Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 09, 1912, HOME, Page 8, Image 8

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8 ' ‘TUBERCULOSIS DAY’ IN CHURCHES <• I I . 1 ■ October 27 To Be Observed in Atlanta and Other Cities of United States. ' Interest In the effective observation i of "Tuberculosis day.’ Sunday. October ' 27. has been stirred by the Anti-Tuber ‘ culosfs and Visiting Nurse association ‘ among the large majority of the churches and Sunday schools of Al lan.a, and In nearly every pulpit of the *• city there will be either sermons upon or references to the Important work, while in the Sunday schools short talks will be given instructive alike to chil dren and adults as to conduct in avoid ing and preventing the spread of the disease. The Atlanta movement is but a part of the greater campaign which Is na- , tional in its scope. <'n October 2i. or approximately that date. 50.000 sermon. , t> will be preached all over the. country . dealing with tuberculosis and the fight ■ ' for its eradication. and a» many more ' talks will be made to the children in schools and Sunday achoola. covering every state in the Union. ■ "Tuberculosis day" originally ae* ' for April 28, but owing to conflict with 1 “Conservation Sunday" of the Men and * Religion Forward Movement. was post- , poned until October 27. a time when it < will not only achieve the desired end t • In the dlsae mi nation of Information, I a but will give Impetus to the sale of the I J Rod Cross seats through the proceeds 1 of which the big fight is waged ‘ Lending especial Interest to the <ksJ. i governors of states wIM Iseue pro.c.a --» mations wpt>roving the work and Owt -1 ting the day apart to call attention to t ■nd Impceee its importance ’ BRIDE HIS STENOGRAPHER OF JUST TEN YEARS AGO J ST. LOUIS, Oct ».—An acquaintance * formed ten years ago. when Mian Ade laide T. Hedegaardo was a stenographer j in the office of Samuel H. Fullerton, ( wealthy lumber man, led to their mar- ( rlage FuUlerton, who is Mi years old, and his brtde. saJd to be Jess than half , his age. axe now In the Bast for a ( honeymoon tour. They* will return in a few week® to the Fullerton residence. Miss Hedegaarde's father was Danish , c onsul in St. Ixiute He died In 1900 DR. SOULE AND DrTpARKS 1 ON EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM ; LonSVIhLE. KY Oct. Notable addresses on pertinent topics will mark the annua! sessions of the Southern ’ Educational association In LouiovlUe November 28-30, according to the pre liminary program announced by fSeo rctary and Treasurer W. F. Feagin, of Montgomery. Ala. Georgians to appear .on the program are Dr Andrew M Soule, president of the State College of 3 Agriculture. Athena and Dr. M M. ■parks, president Georgia Normal and Industrial school, .Milledgeville MUSCOGEE INSTITUTE OCT. 14-17. COLUMBUS. GA.. Oct 9.--The Mus . cogee County Teachers institute will I be held here October 14 to 17. The r institute will be conducted bv State , School Supervisor F E I/tnrf, of Daw eon .All white teacher* are compelled V to attend under the school law WATSON CANCELS ENGAGEMENTS THOMSON, GA., Oct. 9.—Because of the strike on the Georgia railroad, which has isolated Thomson and be cause of an Indisposition. Thomas E Matson has cancelled engagements to ( Bpeak at Bartow, Wrens and Dublin •within the next few days. J W Copeland, of Dayton. Ohio, pur chased a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for his boy who had a . old and before the bottle was all used the boy's cold was gone la that not bet ter than tn pay a five dollar doctor's bill? For aale by all dealers <Advt ) PRESERVE YOUR PICTURES. Get a Kodak Album Jno. L Moore A Sons have just the sire and kind you want. Call and see them. 43 North Broad street. <Advt.) EXQU ISI TE WEDDING BOUQUETS AND DECORATIONS. f ATLANTA FLORAL CO Call Main 1180, (Advertisement ) FINEST DENTAL WORK AT LOWEST PRICES There is no finer dental work done anywhere than at the Atlanta Dental Parlors, yet prices heie are so low a < to astonish those who have been pay ing the usual dentist s Charges this is partly due to an immense practice ami partly to the wry line modern equipment and partly to the fact that