Newspaper Page Text
savannah prepares for
s. GEORGIA CONFERENCE
SAVANNAH, GA., Oct. 15.—Active
preparations are being made to enter
tain those who will be guests of Savan
pd) during the sessions of the South
geoigia conference of the Methodist
Episcopal Church South next month.
T. D. Ellis, pastor of the Wesley
yionutnental church, the host of the
conference, has announced his enter
tainnient committee. N. B. F. Close is
chairman. All Methodist pastors are
ex-officio members.
The conference begins November 26.
Bishop A. W. Wilson, of Baltimore, will
preside. y
FREE!
WEDNESDAY
| 50c Jar of
J. & W. Greaseiess
Cold Cream
GIVEN AWAY WITH EVERY
Box
J. & W. Talcum Powder
(a full pound perfumed)
50 Dodson’s 1 Jc
Liver Tone . .
SI.OO J. &W. jQc
Cod Liver Oil . ™
SI.OO Wampole’s £7°
Cod Liver Oil . 3 ■
SI.OO Wine C7c
| Cardui
i Bars Fairy -7Cc
Soap
SI.OO 2=quart Fountain
! Syringe CQg
guaranteed . .
$1.50 2-qt. Fountain Syr
inge. black Para
Rubber
$1.75 2-qt. Fountain Syr
inge (very best £4 4 Q
I Maroon) I■ S v
SI.OO Quaker
Herb DwC
SI.OO Compound Syrup
Hypophos-
phites ...'b9C
SI.OO Elixir Iron. Quinine
and Strych-
nine UvC
-5c Laxative Bromo 4
Quinine g f C
‘2sc J. & W. Cold Of*
Capsules | O'*
I 25c Bell’s Pine Tar 4 "9-
and Honey 8 E C
25c J. &W. White 4 E"-.
Pine and Tar l
25c Simmons’ Liver 4 4 A
Medicine I 4C
|2se Thedford‘s
Black Draught I
Allan's Liver ft
fnvigorator Wv
25c Mcnthola- 4 J _
|4C
-’■•e Tooth <
Brushes | OC
2-»c Euthymol 4 4
Footh Paste I
| ' Rolls Toilet
| l’ap<’r 25C
g Buttermilk Soap, 4
B box 3 cakes I wv
I U 10c
ij 1 *|t. Household
u Ammonia wC
| '■ qt. ('rude ('ar- 4 A_
bolic Acid | OC
J 'B. Denatured 4
I Al <‘"hol £ I C
' I l '. Wild) llaz.<4 4
r * '• 1 (c
JACKSON &
! WESSELL
| ™ Marietta, Cor. Broad
L Bell M 377 Atlanta 377.
OPEN ALL NIGHT
OUTDOOR SCHOOL
IN ATLANTA HEM
«
Anti-Tuberculosis Association
Plans Relief for Children
Susceptible to Disease.
An open-air school tn Atlanta's pub
lic school system will be established if
the efforts of the Anti-Tuberculosis as
sociation prove successful. Dr. Robert
G. Stephens, medical examiner for the
public schools, declares that there are 900
children in Atlanta schools today suffer
ing from anemia and malnutrition, easy
marks for tuberculosis, who could be for
tified against the White Plague by open
air living.
Such schools have been established in
New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and
other large cities, and have proved emi
nently successful. No tubercular child Is
admitted to the schools, but merely those,
who are too weak to resist infection.
The association declares there are hun
dreds of children in the city who could
be saved from the disease, yet are not,
and gives as an example the case of one
family in which the mother is the only
bread winner. The father has an ad
vanced case of tuberculosis and also has
pellagra, while the boy of eight is a posi
tive tubercular case. The baby of four
is in good health, while the mother syas
once affected by the disease. The baby
could be saved by the open-air school,
as could the hoy. yet because no such in
stitution existed the boy is unable to go
to school because of his affection.
The mother makes $7 a week; house
rent is $1.60 a week and fuel $1.25. They
were all taken to the sanatorium last
fall, and, in the spring, on their return,
they bought two beds, a bureau, five
chairs, a dining room and a cooking stove
on the installment plan. They paid $8
on it and now they are unable to pay
more, and the dealer is threatening to
take it from them.
transmission Tines
DELAY TROLLEY CARS
IN EARLY RUSH HOUR
Trouble on the electric transmission
lines from Morgan Falls delayed the At
lanta trolley cars about twenty minutes
early today, causing several hundred At
lantans to report late at their offices and
disarranging schedules for an hour after
wards.
