Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 17, 1912, FINAL, Page 2, Image 2

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2 T.R.BETTER, BUT KT GENII IN HOSPITAL BEO Colonel’s Condition Continues to Improve. But He Can’t Go Home Before Monday. Continued From Page One. her on n apa .me!, • next coo at 4 b. m. i , M's. Roos \el t touched the ex-p:esi- : . dent'.’ brotv ’lg. t'y. found no trace >f . temperature, smiled a- she had been , bidden and eaning over, kissed liei L iiu.-'band be!" e ; etiring •'Everything is as it should ii- . rut se.” Mis Rooieve'.t whispered to Miss Fitz- t, k :alc, who displayed anxiety about L .jetting hi’ ■ distinguished guest back to bed. for the ho tit* “eit chilly in the . i a: yv morning lion:.’ , Eat y today M.. Roosev- t demanded to know whether he would be permitted t<> assume the airs of a convalescent in 1 view of lit- i'un ove I condition If this had happened in the tie',,." ■ •aid th: patient to his attendants. "I'6 j have got fits ahi 'f I was la-l.y ano i then cleaned tip tin- bu*ir> ■■ in tan.li' v itiioiit fur: he fuss " Colonel Realizes Seriousness of Wound. But tin •<■ is no doubt tiiat the < ol on< ' has been brought to realize ti.e s< riousness of his tound. which all the i uoiiors in Milwauk.e weir unable to im;trss on him in the exciting tn ■ hour’ that followed the shooting. '•n M ~ Roosex .it's decijroti t ie time ’ e colcne! If. < the hospital depends | She is in Absolute contio of th • sick room. Even the colonel admits that The fo"mt president is anxious to re turn to the campaign. lie Is certain that he will be able to stand the ex-’r 'ion ea ly next week. Ms Roo etf I wants he husband to be very cautious. She does not want him to run any i k. especial'' that of pneumonia, whir lite physicians have warned her. niig.it follow unusual exer tion with the wound in the colonel's •ide. Early this morning afle one ,f 1 her brief visits to the colone's loom , Mrs. Roosevelt intimated that it tnigh' I be some days yet before she would con- J •ent to her husband leaving tlie hos- i pita! anti sta ting to Oyster Bay. Sm ' said no move would be made until the doctors were convinced there would be no complications. She believed that the ten days' 'ottfiti-niefit otiglnally suggested as nec. .-•>«■•>■ •nig be ad hered to. Plans New York Speech October 26. f'olonel Roosevelt himself believes he will be able to travel Saturday. tn fait, if the doctors would permit, he would be willing to start for the East today. He is planning confidently on addressing the Madison Square Garden meeting in New York October 26. The physicians were relieved when a successful X-ray photograph definitely located the bullet. While its location ' was generally determined by previous examinations, it was not until late yes terday that its position was known. The tact that it is lodged against a rib < nds the fear that it might be lodged against the inner chest wall, and the fear that it might penetrate the tho racic cavity and pierce the tight lung The sligtit fracture of the fourth rib. the surgeons say. is a matte, of no con sequence. The fracture accounts for some of tiie slight pain the colonel has . experienced in breathing, and th" nat- , ural sorene-s of the wound itself is re sponsible for the rest This has cleared away any apprehension in the minds of the physicians that the soreness ■ might be caused by infection. The physicians were optimistic in the , • xtreme this morning. Before the first formal bulletin was issued, thee point ed out the fait that practically normal conditions obtained. None of them '■wed to discuss the case, however, be fore » car n ful examination of the pa tient Piles Quickly Cured at Home } ■ * ■'> A P’ove It to Yourself That Pyramid Pile! Remedy Ends Pile Torture. Unlit a bad case of piles lias been < tied by Just a trial package of tu mid Pile Remedy. It always proves its 'alpe and you can gel the regulul siz" i ''•-vc-ni box t rum any druggist, but be sure you get the kind you ask for. Simply send your name and address I’ytamid I»tug Co., -145 I’y amid Bldg.. Mat shall. Mil'll., and you will '*< eive a -ample package of the great I' , amid Pile Remedy in pla n w t apper, by return mail, ail charges prepaid. Sate yoms'df trout the surgeon's kttif'' and its to, lure, the doctot anil his ■ bills Pyramid Pile Remedy >• ip ,| 0 if '"oi.sands of tenimonials i"ll ,ou 11 a'ly lg world's timed' • . Gladys Hanson, Prettiest Actress, Diets and Exercises DIXIE PIES FATAL TO BEAUTY? I Atlanta Girl Who Has Won All New York Calls Southern Pastries Harmful. Old-fashioned .niton pi-s—the kind ■with a fluffy thickness of meringue on t top jumbles and othjer pastries sodoa I to the hearts of Southern < ooks and th' ! palates of Southern gb -■ are a t ita bat to beauty. The baneful effect of th".