this establishment wishes to make lasting friends of its patients. Ask you: friends about the work of the Atlanta Dental Parlors at the Cor ner of Peachtree and Decatur afreets (Advt » 55.25 to Birmingham and return, account Alabama State Fair. On sale to 12th. Seaboard. The Columbus Atlanta Special with first class day coaches and Pullman sleep ! ing car leaves Atlanta 12:30 noon via Southern Railway, arrives Columbus 5:10 p., m.; returning, leaves Col umbus 9:30 a. m., arrives Atlanta 1:40 p. m., connect ing with the Birmingham Special for New York and | the East. Through Pullman sleeping car Columbus to! New York SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ' ON GEORGIA POLITICS • ’ By JAMES B. NEVIN. Woodrow Wilson enthusiasts tn Geor gia todsyiare enjoying a-greater meas ure of genuine, ro<d<-ribbed, sure- L- ft Ktvrw enough optimism than at any time since the Balti more convention named Wilson and Marshall to carry/ the Democratic standard this pear to glory or the grave. Unquestionably, the prevailing opinion among the Democrats in Georgia is that the Roosevelt campaign has passed Its zenith, i and that the Taft campaign Is really as hopeless as it heretofore has seemed to be. From every direction comes cheering Wilson news. Roosevelt's visit to the South, teaching its climax In Atlanta, is looked back upon complacently and with no alarm by Democrats Rainbows bedeck the Democratic skies from every point of view, and he is a poor I>emocrat. Indeed, who fails to point with pride nowadays to every campaign sign and symbol The New York situation has straight ened Itself out most satisfactorily. For a time things admittedly looked bad up there. Georgians accepted the Bull Morsis nomination of Straus as a mas ter stroke of political diplomacy —and tt was a fine nomination. Oscar Straus is a worthy ex-Georgian. and his ele vation to the chief magistracy of the Empire State of the North would cause no weeping or wailing or gnashing of teeth In the Empire State of the South —ln ordinary clroumstanoes, anyway. The nomination of Congressman Sul zer by the Democrats of New York, however, was a fair and square ac ceptance of the challenge of Oscar Rtraus, and by all the rules of the game Sulzer now stands to win—and Democratic victory In New York Is the consummation supreme most devoutly to be wished! Sulzer’s nomination cleared the at ■ mosphere—it puts New York, so Geor gia Democrats think, in the Wilson and Marshall column to stay put! Taken al! In all, Wilson hopes never before hsve been so high, and so ap parently justified. In Georgia hearts, as they are today. The initial slogan, ’Win With Wil son.” seems likely to be justified abun dantly latte bulletins front the bedsides This $750 Roadster— —is in a class by itself—built so that two persons can en J°y motoring with the highest degree of comfort. Plenty of leg room large steering wheel easy to control. x I sea t’ s as comfortable as your leather arm chair it isr. t divided, it is made to accommodate two persons comfortably. There is a skirt guard over the lower part and “rakish” in appearance—an alto- °* the sh,ft,n * an important gether handsome car. point should the driver be a woman. Showing comtortabie unJi- v, i t , Full elliptic springs do awav with the ne- RoX?’ ° f ’ he S,udeb-k * r ItS X‘b 80 eaS> ' SteP '° CeSSlly for Shock absorbers tba < Hll spring service is a wonder for riding own w ith any car on the road. ... X X. Vvc can ma * e immediate delivery of these / X D is light, economical, easy to control, low cars. Tdi \ STUDEBAKER CARS STUDEBAKER FLANDERS) “20” STUDEBAKER (E-M-F) “30 I' / Rowdster - - - $750 Touring Car - - - . snoo « f louring Car . . . goo V ' IliP'lJ / Utiluy Car ... g t ,o Detachable Demi-Tonneau . Imo -V Delivery Car . . . 8 00 Roadster .... noo AII P"'"* f ° h Detroit. Top. Windshield, Preat-O-Lite Tank and Speedometer. Extra. ■ se * our denier You rm get prompt deiwery. Our Art Catalog mailed on regueet. Showing easy Men fmm the THE STUDEBAKER CORPORATION Detroit, Michigan STUDEBAKER CORPORATION OF AMERICA Atlanta Branch. 112-14-16 Auburn Ave.. Atlanta. Ga. G W HANSON Mur PHONL IVY 1694 ' ’ J 1 HE A I LAN LA (iEOKGLAJN AM) NEWS W EDNESDW. UUTUBEK y, i.