Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 07, 1912, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

6 DADY'S FATHER IS A TAFT PROPHET Here on Visit. Brooklyn G. 0. P. 1 Boss Declares Persident Will Carry New York. Colonel Michael J Dady. formei (and perhaps present > Republican boss of Brooklyn, millionaire contractor and father of the man who is building the local sewage disposal plants, was in town for tic week-end from Cuba and I declared that Taft w ould be, the n» xt president of the United States. This is believed to be the hist time since the <anipaign opened that all At lanta was not unanimous in the belief that the next president of the United States would not weigh over 250 pounds Colonel Dady came to Atlanta iust "on a visit." he said, but probably to see how his son. Chester A, Dady. was spending the o.d man’s rnonet If he found anything to dispieaae him. he didn’t show it. He was ail smiles until somebody mentioned Theodore Roose velt. Outside of This, T. R. Is 0. K. Mr. Dady remarked that outside of the fact that the colonel should he hung, quartered, electrocuted or some thing as the biggest rascal in the world, he was all right Colonel Dady was very, very opti mistic when he wasn t talking about Roosevelt. He thinks Taft is going to carry New York by a big majority. He hoped—and was inclined to believe, he ■aid that Job Hedges would be the next governor of New York, although he admitted the strength of the Demo cratic nominee. William Sulzer, and the Bull Moose candidate, Oscar Straus Dady relies on prejudice to defeat Straus. .lust one admission the Brooklyn contractor would make. He confessed the Bull Moose were mighty strong in Kings county, of which Brooklyn is the county seat. Leaders in the Bull Moose party this year include «ome of the men who helped kt< k Colonel Dady’s old machine in Kings to smithereens some months back. WHITFIELD DEMOCRATS MAY ABANDON PRIMARY DALTON GA . < »Ct. 7 The result of the recent general election here where T R Glenn, chairman of the Whltf>!d county Republican committee, running as an independent, was elected sheriff, has caused widespread comment which may result In doing away with the Democratic primary for county officials Many counties in this vicinity* have adopted this than, and are satisfied with it; Murrav. Catoosa and Dade, three of the six counties making up the Chero kee judicial circuit, held no itimary this yea r CORN CLUB CONTESTS OCT. 15. JACKSON. GA. Oct 7. The Butts County Roys Corn club contests will be held in Jackson nn October U>. al which time the members of the dub will dis play their corn Prizes aggregating more than S2OO have been offered by tite business men of the county Granted Insurance After Consumption There ’c so many cases of consump tion reported where the details show the • disease started with a cold or a cough that it Is realli surprising that people air not more anxious to Immediately stop these apparently minor troubles dur ad vice is "stop the tough or cold, if possi ble. without delay tuberwise more se rious. troubles are likely to follow If lbw medicines you are now taking do not bring relief, tty Eckman s Alterative, as thin mao did 217 Dean Street Brooklyn N V ■Gentlemen I am giving you below a brief hl»tory of my < ase. which I trust you will use for the benefit of those suf fering from any similar troubles " Yboill a Trnr and a half ago I noticed that my health was rapidly failing, until st the end of six months my weight had fallen to 129 pounds 1 was troubled with night sweats, a severe cough and was verv weak, having in fact absolutely no ambi lion whatevei Ybout this time I consult ed a physical!, who told me my lungs were affected Not satisfied I went to another doctor who. after examining me. said that 1 was in the first stages of consump tion At this point I started to take Eckman's Alterative The night sweats “topped almost immediately. my cough became looser and gradually disappeared My weight is now 42 pounds and my physician has pronounced me perfectly sound which, together with the fact that I have been acc, pterl by two different Insurance companies t r Insurance makes me sure of my entire recovery by Eok man's Alterative I should be vet y glad to communicate with any one who would be interested in my case (Sworn iff-at it, XV E GEE Eckman s Mterative is effective in bron chitis, asthma, hay fever, thioat and lung tt * hie- ami in upbuilding the systep In es i: t i ..main poisons, opiates or habit-form i i'u drugs l-'or sale by all Jacobs' drug - ore* ami oilier leau-ng druggists. \sk lei booklet telling of re coveries and write to Eckinat Labora tory Phil, ielpl ‘1 Pa sot additional evi dence , (Advt.) WE WILL MAIL YOU $1 ' ' • 'i'' i b -et ( g ■ • for old < Sold* Watt Bi oken • ewelry and Precious* Slones Money Sent By Return Mali Phila Smeltmq and Refining Co.. I ! .1 t- \ H ' 863 Chestnut S* . Philadelphia. Pa TO DENTISTS We will bu> on.’ Gold HI nx- Gold . ■ es uald ■ l J lOplofa, Whiakey and Drug Habit* treated |IA iioin* or nt Siniurium, Rook on tuhm t { feiJ H /,rrg - DR 14 M " OOLLF.Y, 14-N. Fluor '-saMBfaMV banitanum. Atlanta. Georgia CHICHESTER S PILLS *9%. 1 Hl« in K. <1 »n I 1..1.1 r ... O . r soi ngy ori fiGisis fyi rywhi re SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS The presence in Atlanta of J. Max ! well Gordon, field representative of the | Democratic national committee, here for I the purpose of arousing enthusi I ting signatures to '* a mammoth peti- Jr , lion to congress. t asking that lion- jp* ann livable body to provide some ♦- J/taE (al met h o d . whereby traveling men away from ho' l -" may vole it, E3 y u.'i 11* n.i i fdect lons. Kai recalls n )e f ;1 , Sk *** that a movement rag is on among the ': tri.y ci ng men <d 9§|| a/wW Georgia to gtt from the state legislature similar JA>*M ® srKvoj legislation with respect to state elec tions. The traveling men of Georgia esti mate that a heavy percentage of their vole necessarily is omitted from every ballot box opened in Georgia, because of the fact that It Is impossible for them to go to their homes to vote without great expense and loss of time, not to mention fnconveni' nee. The traveling men feel that both common sense and fairness should in cline the legislature to furnish them a legal method of registering their votes. They think they should be permitted to deposit their ballots wherever they may be. No men. as a class, are more deeply interested in politics than tlie traveling tnen, and they are unusually well in formed. Their opportunities for hear ing all sides of public questions dis cussed, in widely separated localities, enables them to put two and two to gether with .accuracy and dispatch. Moreover, they are directly affected by much legislation enacted, and their de sire to participate tn elections is, there fore, particularly keen. There is a plan being worked out now among the traveling men of Georgia, looking to Hie passing by the next leg islature of a law enabling them to vote in all state elections, no matter where they may be at the moment The manager of one of Rome's locker clubs, recently operating under such color of authority as the state tax on baker clubs gave it. wishes the Georgia legislature never had monkeyed with the locker club situation at all. for it has made him a defendant in two le gal proceedings, each coming from a different and directly opposite direc tion. Under the leadership of former Rep resentative Seaborn Wright, the Law and Order league of Rome has closed every locker club in the town. Tlie Hill City is lockerless and club less, and consequently extremely Sa ha raesque 1 The manager of one of the clubs, viewing the Wright process with gen uine alarm, quit business, and denied all members access to their booze de positories. He felt snug and safe in that position, so far as the immediate present and future were concerned, anyway Saturday however, a number of members went into court and petitioned that the manager be forced to open the locker club, and let the members liqui date, as the < lub is sanctioned under the law. and. Spending the court's decis ions in the Law and Order league mat ter, tlie club, so the petition sets up. has every right to keep open house. The manager is now in the middle of tlie worst fix he ever found himself He does not know whether to choose tile devil or the deep blue sea as his refuge' Governor Joseph M. Brown has a watch of which he is very proud, even if It is not as accurate a timekeeper as it used to be. This watch is of solid gold, and was manufactured in Atlanta away back yonder in the good old days, when At lanta boasted one of the few watch factories ever operated in the South When the governor bought this watch, is was the fashion to wear watches with heavy closed cases, elab orately engraved. Upon tlie question of A Log On the Track. r of the fast express means serious trou ble ahead if not removed, so does loss . of appetite. It means lack of vitality, loss of strength and nerve weakness. If appetite fails, take Electric Bitters quickly to overcome tlie cause by ton ing up the stomach and curing the in digestion Michael Hessheimer. ofl.in- i coin. Nebr., had been sick over three I years, but six bottles of Electric