Something went wrong at the gas plant
last night also, just at supper time.
Lights burned so dimly that household
ers could not read their evening papers
and gas stoves absolutely refused to fry
the steak.
MACON IGNORES CENTRAL
IN FIGHT FOR NEW DEPOT
MACON, GA.. Oct. 15.—The plea of of
ficials of the Central of Georgia railroad
for a stay of the agitation on the part of
the people of Macon for a new depot was
ignored at a large!' attended meeting of
the members of the Chamber of Com
merce yesterday afternoon when it was
decided to cooperate with those citizens
who have already filed a petition of com
plaint with the railroad commission. A
delegation will be named to appear befons
the railroad commission when the peti
tion is heard.
The letter was from Vice President W.
A. Winburn, who asked that the Central
of Georgia be given more time in which to
decide on plajts
BOYS RAISE FIVE TIMES
AVERAGE CROPS OF CORN
DALTON. GA.. Oct. 15.—The Whit
field County Boys Corn club has ship
ped the exhibit made at the county fair
here last week to the state fair at Ma
con
The club of 30 members produced
2.077.5 bushels of corn on 30 acres. In
figuring the cost of seed, fertilizer, etc.,
and the boys' time at 10 cents per hour,
the club cleared on the 30 acres exactly
$1,521.15. The average yield per acre,
69.4 bushels, is five times the average
yield for the state of Georgia last year.
TRIO ON A DARING VOYAGE
IN TWENTY-FIVE-FOOTBOAT
LONDON, Oct. 15. —A daring attempt
to make a voyage around the world in
a 25-foot sailing boat has just been
started from Yokohama by Captain J.
C. Ross, of Victoria. British Columbia,
and two young Englishmen.
Sufficient food and water have been
taken on board to last the three men
until they reach the Fiji islands, the
first port of call. From the islands they
will proceed to Australia, and thence to
the coast of southern Asia.
CITY EXhTbIT SHOWS
MOSQUITOES HATCHING
Dr. Claude Smith, city bacteriologist,
has put a new exhibit of mosquitoes in
the east entrance of the city hall. It is
a glass containing mosquito eggs and a
few young -mosquitoes just hatched out.
The main part of the exhibit shows the
various stages of mosquito growth. There
are placards which assert that in the 45,-
000 homes in Atlanta $5 per house ex
pended for mosquito netting would save
residents $225,000 a year, and that the
$2,600 spent by the department of health
in 1912 has caused a saving of $200,000.
ONE CHURCH IN COLUMBUS
CALLS ANOTHER’S PASTOR
' '< >l .I'M HI S, GX,, Oct. 15. —Rose Hill
, Baptist i bureti hits called Rev. .1 C.
Wilkinson, pastor of Comer Memorial
Baptist chuicii. <>f this city, to till Its
i.uipjt to sin ced R>-v. Robert C. Gran
fl,q . who recently resigned’to accept a
rail to tile pastorate of Tattnall Square
Baptist church in Macon. Mr Gran
fl, tiv - -i-ignation w ill go into effect
N< veinbe- 30.
GETS BACK INTO JAIL.
DALToN. GA Oct. 15 Park Hitch,
out ot Jail on bond, was returned Io the
prison vtn n in- --nti-rs-il to taking s*M>
oul of the safe of the Farrar Lumber
< oin pan- Hitch slowed bls genet out
cuii n a,tint i•' ■ i' l friends s2*t of
tii< amount Hohn bj him.
lhE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.fUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1912.
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
* ________
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
There is to be a great gathering of
the clans political in Macon on Thurs
day next.
kF
Bi'
isMW u srvrx
The governor
and his staff are
going to be on
hand —the staff in
all of the glory
and grandure at
taching to new
uniforms. gold
lace and the indi
cated trimmings
thereto attaching.
The presence of
the governor,
however. has
nothing to do with
the political end
of the day's do
ings—It has been
made merely the
excuse for gath
ering together as
fine a bunch of politicians as Macon
ever saw.
All the embryonic booms, big and
little, are to be in Macon Thurs
day; and some’of them are expected to
flourish even as green bay trees there
after.
There will be Bill Burwell, and his
spaakership boom; Ed Wohlwender,
with his speaker pro temship boom;
John Allen and Randolph Anderson,
with their presidency of the senate
booms, and others w'ith other booms
too numerous to mention, but of more
or’less importance, nevertheless.
