Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 09, 1912, EXTRA, Page 3, Image 3

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MAYORALTY RACE TAKES ON H ASPECT Chambers to Support Vice Cru saders—Woodward Reiter ates Strict Segregation. The mayoralty contest wks somewhat clarified today, following the yielding of candidate Aldine Chambers to the persistent demand of the Men and Re ligion Forward Movement that he pledge himself to support Police Chief Beavers in his fight to keep the "houses in our midst” closed. Marton Jackson and other leaders of the Men and Religion Forward Move ment had strongly intimated that they would bring out an independent candi date in the general election if neither candidate declared himself for their program. In a written statement to the Evan gelical Ministers association and the Men and Religion Forward Movement. Mr Chambers said he resented some of the former Men and Religion adver tisements because they gave him no credit for past endeavors to live an upright life. Referring to the resolu tion adopted by the Evangelical Min isters association, urging him to sup port Chief Beavers, as "dignified and. considerate," he said: He Also Sees a Ring. "I have never had any intention of doing otherwise than support Chief James L. Beavers In the discharge of Jifs duty. Every impulse of my life leads that way. That any man should doubt it is regretted by me. Without reference to the wisdom of his action, •yes.' 1 will sustain him without fear or favor." Iteclartng that every thinking man knows that the charge that he is the head of a "ring” is untrue, he charged that the "ring" than is trying to get control of the city is a “ring” of gam blers and violators of the law. who are backing Mr. James G. Woodward in his race.” He charged that this ring is headed by • 'ha.rlea C. Jones and that, if he is elected, he will see “that this man does •not reap any further benefit from the infamous traffic in which he has been so long a dealer.” He called on the men and women of Atlanta to rise in their ponver to defeat Woodward. Dr. George Brown, one of the defeat ed candidates for mayor in the first primary, ha« announced his support of Janies G. Woodward. Dr Brown wrote a letter to Mr. Woodward declaring that as he (Wood ward’ had received a plurality of prac tically 600 votes in the first primary, he had won the nomination for mayor, in spirit at least. Same Polling Plaoes. In regard to fbe “houses* in our midst,” Mr. Woodward said today that his campaign announcement still stood for hie views on the subject. In that announcement he declared for strict segregation. Mr. Woodward said today he felt that he won a victory for the peo<ple at the meeting of the sub-committee of the Democratic executive committee yes terday. There he fought to have all the voting places of the first primary duplicated. The committee was inclined to have only one voting place for each ward. Mr. Woodward said it would be an injustice to make citizens travel far ther to vote in the second primary' than they did in the first. He said that he carried all the email precincts and that his friends should not be discrim inated against. When Secreary J. O. Cochran in formed Mr. Woodward that there was a shortage of funds. Mr. Woodward said that new assessments should be levied It was finally agreed to assess each candidate $250 each. Mr. Woodward said today that an other evidence that he had won the nomination on the first primary was the withdrawal from the Third ward count llmanic contest of Carl N. Guess. S. S. Shepard got a plurality of the votes in a three-corner contest. Mr. Guess had the privilege of running a swond race for the place, as he got the second highest vote, but he with drew. WHITFIELD FAIR FOLK ENJOIN RIVAL SHOW DALTON, GA.. Oct. 9.—Judge A. W. Fite has granted an injunction re training the Starnes Stock Company from showing here the balance of this week. The Whitfield County Fair Associa tion was behind the injunction pro •’•edings. affidavit being made that the 8 -sociation had a verbal contract with he company, which was scheduled to appear here during the week of the r >cr. whereby the company was to show '’■where (his week. r injunction is set for hearing here on October 21 acquainted one hour. AGED MAN AND GIRL WED Hl< AGO. Oct. 9. Five minutes aft. H. Hinwley, 53 years old. of mtnund. Ind . met Nellie Brown, •en yearn old, to hire her as u ’■keeper. the\ became* engaged An the\ were married. The an orphan. ' VOTES FOR WOMEN" ON CIGARETTES IS RESENTED IH'Mlo r>, t <» The anger of Miss ’•.tn.