-c delicacies of Atlanta origin on feminine pulchritude is p-iidia ly viru lent. At, Atlanta gill h is found the thorn in these roses of the cti.ina y garden. Site is a beauty het self and knows a ’ about how to be beautifu' And to kt beautiful sue has had Io so swear lie bcl-iyed Atlanta pies Mi.” Gladys Hanson. the Be.as. ■ sta . is the authority so: the beauty ru!" Site told h r discovery to Ma: gatet Hubbard Ay r in an interview in New Vo k. where the Atlanta gt I is apmaring tn one . f tin- principal rol-'s of "The Gove;-to '.« Ixady." Her, is Miss Aye 's e'.O'y By MARGARET HUBBARD AYER ’ Sh han(.’suin •> I woman on the iodu\.” nid n man in Ilv theatri cal ouslneß*. when I told him that I v.a» about to see ‘ The Gov< no ,<4 l S ■ * f rm I Mi ■ ■XM f J iff! ? llf'< " z IQ 111 j \ - t JF /jKbl I \'^W : i MH fl s - Miss Gladys Hanson, the Atlanta girl, whose beanly is greatly admired by New York theater goers. Miss Hanson, who is a talented actress, has one of the principal roles in Belasco’s newest production. “The Governor’s Eady.’’ Lady,” In which Miss Gladys Hanson is playing I looked at the man wearily, for Cd heat'd that so often, but I think bette of his judgment now, and. indeed. 1 shouldn't wonder if he were right. Miss Hanson hasn't been in, New York enough for our theatergoers to become very familiar with her until this season. Indeed, site hasn’t been on the stage very long, and 1 found her looking much younger even as Gladys Hanson at her Hotel than as Katherine Strickland on the stage of the Republic theater. It is pleasant to say that she is really and truly beautiful. A tall and most distinguished looking girl, with a small aristocratic head, beautifully set upon a pair of handsome shoulders, her face is a perfect oval with the pointed chin of the early Italian artists, her eyes, a gray blue, are set in their sockets with Nature's own smutty tinge s. a beauty which one can not imitate, despite all the be-t eyelash pencils. Now She "Tells All.” ''Now . 1 am really going to tell you everything I know about the beauty question." said Miss Hanson in a charmingly modulated voice, which has a delicious trace of Southern accent, as she leaned forward in her chair and looked at nte with a serious determina tion to he conscientious and to stick to tlie subject of the interview. I suppose the most important sub ject is the question of diet. lam sure it is with me. especially when I go home to Atlanta, where 1 have to withstand the temptation of the most wonderful lemon meringue pies and jumbles: and ah sorts of other things prepared espe cially for me by our old cook. Her grief is really pathetic, when she watches me refuse one after another my old favorite dishes, and she moans as she stands at the doorway, ‘Oh, Lan', our Miss Baby she done get al these queer Yankee notions; she won't eat nothing mor’.' That's what out old cook thinks about my efforts of diet ing. and 1 van tel! you sue makes it vet v hard for me to refuse all t’.te gjis. things that I know are hound to make me fat. "When I am winking I neve, tuk more than two meals a day. and I stick to this title no matte wiiat it costs im in obligation. "In the morning a cup of coffee am toast, and then nothing mote until my e:-t: Iv dinner between half-past five ano | six Vftv the ihrate ■ I take a gins'- of buttermilk and a biscuit, but thuds all. I keep in splendid condition on this diet, and the minute I eat any mote I ' know that it is not good for me physi- 1 cally. and that it's correspondingly bad mentally. Os course, it sometimes takes tea' lie oism to refuse to cat when one is invited to luncheon, and I find that the only way 1 can avoid the tempta tion <-ntre'..v is to rim away from it ami to rat b> invself. So much so dirt. Now comes ex ’ - r-s Iwa k a g:.-at dear, but bt-sidt - • '-'t I go throogu i limb . of tx,... THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AXD XE\VS —— . 