The fact of the matter is, “Governor
and Legislative Day" at the Georgia
state fair in Macon has been* decided
upon, at least tentatively, as a day
upon which must be straightened out
numerous things, in order that sailing
in the next legislature may be as rela
tively smooth at the outset as possible.
Already headquarters have been en
gaged at the various MaJbn hotels,
and, beginning Wednesday night, the
slate making will proceed furiously and
fast, until Thursday evening's arrival
sees a general line-up perfected that
may reasonably be guaranteed to stay
put.
The automobile owners in Georgia
have the latest kick against the ever
increasing high cost of living, all to
themselves; and it need not be thought
particularly strange if the common
people laugh in their sleeves, the while
the possessors of benzine buggies weep,
and wail, and gnash their teeth.
Under a law enacted by the last leg
islature. a state Inspection tax of one
half cent per gallon has been attached
to gasoline, and the enterprising gaso
line dealers have shoved up the price
one cent per gallon in consequence
thereof.
This new order of things may be dis
tressing and harrowing to the pluto
cratic few who sport automobiles
around and about, but to the strap
hanger and the pedestrian it is nuts —
all nuts—of a most toothsome variety.
The man who watches the ups and
downs—onlj r there aren’t any downs
any more—of the baoon and eggs mar
ket views with no alarm whatever the
ups of the gasoline market.
He can not eat gasoline —it doesn't
even make good gravy for the kiddles.
Therefore, his immediate interest in
gasoline isn't regularly rampant on the
job.
The Georgia legislature Infrequently
finds away to swat the plutocrat with
out simultaneously swatting the com
mon people also, but in the gasoline In
spection tax it does seem to have hit it
off for once!
At 8:30 o’clock Saturday morning, in
the court house at Carrollton, Ga., the
bar of the Coweta circuit will take ac
tion in honor of the memory of the late
Sampson W. Harris.
Lawyers and friends wishing to go
out from Atlanta can take the South
ern train at 5:45 a. m. via Bremen,
Ga.. and return the same way at 2:30
o’clock.
The court convening last Monday
adjourned for the day out of respect to
Judge Harris and appointed a commit
tee of one member from each county in
the circuit to report resolutions on the
Piles Quickly
Cured at Home
Prove It to Youreelf That Pyramid Pile
Remedy Ends Pile Torture.
Many a bad case of piles has been
cured by just a trial package of Pyra
mid Pile Remedy. It always proves its
value ami you <an get the regular size
50-cent box from any druggist, but be
sure you get the kind you ask for.
Simply send your name and address
to Pyramid Drug Co.. 445 Pyramid
Bldg., Marshall Mich., and you wiff"
receive a sample package of the great
Pyramid Pile Remedy in plain wrapper,
return mall, all charges prepaid.
Have yourself from the aurgeon's
knife and its torture, the doelonand bin
bills Pyramid Pile Remedy will do It,
and !huiiMHiid« us t» si ni.u|ilal« tell vuu
• iiiphatn ally II is the world s ieun i|<
Ini pile*
19th instant. . The committee Is com
posed of W. C. Wright, of Coweta: F.
M. Longley, of Troup; H. H. Reville,
of Morwiether; F. S. Ixyftin, of Heard,
and W. C. Adamson, of Carroll.
Former Representative Seaborn
Wright has succeeded in putting the
lid on tight in Rome, and the locker
clubs that once flourished in that city
among the hills are things of the past.
Following an Injunction proceeding
instituted against the oldest and lead
ing locker club of the city, an agree
ment has been reached—a sort of gen
tleman's agreement—whereby the in
junction is to be withdrawn, and the
club to close permanently its locker.
In resolving not to resist the pro
ceedings of the famous prohibition
leader, the club took high ground. It
had been charged with being an ob
struction to the enforcement of the
prohibition law. Its membership is of
a class that would not rest content
under such a charge. So it has closed
its locker and said, in effect, to the
prohibitionists of Rome; “If you can
enforce the prohibition law better with
this club closed, we will close it and
give you the opportunity you seek.”
The state generally will watch the
future enforcement of the prohibition
law in Rome with more or less inter
est, of course. In view of the new sit
uation developed.
The Savannah News notes the. forth
coming membership in the Georgia
legislature of Mr. John A. Corn, of
Towns county. The News thinks Mr.
Corn should hail from Cobb.
In the eternal fitness of things, that
would seem to be about the size of it—
just as Mr. Turnipseed, in the last
house, hailed from Clay.