Bitters I I put him light on his feel again They ’have helped thousands. They give pure blood strong nerves, good digestion. , only on < i tits at all druggists, t Advt.) ’ H' re is a woman who speaks from personal knowledge and long expe lience. viz. Mis I’ H Brogan. of Wil son F’a who says "I know from e.x perience that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Is far superior to any other. Eor croup there is nothing tu.n excels i* ' For sale by all dealers i Advt i FINEST DENTAL WORK AT LOWEST PRICES | I'heie Is no finer denial work done I any where than at the Atlanta Dental '! Bailors yel | ikes her, ate so low a> i to astonish those who have been pay- I mg the 'usual dentist s charges This is taiily dm 1 to an immense I practice and paitly to tlie very fine modern * .r.lpment and partlv to the I fa< t that lids establishment wishes to .(make lasting friends of Its patients Ask your friends about the work of . ilie Atlanta Dental Parlors at the cor j tier of Peachtree and Decatur streets tAdvt • | EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS AND DECORATIONS ATLANTA FLORAL CO. Call Maan 11M tAtJv ertls«ment > By JAMES B NEVIN. engraving the governor s watch, he and the manufacturers had quite a little ar gument. the former contending that nothing could be more ornamental to a Georgia-made watch —or any other watch, for that matter -than the coat of-arms of tlie state, while tlie latter was strong for birds and laurel wreaths, and ornaments of that sort. "I had no idea then, not the remot est. that I should be governor of the state some day/' said the chief mag istrate today, discussing Ills watch, "but I had been impressed by my father, the'former governor, more than once with the beautiful signflcance of that coat-of-arms. He had explained to me and all of his children the meaning of every figure thereon, and nothing else would suit me bul that.” The governor and M'-s. Brown, cu riously enough, too, were married on "Georgia Day”—February 12 only it wasn't "Georgia Day” at all, then—-and they resided for years in the home of an early governor of Georgia—Charles McDonald, for whom one of the “war governors ’ sons was named. Tlie pres ent governor wrote his first latten of acceptance from that house. If the governor were a Presbyterian, he would think all those things were foreordained, and just naturally hap pened that way—as he is a Baptist, however, he regards them as interesting coincidences merely . R. Usher Thomason, of Madison, is an Atlanta visitor, which is an unusual thing nowadays, even if it was a regular weekly occurenci some ten or twelve years ago. Mr. Thomason used to play the game of politics with the best of them down in Morgan, and represented his county in the house several times—in fact, whenever the spirit moved him. He en joyed and still does—a large measure of popularity, and at one time was (hairman of the military committee of the house. The former membet from Morgan is a retired colonel of the Georgia state troops, having commanded for many years the famous old Third Georgia. He was a military enthusiast in the '9o's, but of late years has given up his war like ambitions and activities for the more prosaic business of banking "Atlanta always looks good to me,” said Thomason today, “even if I do not get here very often. I keep my’ eyes on the legislature, too. and still have many friends in public life, whose careers T watch with interest, and frequently with pride.” Ruptured People- Try This for Relief and Cure Here la something you can try sixty days without having to risk a single cent of your money Something which has cured in the last twenty-four .sears thousands of ruptured people Something so strengthening to the rup tured parts that you can work light along while being cured If you don’t find yourself gelling bet ter after trying a t’luthe Truss or Cluthe Automatic Massagei If you don't think it s doing you a lot of good- making a new man of you Then we don’t want a pennx Try It Sixty Days at Our Risk. 