'iAHF E '"v H®; I X cl I 1. ■ E; I i\ hliw IHi ■MwOr z WflX KI v/ i cis.es every day. Oh. I really do; you needn't look surprised, and I'll show you just what they ate.” Some Exercises She Uses. Beautiful Miss Hanson began to show me a set of exercises she uses. ' They ate the West Point setting up exer cises. They include all the stretching exercises, tin forward and backward bend, the arm, shoulder ami head .exer cises. which ate at once the simplest, best known and the most efficacious. Here are some of them, which Miss Hanson did for me. and which she does every day: She stands erect with her hands clasped behind her head, and lifts the waist muscles and the chest box, stretching the body up as tar as pos sible. The same position is held while the upper part of the bodv is twisted front right to left, the muscles being still stretched and the chest held up. "There is nothing so good as these stretching exercises.” exclaimed Miss Hanson, “especially for tall girls. Tai’, women are apt to become overcon-cious of their height, and that makes them stiff; of course, a mental stiffness of self-consciousness corresponds to the physical, and if you can keep yottri body supple and elastic, and your mus cles will stretch, you have done a good deal toward keeping your mind active, too. "Women glow old because they be come set. set ip their habits of thought, and equally set in their muscle struc- ; lure. It hasn't anything to do with years, for you often see girls hardly | out of their ’teens, whose figures show I this settled, inelastic attitude, which is as much mental as it is physical. I'm positive that all these exercises of the body which keep the muscles flexible, especially the waist muscles and shoul der muscles, have an effect on the at titude of mind as well as on the poise of the body. "Mind ami body are so closely inter woven. and one lem.ts on the other so continually that i. seems shameful to neglect the physical any more than we would neglect the intellectual side of life. Both play an equally important pa l in this vha- after h-altli and beauty What Mrs. Fiske Does. ‘When I was .n Mrs Fiske's com pany. I learned something from hei which lias been a help to retain lie: wonderful freshness which she brings . to her stage work every night. "Nil matter what happens. 'Mis. Fiske takes half an hour of complete rest just before the performance She nevet deviates from this ini. , and I have tried to follow lie:, but I'm afraid I'm not its strict a- she is. ami -omt thing often turns up vvhi.-h cuts om this half hour of repose, but it is an i-xtrao. din.ii, way k-y ing one - salt up so: the perfvruiam i- in which urn wants give of om , ... s t sor 1 which one must be refreshed, both mentally and physically. "There, now. that is really all I can think of that has anything to do with health, or beauty: just diet, exercise rind rest; the oldest and -simplest things in the world, but women have got to come back to them, if they want to be beautiful,” concluded Miss Hanson. Un less they are beautiful already, by the grace of Nature, as is this talented and charming girl, whose brilliant future is still before her. —. . . __ __ Coffee Poisoning is a frequent cause of many human aches . and ailments. But people seldom lay the blame where it belongs until troubles multiply and the doctor says “quit coffee” The coffee drinker who is annoyed by headache, nervousness, indi gestion, heart palpitation, biliousness or lack of sleep, can prove to a cer tainty whether coffee is the cause by stopping it ten days and using POSTUM This healthful beverage, made entirely sleep destroyers. of choice Northern wheat and the juice of She suffe.ed from nervousness bv day Southern sugar-cane, tastes much like coffee ■■ writes , , , . „. ~ , - . young woman. "I was in'the habit of but contains no caneine, the habit-forming, drinking -offe. freely and did not real. Ize that it was injuring my health” health-destroying drug in both tea and coffee. made the victim rtf nervous headache's Every one can drink Postum with fullest . p. much of the time. Then insomnia came oenent. upon me and the wretchedness of sleep- less nights was added to tin agonv of Thousands of former tea and coffee drink- tin a .war ago. when i was persuaded by a friend to give up ers have found it a means of regaining v offee entirely and use Postum. The re- o & stilt was. in less than a week I began health and increasing their comfort. nerve* grt V smmVt r a t nd e i b began m to sleep nights. Day by day the improve- M continued and in a short Hinn I 1 HerC S Q tv CCISOn Wil * restored to health. .