- Gaston ardent •uffraidst >ii i ned il,at ~h Eastern firm nt • igarvttes with Votes for •>en latxls. Debutantes, as Colonels, Majors and Captains, to Lead Old-Time Dances BUDS IN COMMAND AT OLD GUARD BALL New Dress Uniforms to Have First Public Showing at Brilliant Event. Girlhood comes into its own at the Auditorium tomorrow night. The young nomen can t be lawyers or governors in Georgia, but they can be colonels and majors and captains, and they will be all these and more at the Old Guard ball. Everybody in Atlanta remembers the famous celebration >f the old Guard last year, when a thousand or so mil lionaire militiamen from Eastern states came down in private cars to attend the unveiling of the monument in Pied mont park. That was the men’s day and the rejuvenation of the guard This year the women are tc share. Several weeks ago the new dress uni forms of the guard arrived. There are / ' I. / iQmW. \ ' -"-..J® : “Captain” Lula Dean .Jone garet Hawkins, on left, two of take part in the old-time dance great bearskin shakos and gilt swords and gold lace and ail the fancy fixings. It was necessary to have some way to show them off. Therefore, the ball. Twenty-four debutantes of the, past few seasons will dance the dances of other days. Instead of the turkey trot and he waltz there will be stately minuets and graceful quadrilles. The« girls will wear powdered hair and old fashioned costumes of white, with mili tary sashes. Major Lucy Stockard will command the battalion, and Miss Isa belle Kuhrt will be her chief aid and adjutant. You’ll have to have an invitation to attend this dance and they are not easy to obtain The ball will begin at 8:40 o’clock with distribution of special fa vors, and at 9 the band will play and the cadets will drill. At 9:35 the gov ernor and his staff, with officers of the Old Guard, will arrive in a blaze of glory and gold lace. Then the grand march will begin, to be followed b> fancy dances and Just dances until an hour after midnight. EXPEDITION TO EXPLORE SAVAGE TIBURON ISLAND ST. LOI’IS, Oct 9. —But once in the history of the new world has Tiburon Island been visited hv white men who returned alive It Is the most danger ous ap'd on the North American canti- | nent. John J Drummond, citizen of | St lx,uls anil of I'esadena, Is now or-I ganiz.ing an . xpeditlon that will at - j tempt to penetrate Its mysteries ERECTING JOHNSTON MONUMENT DALToN, GA 'lit 9 Woik on the base of the Joseph E Johnston monu ment. to tie unveiled here on October ■4 Parted ’I d» SouthHin GianltMj ♦nd Marhh < ’oni|uin\ of ihl> it ' h<> hm io hwv» th* inotHHii’ n r*•»♦♦♦> i'»i uiiv* lllfif: •*< tlh -*i » nil• <1 Univ. THE ATLANTA GEORGTAN ANT) NEWS.WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 9. 1912. Major Burke, of the Old Guard, conferring with “Major Lucy Stockard. who will be in command at the Old Guard ball. /h\ ’ ex THI \\ iUhvt jbw— Myy vJIE Jmmmm // flr<- aaMr' ( " a ~i ( ' «nH®r pr ?! Of/i /f ' • "iW : J - J twa / - i Egfe; w / \ X/WM w.yga on right, and “Private” Mar ? voting “soldiers” who will T. R„ OVERWORKED, IN ANGRY MOOD AT MICHIGAN LEADERS MACKINAW CITY. MICH. Oct. 9. Colonel Roosevelt was angry when he arrived here today on the windup of his two days campaign in Michigan. His anger was caused by his managers, who had extended his Itinerary through the state >0 as to keep him speaking twelve hours a day. When he started from New York he understood he was to make only three speeches each day. He made seven yesterday, quitting at 9:30 o’clock last night at Bay City. Today eight stops are on the schedule, including St. Ignace, Soo Junction, Marquette and Houghton. “I want to save some energy for the windup of the campaign in New York.’ said the colonel. "We've got a mid dling lively fight there.” A large crowd and the s'teme lively spirit that has marked his progress through Michigan greeted the ex-pres ident here. He talked for five minutes from tile rear platform of his car, urg ing the crowd to drive out the bosses and put the government in the’ hands of ’he Progressives. CELLAR DROPS INTO MINE: FOOD FOR WINTER GONE WILKESBARRE. PA . Oct. M Pat rick Lai kin and family, of ( ’ourtdale, Luzerne county. awoßr this rnornhiK and diu’ ovcred iheir home waw rent Ing <»ri the »di4«- of .1 mine cave-In big • -nough to swallow several - buildings They looked Into th» cellar and saw nothing but a black urfa< e from which vafior escaped f'om the intnrf» The furnaii was missing. onl\ the pipe* being in p'.o . Th” w int-r >up p . of ♦‘l b which WHH Mtojtfd in the * • 1 . • a. ■ • missing. W BOY BANDITS IN POSSE'S NET Youthful Robbers of Passenger Train Now Surrounded in Oklahoma Cornfield. FORT SMITH ARK., Oct. 9.