There may be some Georgians who
yet hug the fond illusion to their
breasts that*there is some way to keep
Mr. Roosevelt from out the very mid
dle of the spotlight.
It may be noted, however, that the
way never has been discovered by
mortal man.
Are you searching for a position? Then
an ad in the “Situations Wanted” col
umns of The Georgian will assist you
greatly.
The "CENTER AISLE” ■j| HI All O [10(10 Art Harvard Mills & Munsing
<* Where Paris Novelties find M Mil U Jf Mm||\ 111 Underwear for Ladies,
’S their way almost as soon |f| a |(|Ull QI UHUUi UUi Misses and Children. Com- 5*
as shown abroad..plete Stocks Now Ready.
I Ladies’ Long Kid Gloves, Worth to $3, at 98c |
~ nn r ixz-. J —'tomorrow (-Wednesday) at 8:30 a. hl. we offer 2>'
5 Vpening the Doll Season With some 200 pairs of long gloves that were carried
1 REAL $2.00 DOLLS FOR JUST 98c "XX™
2* led or soiled; many are as fresh as our brand-new
Xi® We’ve just unpacked the prettiest dolls that stock. *L.
Sj! ever came from across seas to gladden the heart -Choose from glace kids or suedes, most, of them in the 16-
of your little girlie. button length—a few in 12-button length.
j , ... . —Evening shades predominate—pink, blue, red, with aSp
heal live dolls, almost, for they sprinkling of naw, nile, lavender and white. 2 s ®
Ji open and close their eyes, stand All sizes in the lot, but not all sizes in every color-prizes 2*
TBi and sit m almost any position; jjaQIL HSfflEy to early comers. •
JIB move arms, legs and hands at —Former prices were $2, $2.50, $3 and $3.50. QQa *®--'
Choose tomorrow at just. voC fit,
JIB For these dolls have ball-jointed J Note— No phone or mall orders; none tried on or exchanged. Sale gP
arms, elbows, hips and knees. Fitted at B'3o a m a WL.
with real bisque heads and real hair \ Um |l\W (Glovee-Maln Floor) JJx
csC* and eyelashes. Each doll complete with
fancy colored lace stockings and shoes IMJ ~
to match: some even completely dress- ■■l B M r> J. J. IF> J.J. I A /"* Ir* a ga*
ed. including hat or bonnet. f||ll DUtlOllS! DUtlOIlS! A Safe
Your little girl can choose the fig ® o __S 2 *
J* doll she likes best—a pretty ||| 11 /■ USUHI V 311168 JMi t
blonde, a dashing brunette, or f|| Il a. 12 J BT
" ne with captivating auburn hair. J«OC TO lOC 3 (lOZ. ggr
Zy And instead of $2 she QQa >———l
need pay only UQ* JB 2,400 dozen buttons—a maker’s entire surplus stock—
(Toy Department Main Floor— ahi dozen. <7
Right Annex) The price is no indication of the buttons, real vahie
11 " 11 For none of the buttons sold regularly for less than 20c a
“y dozen: many sold for 50c and 75c a dozen.
™J»B Qavp Art Vnilt* Maw There are bllttons for every purpose—bone buttons for S'*
. Od V V epU Uli I UUI 11CW OU It coats and dresses, silk buttons for trimmings, buttons with
t* i metal rims and silk or satin centers, buttons in all sizes from
If the woman Who usually pays S2O or there- 24 to 45 lignes, and buttons in every wanted color
abouts for her new suit will see these at $14.75, we Find the buttons best suitpd to yonr purpose, and buy all
teel confident that she will decide to save the dis- 20c to 75c a dozen buttons, g
ference. and Wednesday’s price per dozen is only < wC
BR (First Table—Center Aisle)
For these suits are really worth $20 —you can see their 3**
value in the handsome materials, the thorough workmanship, the clever 1 " 1 11 -3*“
JIB styles. And choice is not confined to a skimpy few—there are more I \7 C* i
than 100. Made in the cutaway or straight models, some with fancy 101 lllC vJ I I IS = = VOf V
vest effects, others plainly tailored. Materials are handsome broad- *
cloths. French and storm serges, wide wale diagonals, cheviots and p nnfc ru-f \I I 4-
unfinished worsteds. Colors are black, navy, Copenhagen, gray, brown. wOHIS OT wOIGUIOV V GIVCI
All sizes from 14 to 40. An unusual o*4 g "T F"
sult value at $ 1 nr« f U The richness of velvet corduroy plus its dura-
2 I a. i • e •, x bility make it the ideal fabric for children’s 9C
• 1 he Last Word in Suits at $25 je
-jS Vou get whiii you pay for, and in ilirse suits And here are some of the jauntiest models von
jp al $25 vou get a lieaping $25 worth. bave ever se, ‘ n ,h "' particular for little tots of 2to 2*
‘ 6. Simply made of firm quality velvet corduroy with roil-
They are individual models ihst yon won't see every- ing collar and trimmed in sane) brass button. Lined
where. Suits that have style and character, and tailoring throughout and interlined to make it sun gaud ‘‘comfy.’’