'This is more than a truss more than merely a device to hold your rupture in place F'or your protection we guarantee, in writing that a Cluthe Truss will keep your rupture from coming out when you are working, exercising, taking a bath (this truss Is waterproof) every minute of tire day If a sixty days’ trial doesn’t prove it. the truss won’t cost you a cent. You see this truss unlike all others is self-adjusting, self-regulating 'Phe support it gives automatically in creases when there is any sudden move ment or strain as in working so no strain < an force your rupture out And. in addition, a Cluthe Truss pro vides the only way ever discovered for overcoming the weakness which Is the real cause of rupture. While relieving the weak ruptured parts of all strain, this Truss is constantly strengthening the ruptured parts. Does that by automatically massaging them this healing massage does for these parts what exercise does for a weak arm restores their lost strength in many cases makes them so strong that a truss is no longer needed Curing Begins at Once. This massage is so beneficial that near ly all feel better and stronger get imme diate relief after trying this truss So beneficial that a Cluthe Truss has cured some of the worst cases on record Among them men and women 50 to 70 years old. who bad been ruptured from twenty to fifty years <'tired many of them after everything rls*>. Including operation, had failed to do any good whatever. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.MONDAY, OCTOBER 7. 1912. The Wisdom of Saving Money It is characteristic of the really prudent and successful man that he believes in Saving. I he wisest thing for every earner to do is to save consistently and steadily. I here is no hank where your Savings ac count will he handled -with more care and safety than the Fourth National. Call or write if you desire any informa mation on this subject. Fourth National Bank BABY OR PICTURE? GREAT QUESTION PUZZLES LONDON LONDON. Oct. 7.—ls you were in a burning house in which were a help 's s baby and the most valuable picture in the world. Raphael's "Dresden Ma donna." which would you save - .’ This is the question discussed in The Lon don Daily Express, as the result of a letter written to The London Times by Sir George Birwood. on the subject of th* sacrifice of the Temple of Philae to make room for the Assouan Dam in Egypt. H* quotes Sir Henry Knolls as draw ing, a comparison of the picture and child and saying: "I should certainly save the Madonna first. She can get another baby, but there is only one Dresden Madonna.” The Express prints the opinions of many prominent persons, all in absolute disagreement of this view. H. De Ver* Stacpoole says: "If the fire wore in a criminal lunatic asylum of which I was a patient, the Madonna would stand a chance, other wise the baby first.” Arthur Bourchier, John Collier, Max Pemberton and Sir Hiram Maxim all declare that one live baby is worth more than a million pictures. Elinor Glyn says: "It Is much too difficult a question for my small brain to answer. It is worse than th* lady or the tiger.” Drives Sallowness from the Skin imperfect complexion is enused by ■ sluggish livet. A few days treatment with CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS will do more to clean up the skin than all the beauty cieams in creation. Cures constipation, * unclogs the liver, CRD ends indigestion, WtVKO biliousness and d i z z t n e ss. \\ Purely vege- . table —nevei fail. Small Pill. Small Dote, Small Price. The GENUINE must beai signature Our Expense if It Fails. 'i ou are making the mistake of your life if you lei any doubts or past disappoint ments keep you from finding out what a ’ liithe Truss can do for you. Remember that wt' ask you to take no ehances W e’ll make a truss especially for your ease and send it to you and allow you sixty days trial in prove tliat it wQI hold your rupture that it will put an end to the trouble you’ve heretofore had and improve your condition. If tlie trial fails to prove tliis, we ll lie the losers, not you. Get the World's Greatest Rupture Book Ko thal you can judge tor yourself, we warn io send you a free book we have written a cloth-bound book of advice. Hven physicians who have read it say it’s the best book ever written on Rupture. li sums up all we have learned about rupture in forty years of day-after-day experience in the successful treatment of more than 290,000 cases. It deals with rupture In all its fdrrns and stages -ex plains the dangers of operations—ex poses the worthless trusses and the equally worthless makeshifts masquerad -1 ing under such names as “appliance,” “method.” “system,” “plasters,” etc.