—Armed with rifits and shotguns, sheriffs posses have surrounded a corn field near Wister. Okla., where, it is believed, the two youths who held up the Rock Island passenger train No. 4 last night ate In hiding. The robbers rilled boll: mail and \express cars and secured quantities of registered letters, expt, s tackages and money consignments The amount of their thefts could not be determined by the authorities. Although evidently amateurs at train robbing, the bandits were not lacking in daring and a battle is expected with them by the posses. The bandits en teied the cab of Engineer Buchanan and compelled him to stop the train at a point where the dense woods line the Hack on either side. They later en tered the mail ear, compelling tile eri ginemen to walk ahead and shield them and then overcame the mail clerks am: baggagemen. They forced the train men to cut the express and mail cars from tile rest of the ttain and run into Wister. Seven explosions were ne. • s sarx to blow open tile express car safe A flagman escaped and tan to Hone, where the- alarm was given ’Two poss. , were organized and chased tin robbers to tlie corn field. HE FORGETS HiS NAME: FATHER IDENTIFIES SON ST LOI’IS. <>< t 9 A <’lty hosplt » path m u h<> couldn’t rcmvrnb”! hi* name wa* idcnllfb I a« Eclix l>urra, .1 Ills fath*' -'h at the hospital and H a h<» !•> !■> v»-h‘h «< d, ualkod th” .••iHfa. dlMtn-l Motion Thur-- nigl i and ’ ■■ the b» i<cuni n< iiau toigottvh nix num”. Miss Marion Goldsmith, who will be one of the maids of honor at the ball. BOWELS SLUGGISH,STOMAGHSOUR, ora, UPSET? CASCARETSGREAT! That awful sourness, belching of acid and foul gases; that pain in the pit of tlie stomach, the heartburn, nervousness, nausea, bloating after eating, feeling of fullness, dizziness and sick headache, means jour stomach is full of sour bile —your liver is torpid—your bowels constipated. It isn’t your stomach’s fault—it isn’t indigestion—it's biliousness and constipation. Trj C'ascarets; they immediately sweeten the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the live, and carry off the constipated waste matter from the bowels. Then your stomach trouble is ended. A Cascaret tonight straightens you out by morning. J — J JO CCIItS. Never gripe or sicken. “CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP.” 25 GENT ‘DANoTrIe’ FOR FALLING HAIRANDDANDRUFF--GROVJSHAIR Don’t Pay 50 cents for worthless hair tonics Use old, reliable, harmless “Danderine” Get results. Thin, brittle, rolu les- diid **< rnggy ‘Udi' U mute evhhue ♦• of .♦ neglected ' scalp; <»f iaiidrun that muiu' scurf. ’l’hcrt is nothing so destructive to the hair mm dandruff It r<»hs th” hair ot rs luster, Uh Ht/cngfh and its very Ilf”’, ♦*verituall\ producing a fvx lishncMsand !'• hlng of the Hrulp. which If not rm ♦ led i’HUsv* the hair roo’s to shrink. " -cd and die then th” hi'ii f»i s out I fa m! I \ 'i’t • I hinderin” tonight nou wnv nine sa j nave your t.air D’ALBA. WHO TRIED TO SLAY ITALIAN KING,TO PRISON FOR 30 YEARS ROME. Oct. 9.—Antonio D’Alba, the young anarchist who attempted to kill King Victor Emmanuel on March 14, was today found guilty of attempted regicide and sentenced to 30 years soli tary imprisonment. This is equivalent to a life sentence, as no prisoner has ever been known to live 30 years in an Italian cell. The jury returned its verdict of guilty after being out only ten minutes. The trial was remarkable for its rap idity. D’Alb’a was placed on trial yes terday afternoon. All the testimony «:ts in b> nightfall and the prosecutor only took ten minutes in his argument today. Tile judge summed up in fif teen minutes. * GIRL SHOOTS WATCHMAN. THINKING HIM BURGLAR POTTSVILLE. PA.. Oct. 9.—Mistak ing Night Patrolman Morgan for a burglar. Miss Jennie Thomas, the six teen-.vear-old daughter of David Thom as, a hotel proprietor at Lansford. Pa., sliot him early today as he was stand ing in the vestibule of the hotel door way. Morgan died an hour later. SPEED LIMIT IN DALTON. DALTON, GA.. Oct. 9. —City council placed fifteen miles an hour as a speed limit for automobiles and motorcycles running within the city limits, and adopted a stringent ordinanee govern ing the l imning of such Vehicles. i ' v : 1 - IJ/ /WJP 11 *' w/ tiei u 26 ”iit bottle of Knowlton » Uanderin** from any drug stole or toile <oiint”r. «nd hllci the H mi appllcatior \ou u i'l nay it wan the beat Investment .o i aver made Your hah will Imnie* ‘iiately take on that life, luMter and luxuriant » u hi< h Im »o beautlftil It will become wav\ and duffs and have h» appearance of abundance, an In < oinpa ab • gloss ami aoftnei*, but .