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America
T he Wiltshire y
Spirited Clothes
\ oung man, we have em—and you need
have no fears of not getting the Best and most
Fashionable Suits and Overcoats in America
from our several High Grade Lines—
-1 hey re smart—snappy—high spirited—fit
to perfection—
Norfolk and English models in new fabrics
and shades—
sls to S4O
Eiseman Bros., Inc.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall St.
FRED MILES
DENIESCHARGES
TO THE PEOPLE OF ATLANTA :
Through insinuations made by my opponent in
his public statements, ami by “political gossipers"
on the streets. I have been charged with being the
tool of corporate interests in my race lor City elec
trician.
I have been conducting a clean and lair cam
paign. and had hoped that no reflection would be
made against my character requiring a defense at my
hands.
I am 35 years of age: was born and reared in At ■
lanta; have held public and private positions of re
sponsibility and t rust, and never before has it ever
come to my knowledge that anyone has charged me
with dishonorable relations.
I wish to say that I am not the candidate of any
person or corporation; that I am absolutely under
no obligations to anyone, except to my friends, the
people of this city, whom I confidently expect to elect
me City Electrician tomorrow.
I am an electrician by training and rears of ex
perience: and. as touching my fitness and competen
cy to fill the office I seek. I refer the voters of the citv.
with absolute confidence, to any skilled electriciau
in Atlanta.
I was City Electrician in 1904 to 1910. My con
duct of the office at that time is a public record. It
is passing strange that my opponent has not been
able to dig from my record, then, something that
would substantiate his charge of “corporate con
trol.”
When I assume my duties a< City Electrician I
I'l'oiinst tin people a faithful. painstaking adminis
tration of this important department of your public
i' ' - I will sincerely appreciate vour vote and
i nfluemr.
-nr. ATLANTA tWKtrIAS AM) NEWb.'l I ESDAY. OtJUBEK 1.191 T.
HEARST ASKS T. R, TO
MAKE PUBLIC ALL HIS
OILCORRESPONDENOE
(From The New York Sun.)
PARIS Oct I. In reply to a
question by The Sun s correspond
ent, William R Hearst dictated the
following statement.
The Standard Oil investigation,
about to begin before the senate of
' the United States, should be of
great value if thorough and impar-
| tiai and made with an earnest and
honest desire to secure the fullest
facts, and not merely in the hope of
protecting some individuals and
discrediting others.
The personnel of the committee
I would seem to be sufficient guaran
tee of a proper and complete in
vestigation which will reveal the
I evil methods of those privileged
interests which seek to exercise un
due influence upon certain of our
| public men in America.
As for Mr. Roosevelt, no one
would place him in the same cate
gory with the Penroses or Sib
leys and the Archbolds. Mr. Roose-
| veil is an honorable man and it is !
impossible to imagine him involved
in any squalid scandal.
The only question in regard to
Mr. Roosevelt is to what extent he
invited and-secured the support of
those powerful criminal corpora
i Hons which he has always publicly
pretended to oppose, in discuss
ing this question and in the Stand
ard Oil letters, Mr. Roosevelt should
adhere a little more closelv to the
point involved.
Evades the Question.
.Mr. Roosevelt says in the pa
pers that if Mr. Sibley or any other
congressman desired to bring any
friends to meet him he was always
willing to meet them. That is an
evasion of the question. The tacts
as related are that Mr. Roosevelt
urged Mr. Sibley to bring Mr.
Archbold to the white house to
luncheon, and Mr. Archbold sent a
telegram to Mr. Sibley, declining to
come. It is not a, question of Mr.
Archbold's havjnjj- desired to see
Mr. Roosevelt, but of Mr. Roose
velt’s having desired to ■ see Mr.
Archbold.
Mr. Roosevelt then goes on to
say in the papers that he met Mr. !
Morgan and he met Mr. Harriman
and he met Mr. Rockefeller, and
that sometimes he discussed the
baseball situation and sometimes
the labor conditions and at one
time the white slave traffic. All
this again has nothing- to do with
the point.
The question discussed by Mr.
Roosevelt as related by Mr. Sibley
in his confidential letter was the
attitude to the Standard Oil Com
pany. It was not the attitude of
the Standard Oil Company’ on the
baseball situation, nor yet the at
titude pf the Standard .Oil Company
"n the labor situation nor yet the
attitude of the Standard Oil Com
pany on the white slave traffic, but
the attitude of the Standard Oil
Company on the political situation
as it affected Mr. Roosevc’t.