-,,_. of Editors Shope, of The Dalton Citizen, and Laps Walker, of The Chattanooga Times, are encourag ing, and both are expected to re cover from the shock of grief each su.,.alned when Judge Fite was summoned to court Monday for contempt. It Is a matter <af genuine interest tn Georgia politicians to know that Ed ward Brown Is to be the manager In charge of the Kimball house, under the genera! direction of the new lessee. Mr. Brown is to be In absolute im mediate control of the famous hotel and will devote his entire time and en ergy to that, and to nothing else. The Kimball house is identified with Georgia politics as few things are. Within its walls governors, senators. Judges and minor public officials have been made and unmade for years. There '‘Bill’' Atkinson was made a gubernatorial possibility, and "Steve” Clay was decided upon to succeed Gor don in the I'nited States senate, after Speaker Crisp had been named in a primary, only to die upon the eve of his formal election. From the Kimball house was directed the first successful campaign for “Little Joe” Blown, and there it was that Jo seph M. Terrell played his last political card In his own behalf in Georgia. If the Kirnball house walls could talk but they can't Ed Brown guarantees that! Al! Georgia Is agog with excitement, as they say In Savannah, as “Governor and Legislative day" at the state fair In Macon comes on apace. The Indications are tiiat ihe occasion is to be one of great joy and eclat, as they say in Athens. Restless as the happy day drags nearer and nearer, The Vienna News relieves Its mind In this fashion: We are going to the state fair at Macon, if possible, on “Governor's day," especially to see Colonel Jesse Perry, colonel by enactment of law and executive secretary to Governor Brown, who will don foi the first time his new uniform with “gold lace and glory." He is one of the best secretary's (sic) that has been In the governor's office in a long time. Unless the executive .w careful, it is evident that Jesse Perry is going to outshine even the governor al the state fair on October 17 and Colonel Perry would not do that intentionally, of course, not for gold nor precious stones! There is groat and exceeding joy in Cuthbert nowadays! Cuthbert has achieved a telling vic tory before the state railroad commis- CATHOLICISM IN GERMANY GROWS BERLIN. Oct. 9. —Protestants in Germany are somewhat worried over the fact that the number of Roman < atholics within the empire 1s growing much faster than that of their own. Official statistics just published show that Roman Catholics have increased in Prussia at a greater rate than Pro testants since 1871. and In other parts of the empire since 1890. In 1900 the Roman (’atholics formed 36.06 per cent of the entire population; in 1905, the percentage had risen t.o 36.46, and 1910, to 36.69. The explanation given is that, in general, Roman Catholic families have a larger natural increase than Protestants, and that the Protestants form a larger proportion of the pop ulation of large towns and of the edu cated and richer classes where large families ar*- Infrequent. Besides, the Poles, who are Roman Catholics, have invariably large families, and most of the immigrants to Germany from other countries are adherents of the church of Rome. With regard to the diminution in the number of Protestants, it is more apparent in Prussia than in other states of the empire. In five years the num ber of persons entering themselves as without any religious confession rose from 17,203 to nearly 206,000. It is be lieved that this is largely due to the exertions of the Social Democratic par ty, rvhiyh advises its adherents to se cede from the national church. sion. and the newspapers and citizens of Randolph county are celebrating ac cordingly. Anent this revival of interest in life in Cuthbert, The Leader says: Through the efforts of Mr. J. Frank Turner before the railroad commission, the freight rate on beer to Cuthbert has been consider ably reduced. It is now the same as the Dawson rate, ft behooves our merchants to press the matter of freight rate reduction. It looks as though Cuthbert has been sleep ing over her rights. Cuthbert may have been sleeping over hei rights, but she will sleep no more! Dawson, haughty rival, smug and satisfied in a freight rate on beer that f'uthbert shuddered t<- contemplate, will now cc.