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ARCTIC VOYAGE
IN MOTOR BOAT
Professor Donald McMillan
Tells of 3.000-Mile Trip
to the North.
SYDNEY. NOVA SCOTIA, Oct. 11.—
p r „fessor Donald B. McMillan, who was
nitl; Mr- Deary on his trip to tha North
p r .> has arrived in Sydney after a three
months' voyage along the Labrador coast.
The trip, which covered 3,000 miles, was
made in a motor boat 25 feet long and 7
fee beam The object of the expedition
ornithological and ethnological re
(parch. Coming through Belle Isle
straits h’s party passed many icebergs
in the path of transatlantic steamships.
The party reports splendid success.
I ~ easot McMillan said:
■, . reached Rattle harbor July 5 and
|. (l . , the port blocked with drift ice. Sel
dom or never have I seen such storms
on the Labrador coast as were expe
r prrmi this summer. Soon after leaving
i,. , Cape Harrison we encountered
n < ,: | er. and for seventeen days
battled wi h the storms That, however,
was oidy fun and served to break the mo
notony.
Called Off Interior Trip.
io ■ intended to pay a visit to
.Irdiars f the interior, who are a
r , !,!«• . It, gether different from the Es-
st,!,, and cruel. Owing to the
, !» waited for a time for some
C,. ■ r< ' .e riat.es to join us. who
(. , -o we had to call off
■ . trip.”
~ ... ,to the Crockerland ex
,. I, s-or McMillan said:
. ■ t.novA this expedition was to
i'. s licit about the last of July
t r o - \«v. .noor command of Proses
.. hori’i -.ml myself. bit l <.« ng to it is
f i H i ,t was postponed until 1913. As
fi.. ... ; ..in .ell. the Ci • ckerlard expe
, \. leave Sydney in July. '913. on
■I . I tiara, a sealer somewhat smaller
an oi(. !t<,osevelt. In the party will
. .oolngist. geologist, hydrographer
.. .pan-maker. The whole parly of
’ em tifteen will be dropped at Crock
«rd The Diana will, then go south,
turning for as in 1915.
To Try to Find New Land.
■Tt-o firs* year of the expedition will
p. . . . . ; to rn attempt to discover a
!:::>: • the Polar tea which Mr.
I’earj -a> . > e saw and named in !!06.
As rew land Is accepted by science
>r i- •. i.t. has set Tot upon it, and
I ,i ■ . i’s '..r.itttde, and longitude.
> ~i that there are about -*OO.-
i .r.T'es of land still unknown it:
v ~ ; a it is supposed that Mr.
!'• corn*-’.- of this.
'< ot tear wc will penetrate the
r ■ i: ecnland for. although the
th are 'airly well known,
.■ <: ; is unexplored. It is un
.l so:r.‘ uea <:> in the interior
■| m| . ome of t he-e
w>i attempt '<> reach. We
ill c, v. Ml. In the 'all
•a- io i :.ve found out a
I >m we l;r ,v. now.”
• 5 \ ■
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Women Furnish Pupils Cheap, Wholesome Food
PENNY LUNCH IN SCHOOL
An Innovation in Atlanta schools will be
tried next Monday, when for the first
time in the history of the city "penny
lunches” will be served the children. On
that day one of the fondest dreams of
Mrs. V. H Kriegshaber. leader in civic
progress and practical charity, will be
realized
It was more than a year ago that Mrs.
Kriegshaber returned from on® of the
Northern cities full of a new idea to help
along the children In Atlanta schools. The
"penny lunch" Is not a new thing in the
I nlted States, but it was a discovery for
her. She told the members of the board
of women visitors for the Atlanta schools
about the way the children in Northern
schools were served.
The women visitors, there are ten of
them, were enthusiastic and Mrs. F. D.
Pickett, president of the board, suggested
that they present the matter to the board
of education. When Mrs. Kriegshaber ex
plained to the board members the "penny
lunch plan they immediately suggested
the women fry it here.
It took a lot of work and some little
money, as well as persistence, to get the
movement under way, but at last the plan
will have a trial at the Inman Park
school. Mrs Kriegshaber will be there,
helping to serve the little fellows. The
children will have a variety of things to
KILLS WIFE: SELF
DEFENSE IS CLAIM
GRASS RANGE. MONT., Oct. 11.—
James W. Briggs shot and killed his
wife. Evidence thus far Indicates that
Briggs acted in self-defense. The wom
an formerly was the wife of Jacob
Hoover, and it is said that while they
■ ere living together she shot through
a door at him. but missed. She was
granted a divorce from Hoover and
was married to a man named Riordan,
in Yellowstone county. She claimed to
have learned that Riordan had a wife
living and shot and killed him. She
was convicted of manslaughter in 1908
and served sentence of a year. She
had instituted divorce proceedings
against Briggs.