\l\ headache* left me. the nervousness passed away entire’v, and I enjoy good, sound sleep at night. ________ 'This is v hat I owe to Postum. and I feel It but right to teltyou of it." Name given by Postum Co.. Rattle Creek I Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek Mich Mi ‘ •- R ' ! ' in ' b Ti " «•»«<» to Wellville,' in pkgs. ■EONTO CURB WOODWARD’S AUTHORITY ! Foes of Mayor-Elect Planning I Bitter Fight on Him in the City Council. Continued From Page One. of office on January i, while Woodward, as mayor, will have many perquisites with which to gain councilmanic favor. It is doubtful if the Chambers fac tion can control council now. Mayor Winn recently declared that the mayor does not have enough au thority. While he voted for Council man Chambers for mayor, it is expect ’d that he would veto any action curb ing the authority of his successor. j Candler to Quit As Mayor Pro Tem. Aiderman John S. Candler, mayor pro tem, announced today that he would not stand for re-election as may or pro rem. A hot contest is already on between Alderman James R. Nut ting and James E. Warren for tlte place. Alderman Nutting is one of the lead ing members of the Chambers faction Alderman Warren has been an inde ! pendent in council. This fight may de velop some strong factionalism. The first clash in the fight for control of the police commission between Mr. Woodward and Carlos H. Mason, 'he present head of the police board, will occur in council over the election of a new commissioner from the Ninth ward. Two candidates for the place. A. R. 1 King and Dr. Linton Smith, both have appeared favorable to Chairman Ma son. But the fight developed by the nomination of Woodward and his dec laration of antipathy to Mason will make this factionalism the issue in all matters affecting the police board. The fight also gives Councilman Al dine Chambers an opportunity for a slight retaliation at Woodward. The election of a Mason man virtually would be the election of a Chambers man, for Mnsor and Chambers have been closely affiliated. W. D White is the present commis sioner from the Ninth ward and he is a Mas m man. He has been nominated for couneb to succeed Aldine. Chambers ted he must resign his police commis siov vsl. p The Mason men hold the stiMegie position because they can control :i:e time of the resignation of Mr. White and the election of his suc cessor. W. G. Humphrey, chairman, and the other members of the police commit tee of council, have begun an inspec tion of all locker clubs of the city. Un ier the new charter amendment the council will harge all locker leubs an annual license of SSOO. and it has the , right t.t close any of them at any time. . Chairman Humphrey said he eonsid • b ere ! al'. I"ekei clubs illegal where in dividuals were receiving the profits from the sate of beers and liquors. He ; said he would fight to close all locker I clubs where the profits from the f ; drinks were not for the mutual benefit of the members. 'PERMITS FOR HEALY AND HURT BUILDINGS ISSUED SAME DAY Building permits calling for the ex penditure of more than $1,500,000 were issued today by Building Inspector Ed R. Hayes and showed Joel Hurt and "Bill" Healy running even in the great skyscraper Marathon. One of these was to the Healy Real Estate and Improvement Company. W. T. Healy, president, for the Healy building of sixteen stories at the cor ner of Walton and North Forsyth. The other large permit was to the Atlanta Realty Corporation to erect a seventeen-story office building, triangu lar in shape, at Edgewood avenue and Exchange place. J. E. R. Carpenter is the architect and the contractors are the Realty Construction Company of Birmingham. FIREMASTERS FAVOR BID OF $104,000.00 FOR NEW ALARM SYSTEM The board of firemasters have recom mended that the bid of the Okonite Cable company, of New York, for a new police and fire alarm system for the whole city at a cost of $104,000 be accepted. City At torney Mayson today is preparing a for mal contract to be submitted to council Monday. The city is to pay $5,000 