-ise front being either smug o: satisfied. Beer, that sometimes approved, con jurer of sweet dreams anrl fair illusion now comes to Cuthbert in the same ad vantageous freight rate regalia that fi these many moons it has visited Daw son regularly! Rome has a better- freight rate or beer than either Cuthbert o: Dawson for that matter -but there isn't an beer in Rome any more! CENTRAL OF GEORGIA REVENUES FOR YEAR SHOW $1,024,365 GAIN SAVANNAH, GA., Oct. 9.—The an nual report of the Central of Georgia railway has just been issued from the office of W. D. Beymer, comptroller. The report shows the Central to have enjoyed a year of splendid prosperity'. The figures make the following show ing for the system for the present year, ending June 30, and for the similar period last year: Earnings of Road. Operating revenues, 1912, $13,932,- 153.33; 1911, $12,907,788.01. Increase, $1,024,365.32. Operating expenses, 1912. $9,923,- 262.28; 1911, $9,020,092.95. Increase, $903,169.33. Net operating revenue, 1912, $4,- 008,891.05; 1911, $3,887,695.06. Increase, $121,195.09. Outside operations (net) 1912, $68,- 589.70; 1911, $77,856.29. Decrease. $9,- 266.59. Total net revenue. 1912, $4,077,480.75; 1911, $3,965,551.35. Increase, $111,929.40. Taxes, 1912, $625,503.48; 1911. $560,- 125.16. Increase, $65,378.32. Operating income, 1912. $3,451,977.27; 1911, $3,405,462.19. Increase, $46,351.08. Percentage of operating expenses and taxes to operating revenues, 1912, 75 72; 1911. 74.22. AGED PAIR FOUND DEAD. BUFFALO. N. Y„ Oct. 9.—The bodies of Philip Reinhardt, aged 82, and his wife, aged 85, were found In their home this morning, the surroundings indicat ing murder and suicide. Clogged-Up Liver Causes Headache It's a foolish proceeding to suffer from con stipation, sick headache, biliousness, dizziness, indigestion ar\ kindred ail meats when U (TER’S little liver jOufX PILLS will end all v -» vegetable. Act gently [S IV ER on liver B bowels. ' Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price. The GENUINE must bear signature 0 I’LL DRESS YOU WELL, AT MODERATE PRICES* TOM WEAVER, TAILOR 14 LUCKIE ST ■ ITh ursday One-Day Specials at Rogers’ Where Where Qualitiy Prices Is Are Highest Lowest Another Shipment of Fine | Colorado Cantaloupes Large Size, 8c Each. Extra Large, 15c Each Crate of 15, sl.lO Crate of 12, sl.lO. Evaporated Peaches: Raisins i lliui'sdtiy only, these prices: Xew Seeded Raisins at | Good quality ('alitornia these prices Thursday only: | Evaporated Peaches ’ Choice Seeded Raisins in 12- Per pound ©C ounce packages. Q Per packageQU Ii Fancy Xew Crop California l. ~n • • T, , ~ rtincy Seeded Raisins in 1b- ztapoialed eaches. ounce packages. 4 Per poundwG Iler packagel BaG Rogers’ Coffees | Scientifically Blended and I Perfectly Roasted Daily I 1 In Our Own Modern Plant Rogers Coffees are growing in popularity constantly | ■ as more and more people realize their superiority. Xot y only are they the finest grades of best varieties, scientif » ically blended and perfectly roasted, hul you get them ■ I fresh from the roaster with no loss of strength, flavor or aroma. Xole the special combination bargain offers for Thurs- ■ day ((noted below: I Santos Blend, lb 25c Regal Blend, lb 35c Java Blend, lb 30c Royal Blend, lb 40c Special C. C. C. Blend, lb 20c With SI.OO Purchase With Purchase of of Rogers’ Coffee One Pound Rogers’ Thursday only Coffee Thursday only 25 Pounds One Dozen of Best Granulated Blue Ribbon Selected Sugar Eggs I For 31'15 For 24c | Finest New York State Concord or I Niagara Grapes, 17c Basket (About 5 Pounds to Basket) Xew Virginia Green Cab- Select Xew York State Red bage; crisp and Onions, per fine: poundkjG peck Select Rutabaga Turnips; Finest Irish Potatoes; large special Thurs- 1 and smooth, day: poundCnlG per peck bIC Xew Sauer Kraui in bulk at. Finest Irish Potatoes, in 2 1 2 per bushel bags; 9fl poundWV per bag a fa»U Thursday Only We Will Sell I Standard Fine Granulated Sugar In Barrel Lots at $5.15 Per 100 Pounds ROGE R S ’ 36 PURE FOOD STORES i H I .7^—— --- - -