INDICT POSTMASTER
AS FREE SEED THIEF
RICHMOND. VA., Oct. 11.—Postmas
ter S. M, Mealy, of Laiana. Gochlar.d
county, was indieted by the giand jury
in tiie United States district court on
Lie charge of confiscating packages of
free seed sent through the mails by
Senator Thomas S. Martin and Repre
sentative John 1 ainb to their constitu
ents. It was charged by the govern
ment that, ih' postmaster, who a9tto
conducts a store believed the fr e dis
tribution would injure his own. seed
business.
# .
SUFFRAGETTES SPEAKING
ON MILWAUKEE STREETS
MILWAUKEE. Oct. 11.—A full
f!< ilged suffrage campaign is on here.
Women speakers invade the factory,
dock and department store districts
ard street corners at the noon hour
daily.
* »
i HE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11. 1912.
choose from, and for a penny one may
take two of 'the following dishes: Rice
pudding, corn pudding, hot meat sand
wiches. baked sweet potatoes, baked
beans, fruit, candy and other things.
A cook at the school will prepare these
dishes daily and they will be served the
children each forenoon between 11 and
11:30 o'clock More than 400 of the chil
dren at the Inman Park school already
have declared that they will purchase
daily lunches. A variety of dishes always
will be prepared, and when the board of
education thinks the plan has made good
in Inman Park they will allow the women
visitors to try it elsewhere.
“It's pleasant to be able to help the
children.” said Mrs. Kriegshaber. "but we
need more money and supplies. We know
that the people of Atlanta will subscribe
to the movement and we want every one
who will help to send checks or supplies
to Mrs. J. D. Pickett, our president, I
hope to see the penny lunches in every
school by next spring.”
The women visitors will maintain a su
pervision of the plan at all times. A cook
will be provided for each school when the
lunch plan is adopted, and before many
months the most economical lunch plan
ever tried in the South will have had a
thorough trial in the public school system
of Atlanta
INDIANS AS FARMERS
ARE MAKING RECORDS
CHIPPEWA FALLS, WIS., Oct. 11.—
The Indians of the Chippewa tribe in
northern Wisconsin will soon be an im
portant factor in agriculture in the
northern section of the state. This was
the statement made bv a well known
railroad man here. "These Indians ate
raising potatoes and corn with all the
intelligence of white farmers." he said,
"and some of them are raising remark
able crops."
FEEL BULLY! HEW M, SWCH
SWEET, BOWELS RIGHT-"C£CKTS"
You Tnen and women who can't get
feeling right—who have lieadache, coat
ed tongue, foul taste and foul breath,
dizziness, can't sleep, are nervous ami
upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, dis
ordered stomach, and are all worn out.
Are you keeping your bowels clean
with Cascarets—or merely dosing your
self every few clays with salts, cathar
tic pills, castor oil and ther harsh ir
i itants?
Cascarets immediately cleanse ami
sweeten the stomach, remove the sour
CATHARTiCLg
IO CSHT BOXES-ANY DRUG STORE ''
• »I-SO 25 ft: SO CENT B0X£?: ■
BARS iff E FROM
HUSBAND'S W
Court Says Woman Suing for
Abandonment Had No Righi
to Take Money.
CHICAGO, Oct. 11.—Model husbands
have some rights, according to Munici
pal Judge Gemmill, even after they
cease to be “model." And so. while at
torneys for Mrs. Lola Sutcliffe were
undertaking to prove that Robert Sut
cliffe, formerly part owner of the Ge
neva Optical Company, had deserted his
wife at the beck of another woman.
Judge Gemmill hunted for the reason. 1
"She took S2OO front her husband s
bank account without his consent." Sul
cliffe’s attorney offered to prov<-. And
Mrs. Sutcliffe did not dent it. Pre
viously she had confessed that tor te:
years her husband was "simp y ideal a
model."
"That settles it,” said the court
"Case dismissed.” ,
“But we can prove,” protested the
wife’s attorney, “that Sutcliffe left her
for Mrs. Alta Moore, of Antioch, III."
A woman has no more right to steal
from her husband than from anybody
else,” declared Judge Gemmill firmly.
"Didn’t Sutcliffe get letters from a
woman at his office?” asked the law
yer. appealing to Herman F. Jacobs, of
the optical company.
“That question is immaterial," said
the court, impatiently. But Jacobs an
swered, anyway.
"I get letters from forty women my
self—what does that prove?" he said. I
t undigested and fermenting food and
- foul gases; take the excess bile from
. the liver and carry off the constipated
I waste matter and poison from tile bow
els.
A Casearc t tonight will straighten
i you out by morning—a 10-eent box w ill
keep your head clear, stomach sweet,
liver and bowels regular and make you
feel cheerful and bully for months.
Don't forget the children —their little
i insides need a good, gentle cleansing
\oo.
ADEL HOLDS ELECTION.
ADEL. GA.. Oct. 11.—In a spirited con
test here for mayor and council. C. E.
Parrish was elected mayor and .1 H.
Kinnon, J. T Pope. Claton Harris, s. A.
Parrish and J W. F. Wodall councilmen.
The town is ready to begin construction
of a si werage system
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GEORGIAN WANT ADS BRING RESULTS.
5