that will last longer than the fabric. Scores to choose from 'j! bro 'Y ,l< nilV .' " r red. -
you could keep trying on for hours. Most of I hero fol
JIB low the new cutaway models in smari. graceful lines Every wanted P. S.—Other corduroy coats for girls in all sizes from 2 ijT
<2* niaieiial is represented, including the jaunty wool corduroys and the to 10 years Prices start with $295 and go up step by • '
sirikliig twoione diagonal cheviots All colors and black. The most step to smart Norfolk styles at sls.
brilliant assemblage of )26 stills we have ever shown —do come and
see them. i.lilVPliile Section, Second Floor.) 3l*
Ready to Wear—Second Floor) »
M. RICH & BROS.
SAVANNAH POSTMASTER
SEEKINGJMPROVEMENTS
SAVANNAH, GA„ Oct. 15—W. S.
Baker. Jr., postmaster of Savannah, Is
in Washington to hold a conference to
day with the first assistant postmaster
general. Postmaster Baker will en
deavor to secure carriers to be used
solely for collecting malls. He also
probably will consult with the authori
ties relative to a reorganization of the
Savannah affairs.
CONFEDERATE MONUMENT.
LEXINGTON, GA., Oct. 15.—The
Oglethorpe. County Chapter of the
United Daughters of the Confederacy
has begun a movement for the erection
of a monument on the court house
square at this place to the county's
Confederate dead.
Dandruff
and Falling
Hair Remedy
Fifty Cent Bottle of Pa
risian Sage Hair Tonic
Best for All Hair and
Scalp Troubles
Every man and woman who values a
good head of hair should regularly use
Parisian Sage.
Tens of thousands of people are using
it every day because it is such a clean,
honest remedy that does exactly what it
is advertised to do <*■ money back.
Please bear in mind that Parisian
Sage is not a dye: that it does not con
tain sugar of lead or any other dan
gerous ingredient, and that it will stop
falling hair, scalp itch and rid your
scalp of every particle of dandruff.
It will do more; it makes hair grow
lustrous and luxuriant and puts a ra
diant beauty into dull, lifeless hair.
Get a bottle of Parisian Sage today
at any drug store or toilet goods coun
ter. The price is only 50 cents. Be
sure and ask for Parisian Sage Hair
Tonic; the girl with the Auburn hair
is on eveiy carton. Sold by dealers
everywhere. (Advt.)
SHOOTS RESISTING NEGRO.
LA GRANGE, GA.. Oct. 15.—Deputy
Sheriff Gordy shot an unknown negro
near Dixie Mills while the negro was
resisting arrest. ' The negro is expected
to recover.
More sold than all other nrands com
bined. SAUER’S PURE FLAVORING
EXTRACTS. Because they flavo-
BEST. Ask the housekeeper. (Advt.)
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS.
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 11M.
(Advertisement.)
Men of Atlanta, Get This
A Genuine $5.00 Style Durham Duplet Safety Razor For
ALL THIS
■ il week!
SEE DOR WIHOOW
fmdwwwy ___
The Durham DuPlex
Safety Razor is simply
razor perfection. You
use the sliding diagn.
na l stroke, just as your
barber does. It’s a razor, not a hoe.
EXTRA BLADES, PER PACKAGE OF SIX, 50 CENTS
KING HARDWARE CO.
53 PEACHTREE ST.
FINEST DENTAL WORK .
AT LOWEST PRICES
There is no finer dental work done
anywhere than at the Atlanta Dental
Parlors, yet prices here are so low as
to astonish those who have been pay
ing the usual dentist’s charges.
This is partly due to an immense
practice and partly to the very fine
modern equipment and partly to the
fact that this establishment w’ishes to
make lasting friends of its patients.
Ask your friends about the work of
the Atlanta Dental Parlors at the cor
ner of Peachtree and Decatur streets.
(Advt.)
5