♦! ulil please you mowi will be aft”’ lust as» a Meeks' off when you wdl! .♦ctual'v s. < a lot of dm downy halt lieu hal glowing ad over the stca’p < A<l\ t | 8 W 5 TO RUN CITY SUGGESTED Only Two Speakers at Cham ber of Commerce Dinner Fa vor Proposed Tax Raise. If nine of the leading political and business men of Atlanta were given free rein with the city government at the same time there would be eight different systems of business manage ment. That fact was demonstrated last night at the Chamber of Commerce dinner, held to discuss Atlanta’s finan cial problem. Only two of the nine speakers believed in raising the tax rate 1 1-2 per cent. Each of the other seven had a remedy indorsed by him self alone. Judge John S. Candler and Alex W. Smith advocated the tax rate Increase: Eugene R. Black believes in greater efficiency among city employees; Judge Hillyer believes in indiscriminating ap portionment of funds; F. A. Quillian wants the tax rate increased, the as sessments lowered, so as to stop pay ing so much to the state; E. V. Car ter advocated a spec ial school tax; General A J. West wants commission government, and V. H. Kriegshaber be lieves in civil service examinations for city employees. It is doubtful if a more representa tive body of men could be assembled thjm that at the dinner last night, it is certain that a no wider diversity of opinion could exist among the lead ers of Atlanta as to t ip solution of Atlanta’s financial problem. Judge Candler opened the argument by" detailing what Atlanta needs. "What are you going to do about it?” he asked as he sat down. Some of the things Atlanta urgently needs, he said, are three fire stations, more police men, improvements for hospitals, more schools and teachers, more sewers, bet ter streets, bridges, cyclorama, audito rium improvements and other things he said he could barely mention. Eugene R. Black, in answering Judge ,Candler, advocated a bond issue when more money is needed by the city, but declared that the burden upon the peo ple is as great as they can bear. "A ’maximum income and minimum effi ciency" was the way he characterized the situation. The other speakers all advocated Im- Inediate improvement in the Atlanta streets, but each developed some new need of the city, until at last it seemed that Atlanta should be wiped out and made all over again. More than 300 citizens were present and all believed that the meeting would mark a new era in civic advancement. President Wilmer I, Moore, of the Chamber of Commerce, presided. Health is the foundation of all good looks. The wise woman realizes this end takes precautions to preservo her health and strength through the pe riod of child bearing. She remains a pretty mother by avoiding as far as possible the suffering and dangers of such occasions. This every woman may do through the use of Mother's Friend, a remedy that has been so long in use, and accomplished so much good, that it is in no sense an experi ment, but a preparation which always produces the beet results. It is for external application and so penetrating in its nature as to thoroughly lubricate every muscle, nerve and tendon in volved during the period before baby comes. It aids nature by expanding the skin and tissuee, relieves tender ness and soreness, and perfectly pre pares the system for natural and safe motherhood. Mother’s Friend has been used and endorsed by thousands of mothers, and its use will prove a com fort and benefit » a to any woman in need of such a remedy. Mother’s Friend is sold at drug stores. Write for free book tot expectant mothers, which contains much valuable information. HADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. COLLECTIONS The clients of an organiza tion that is recognized for its -- efficiency, prompt service and courteous treatment reap re wards hard to compute in money. We refer to the satisfaction ami sense of security to be derived from transacting busi ness with an institution whose record is without reproach. 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