— , puts you on guard against throwing money away on things that can’t stand a fair lest. And it tells all about the Cluthe Truss how little it costs how it ends con stant expense on account of your rupture how thousands have found ibis truss as comfortable as their clothing ino • springs or web or elastic band or belt around your waist no leg straps)—how you can try one sixty days at our risk thus giving you plenty of time to make sure of its wonderful holding and healing powers and of its waterproof and wearing qualities It tells in their own words the ex perience of many former sufferers—gives their names and addresses—perhaps you know some of them. Book sent in plain, sealed envelope, ; Write for it today don't put it off this book may be the means of adding many years to your life and of restoring you to full strength and usefulness. s .lust use the coupon or simply say in a letter or postal “Send me the Book ” In writing us. please give our box number: “ Box 55—CLUTHE COMPANY 125 East Twenty-third Street. NEW YORK CITY. Send me your Free Book on The ( Cure of Rupture i Name . I r. 8 f roe t Town CHAMBERS Replies to “Bulletins Extra” TO MESSRS. JOHN J. EAGAN AND MARION JACKSON: Your publication of “Bulletins Extra’’ in open support of the can didacy of James G. Woodward for Mayor, and copied by his campaign committee in newspaper advertisements as an effort to make it appear that the Churches of Atlanta are supporting him, has made it necessary for me to make a statement. It is not strange that the two extremes typified by you and Mr, Woodward should have come together and joined forces. It is not sur prising that the fanaticism which moves you to make a public at tack upon me, while assuming to represent the churches of Atlanta, should at the same time move you to support James G. Woodward and all that he represents. I do not believe the views of the good people of Atlanta are repre sented in your “Bulletins Extra,’’ which gives no credit for public hon esty and cleanliness of life, any more than I believe the true spirit of progressive Atlanta is represented in James G. Woodward. Every man elected to office takes an oath to enforce the law. I have endeavored in the past, and will endeavor in the future, to faith fully and properly discharge my duty under that oath. But the responsibility of how I shall discharge my duty will rest upon my own shoulders, not yours. No man can answer for my conduct but myself, and no man shall dictate to me the manner in which I am to perform my duty, Atlanta is a metropolitan city where every class of honest men are welcome. For you or any other set of fanatics, charged with no respon sibility except that which you gratuitously assume with reference to the morals of the community, to be allowed to dictate the method of pro tecting and furthering the moral and industrial welfare of this city, would be a blow at the vitals of democratic government, and I do not propose ever to be a party to any such procedure. The subjects discussed by you in your “Bulletins Extra’’ were not and are not issues in this campaign, nor is there any reason to believe that any considerable number of the people of this city, especially the churches, have any desire to make them the issues. But inasmuch as you two immaculate gentlemen, presuming to con stitute the “Executive Committee,” have so persistently and publicly clamored for an expression from me, I have decided to give it to you. If you have made up your minds to believe Mr. Woodward’s claims of reform and repentance, and to support him in preference to me, not withstanding his past notorious record, well and good. Pure motives, efficient service, and honest endeavor to lead a moral life may count for nothing with the “Churches in Our Midst,” but I have yet to arrive at such a conclusion. Ido not claim perfection or immaculate conduct. lam a normal man in the early prime of life, swayed by human emotions, earnestly de sirous of achieving the highest degree of permanent good, conceding the fallibility of human judgment, but endeavoring always to do what is right and to accomplish lasting results. Permit me, excellent gentlemen, to suggest that it might be well for you to look into the question of educating the public along moral lines, rather than for you to undertake to foist upon the community your own particular scheme of obtaining moral results. You have insisted on a declaration from me, and now you have it. If you prefer a man whose sole ambition for twenty-five years has been to hold public office; whose administrations have been famous for wrangling and dissension, not to mention other things which reflect no credit upon himself or the city—and whose present race can have no motive except to obtain personal and political revenge upon the people who have twice repudiated him— If you prefer this man to a man who is making his first race, whose whole life is before him, and who has all to lose by inattention to duty and improper conduct, then take Mr, Woodward, and say so. In the language of Holy Writ, from which you are so fond of quoting: “Choose ye this day whom ye will support.” Respectfully, ALDINE CHAMBERS. (Advertisement.)