Truth Will Come Out.
I hat this was exactly the subject
of discussion will be brought out
later in greater detail, and. in the
meantime, if the subject is to be
discussed at all by Mr. Roosevelt, it
should be discussed with relation
to the points at issue and with i
some considnation for the intelli
gence and information of th a read- ’
I ing public.
Mr. Roosevelt says that if I will
tell him exactly what letters I have
he himself will make them public. I
if Mr. Roosevelt wishes to make
any letters public, why does he I
limit the publication to the letters !
that 1 possess'.' Why not give the
public the benefit of all the letters
he possesses on this interesting
subject
II is ridiculous to say that he
ean t find this or that letter. He
can find quick!.' enough the let
ters he desired to make public, and
had no difficulty in discovering the
letters he had carefully written to
Mr. Bliss with regard to the re
jection of Standard Oil contribu
tions.
1 note, furthermore, in the news
papers that Senator Penrose a few
The Octopus began a fight
on R. C. Turner, city electri
cian, many months ago be
cause he began a fight to put
back into the pockets of the
people some of the big divi
dends made by that gigantic
corporation.
Special Prices
"* J Gold Crowns .. . 53.00
1W Bri^e Work • • • S 4 M
W ** Silver Fillings ... 50c
i&rjk J Painless Extracting 50c
Teeth Made While You „C fltl
a w ’* t
A ' other o’icos -eaeonable.
One of the men who irade the
NEW YORK AND AMERICAN
PARLORS
A mervOlous Success. W» ouer.
□flW. J. HAHPER thie"*fi*m* ry d °" e b
days ago expressed the timid hope
that if 1 had any further letters
reflecting upon him I would hasten
to publish them. I imagine that
Senator Pen-ose really hopes that I
won't, but he knows that 1 will.
At any rate. Senator Penrose's
invitation expresses a singularly
insatiable appetite for exposure. He
has already been disclosed as con
nected with the questionable finan
cial transaction involving his public
life of tlie Standard Oil Company,
revealing to Mr. Archbold secrets
of legislation which affected Stand
ard Oil interests
, Penrose Exposed.
He has already been exposed as
the trusted agent of the Standard
Oil Company in the United States
senate, a fit successor to the dis
creditable Quay. He has been ex
posed aa tlie venal boss of a cor
rupt political machine employed
and financed by the Standard Oil
and allied institutions.
He and Quay and Foraker have
been shown to be the intimate and
reliable public friends to whom Mr.
Archbold appealed for assistance
in securing the appointment of
complaisant judges. He has been
shown, while a senator and while
a leader in Pennsylvania politics,
to have been the recipient of a
>-5.000 campaign contribution from
a criminal co poration seeking po
litical favors and judicial immuni
ty.
Finally, he has been exposed as a
fa’sifler in an unworthy attempt
to unload the consequences of his
own iniquity upon the seif-con
fessedlv pure and innocent Mr.
Roosevelt.
it seems to me that this ought to
be enough exposure to satisfy Sen
ator Penrose, and I can not see how
the senator can hope to receive any
further exposure and retain his lib
erty. He had better be less urgent
in his invitations. Furthermore.
Senator Penrose has no right so
wholly to monopolize the unfavor
able attention of the country.
There are other inculpated gentle
men clamoring for attention, and
they must get it both from the
senatorial investigating 'committee
and from me.
WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST.
PILES QUICKLY
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to All in Plain Wrapper.
The Pyramid Smile
Many . ases of Piles have been cured
by a trial package of Pyramid Pile
Remedy without furthe: treatment.
When it proves its value to you, get
mo f from your druggist at 50c a box.
and be sure you get the kind you ask
for. Simply fill out free coupon below
and mail today. Sa\e yourself from
the surgeon’s knife and its torture, the
doyto;- and his bills.
FREE PACKAGE COUPON
PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, -ti'2
I’y amid B’.ii.g.. .Marshall, .Mich.:
Kmdlv n. 2me a sample of Pyra
mid Pile Remedy, at once, by mail.
FREE, in plain wrapper.
Name
Street
City State
Fred Miles will administer
the affairs of Citj’’ Electri
cian in a fair and impartial
BUSINESS ma nner, with a
strict guardianship for the
public interests and without
any attempt to use the city
and her enterprises for polit
ical purposes in his own be
half. Vote for him Wednes
day.
