, TWICE REPRIEVED, CONFESSES ON GALLOWS DES ARC, ARK., Sept. 27. —Harvey Wood, convicted of murder and twici reprieved by Governor Donaghey, was hanged at sunrise .today. He confessed when the sheriff placed the noose about his neck. in, This Girl Recovered From Consumption The makers of Eckman's Alterative, which is doing so much good for Con sumptives, are continually tn receipt ol wonderful reports of recoveries brought about solely through the use of this medi cine. These reports are always at the command of any one interested, and many of the writers In their gratitude have sug gested that like sufferers write direct and learn what It did for them. Here is ona specimen: 421 Second Ave.. Aurora, 111. "Gentlemen: Pardon me for not writing sooner, but 1 wanted to see If I would stay cured. I can now truthfully say I am perfectly well. I wish to express my heartfelt thanks. I have no pain, no cough, no night sweats, no hay fever. Since a child of two years, I have beer ailing with lung trouble. which grew worse as I grew older. At the age of four teen. the doctor said if I could not be sent South I would surely die of Consump tion. Every winter I would be sure to have either Bronchitis, Pleurisy or Pneu monia. 1 had Typhoid-Pneumonia one time. I had catarrh of the stomach and bowels and had Hay Fever for the last few years; but have not anything of the kind this year. “I will answer all letters sent to me, asking a history of my case, from any one suffering with lung trouble." (Sworn affidavit) ETTA PLATH. (Five years reports still well.) Eckman's Alterative la e fltective in Bronchitis, Asthma, Hay Fever: Throat and Lung Troubles and m upbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates or habit-forming drugs. For sale by all Jacobs’ Drug Stores and other leading druggists. Ask tor booklet telling of re coveries, and write to Eckman Labora tory, Philadelphia, Pa., for additional evi dence. —Advt. 7