cash and the remainder of the purchase price in five annual installments, according to the con tract. The company is to accept the city moral obligation for the deferred pay ments. The Gamewell Fire Alarm company, of New York, put in in bid of $107,500. and the Star Electric company, of Binghamp ton. N. Y., a bid of SIIO,OOO. The present alarm system covers only the old part of the city. FIRE IN SKYSCRAPER MAKES MANY FLEE; STAMPEDE CHECKED Short circuiting of wires in the Eng lish-American "Flatiron" building, at Broad and Peachtree streets, which stopped the elevator service and filled the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth floors with smoke, caused an incipient stampede on the staircases of the building at 10 o'clock today. As the offices filled with smoke, clerks b'came alarmed and hurried to the ele vators. When they found that the ele vators had stopped, there was a rush for the stairways. For a while there was danger of a crush, but cool counsel by several men permitted an orderly exit to the street until the circuit had been repaired and elevator service re stored. No damage was done the building. WILSON SYMPATHIZES WITH ROOSEVELT,BUT LAMBASTS PRESIDENT GEORGETOWN. DEL. Oct. 17. 1 Governor Wilson made his first speech since the shooting of Colonel Roosevelt to an audience of 2,000 in the public square here today. He expressed deep ' sorrow for the wounded leader of the third party and declared he never en tertained any personal opposition to • the colonel, but regarded him merely as ‘ the representative of set of campaign t issues.. : The governor then assailed President . Taft. HEADS EDUCATION BOARD. s WAYCROSS, GA., Oct. 17.—T0 suc- • ceed the late W. J. Carswell as presi ' dent of the city board of education. V. f L. Stanton, for a number of years an t active member of the board, has been named. GUEST FOUND IN GJS’FILLED ROON Mystery in Youth’s Narrow Es cape From Death in North Side Hotel. Charles Page, of Lancaster, Tenn, was found unconscious in the Hend;;E son hotel today with the gas turned m He is in a critical condition at G:ad\- hospital, but the physicians think he has a chance to recover. Page, 21 years old. registered at the Henderson. 41 1-2 Peachtree street, ast night, and was given a room. About noon today the fumes, or gas were j f . tected in-the hall and the door to hi? room was broken down. Page was .lying in bed, undressed, and the room was full of gas. The window was tightly closed and cotton was stuffed in h s mouth. Policeman Haslett, who investigate';, j found a dozen postcards written by Page last night and addressed to rela tives and friends. In each of them ,■ said he had arrived yesterday and would be here only a day or two befo:- going to Florida. There was nothing in the messages to indicate despondency or determination to commit suieiii. One card was addressed to his fathe . J. A. Page, and another to a sister. M -- Alma Page, both at Lancaster, Tenn. HIDDEN DEEDCOSTS ATLANTAN HALF OF MOTHER’S ESTATE Because his mother hid a deed to a lot at Mays and Elliott streets, valued at $6,500. instead of transferring it in him, as she originally had planned John C. Martin was forced today to shate his inheritance with his cousin. Mrs. L. C. Wall. Superior Judge Pendleton decreed that the failure of Mrs. Booth, mother of Mr. Martin, to transfer the deed to the property before her death gave Mrs. Wall one-half interest in tire real estate. Mrs. Wall brought str it on this ground. | I I TURKISH W mCAHETTEs?S d 'fCunermiCuwwi Cd $.C| A/f "«««• a»»CTOae V I really I -1- ’ high-grade | cigarette has ever increased in sale so rapidly as FATIMA. The reason is evident —smokers would rather have that extra quality in the tobacco than in a fancy pack age. In their sim ple, inexpensive wrapping 20 FATIMAS cost but 15 cents. ''Dfotinctioely Individual" cents sssssassass A ikl Toda y at 2:30 Tonight at 8:-0 Keith Vaudeville VALERIE BERGERE AND HER CO Howard 4 Snow The Caberet Tno Sampsell 4 Reilly The Havelock* Mariano Bros. Joe Jacke rnnOVTil WEEK Nights at 8 0 FORSYTH J® LITTLE EMMA BUNTING And Her Splendid Players Present Barrie's Great Four-Actn •» rtHE LITTLE MINISTER Next Week "L.ttle Lord Fauntlero" i vmn THIS WEEK I I Kill Matinee.’. Tucf-. rinir- L I IIIU and Saturday ENGAGEMENT EXTRAOR DI" A r ’ THE CALL OF THE HEART NEXT WEEK—"MADAM X"