12 SOCIALISTS PLACE
NAMES ON BALLOT.
RECORD FOR LENGTH
With the addition of the names of
. twelve Socialist candidates. Judge John
I R. Wilkinson, of the Fulton county'
court of ordinary, believes the largest
recapitulation sheet for state election
figures ever handled in Fulton county
will be used this fall.
The sheet will carry 93 names. 83
Democratic candidates and 12 Social
ists. Candidates for state and county
offices will appear on the sheet, and.
undei a new ruling, all the candidates
for superior court judgeships and so
| licitorships anywhere in the state will
appear on the Fulton sheet.
GIRL-WIFE, WHO LEFT
HUSBAND IN 10 DAYS,
NOW WANTS DIVORCE
I ROME, GA, Oct. I.—Pretty Stella
I Clark G'eggs and her husband lived
I together just ten days and then the
I parting of the ways came. The little
bride, just fifteen years old, has tiled a
petition for divorce.
In her petition Mrs. Greggs alleges
I that she married George Greggs on
| March 1, 1912. and that on March 10
1912, they separated. She claims he
wa« brutal to her and she just simply
I couldn't live with him.
"Besides." says the unhappy girl,” he
I threatened to kill me if I did not rnarrv
him."
FAIR BUILDING CONTRACTS LET.
COLUMBUS, GA., Oct. I.—At a
meeting of the directors of the Georgia-
Alabama Fair association, held last
night, bids for the erecting of buildings
so the fair to be held in Columbus
November 27 to December 7, were re
ceived and contracts for their construc
tion awarded.
READ THSS.
The Texas Wonder cures kidney and
Madder troubles, removing gravel, cures
diabetes, weak and lame backs, rheums
:fsm. and ah Irregularities of the kidneys
and bladder >n both men and women
I regulates oladder troubles tn children
If not sold by your druggist, will be x_nt
by mall on receipt of 41.00. One srnai;
bottle is two months treatment and sel
dom fails in nerfe-*t a cure Send for tas
tfn-.onlaic from this and other states Dr
I E. W Hall. 2S2K ollve-st . St Unite Un
sold by druggists. (Advt.)
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The public has at last realized that Atlanta is at a critical point in its history: that it is at
the parting of the ways: that with one candidate charging another with cross immorality and
drunkenness and other charges, with the retaliation that another candidate is held by a ring
rule for Atlanta, a ring rule that can not be shaken off for years to come.
The voters must tomorrow decide whether they will support Mr. Steve R. Johnston, a
candidate for mayor against whom nothing whatever has been charged either in his personal
or professional or political life. but. on the contrary, a man that has the confidence of the
laboring man and business element, and ail of those interested in the development and up
building of the good morals of our city. The answer rests with the voters.
A vote for Mr. Steve R. Johnston means the removal from our city of the mud and
stench of petty politics, the interest of Mr. Johnston looking solely for the development of our
Campaign Committee
Fred Miles is a highly ef
ficient electrician, a splendid
all-around man, painstaking,
faithful and tactful in the
; discharge of duty. Is honest
and courageous, and for
years filled the position of
City Electrician with con
spicuous ability. Vote for
him Wednesday.
— U-. u... IL—;
HEATERS
You will Need One—Get Ready
Before Cold Weather Comes
Why not buy just a little earlier than usual and have a nice, new
Heater all ready for the first cold wave? Let us put one up for you.
Our Piedmont Oak
-f&T ’ ' is an unusu a ,, y good Heater. It is made of
Wk
B ; f the best Srade material, and has drawer
! center grates for letting out cinders. It is
I nicely finished with nickel-plated parts and
will surely please you.
Compare These Prices
12-in. 14-in. 16-in. 18-in.
W/T Fire-pot. Fire pot, Fire-pot. Fire-pot.
: $ 8,50 511.00 $13.00 $16.00
We also have Heaters Ranging in
Price from $3.00 up
ANDERSON HARDWARE CO.
32-34 SOUTH PRYOR ST.
Fred Miles’ friends (and
he has hundreds of them)
knows that he is made of the
stuff that is unpurchasable
That’s why they resent the
insinuation that he belongs
to anybody. He is competent
and square. Vote for him
Wednesday for City Elec
trician.