Newspaper Page Text
8
■SU MRS IB
RUN TOMORROW
Mediation Board Brings About i
Settlement Between Com
pany and Employees.
AUGUSTA. GA. <>. • 18 ’i ■
gusta street
and th' ■a-
- ■> mtr 111:
of the -‘r • ■
m< nine
Today the company v. ill fur- I
nish th. me it ion ho 1 ■
namrs ■ • < • in ie be
who went on a strike ind "ho are I
charged with committing acts of vio
lence again-: the company's property
and employ ' * - -Jr -■ the strike began
The charges u I" Investigated. None
Os these men ' ill go b:i< k hi Ho: k until
the charges . e disposed of before an
arbitration board. It they ate exoner
ated the company must pay them for
lost time.
The company corned'- to the men
shorter horns, two cent- p. hour in
crease in pay and a cognition of the
union, although it is specifically stated
that the railway company will not lie a
•‘closed shop." The agreement pro
vides, however, that union men must
not be discriminated against
Twenty Under Charges.
It is expected that about twenty cat
men will be formally charged witli
committing acts of violence and will
not be reinstated until the arbitration
board says so. The mediation board !.-
acting today in the i-apm ity of a grand
jury and when the company can show
with reasonable certainty that the men
are guilty of violence they will be sus
pended and not go back on the cats to
morrow with the other car men
The majority of the officers and com
mitteemen of the union are said to be
under cha ges by the company Colo
nel M. ,1 O’lx>ary left here last night i
so- Savannah, leaving Major Abram
Levy tn command of 40 men who will
be kept on duty for several days as a
matter of extreme precaution. The city
Is still Tinder qualified martial law and
will remain so until Major Lett noti
fies the governor that al! danger of
trouble has passed.
The near-beer saloons will probably
nut open until Mondat They hav<
been dosed for three weeks
The agreement In the street cat
strike situation was not reached until
nearly midnight and the mediation
board had worked almost continuously
for six days and nights to effect a set
tlement.
COLLISION KILLS TWO.
SCRANTON, PA.. Oct. IS. Two
trainmen were killed in a rear-end
collision of freight trains on the Lack
awanna railroad neat Hallstead today
Climate Failed,
Medicine Effective
It has been absolutely shown that lest,
fresh air and good food do help many
persona suffering from tuberculosis Hut
It must be admitted that the disease is
seldom more than ‘ arrested.” Something
more is needed
Eckman's Alterative Is a medicine, made
for the treatment of tuberculosis It has
Conquered this disease again and again
Often these benefits have been effected
where the surrounding- were not ideal
ret recoveries resulted Now we argue
that Eckman's Alterative should be used’
In every case of tuberculosis, in addition
to good, nourishing food and fresh air,
which we all need A remarkable case
follows:
"Weldon, 11l
"Gentlemen Through Eckman s Alter
ative I have been saved from a premature
grave. On December 14. 1904, 1 was taken
with typhoid pneumonia My lungs be
came very much affected; my sputum was
examined and tuberculosis bacilli were
found On February 21. 1905, I was ad
vised to go to Fort Worth, Tex While
there an abscess In my right lung broke
»nd discharged 1 gretv worse, and be
tame very much emaciated. My physi
cian Informed me that 1 must go to Col
orado as quickly us possible. 1 left Texas
June 1 and arrived in Canon City June 8,
very feeble After being there two weeks,
my physician Informed me that my case
was hopeless. Three weeks later I re
turned home, weighing 103 pounds, the
doctor having given me no assurance of
reaching there alive.
"On July 14, 1905. 1 began taking Eck
man's wonderful remedy for consumption.
Today I weigh 158 pounds I am stout
and well and can do any kind of work
about my grain elevator I have net an
nelie nor pain in my lungs, eat well, sleep
well, and never felt better
(Sworn affidavit., "ARTHUR WEBB
Eckman's Alterative is effective In
Bronchitis. Asthma. Hay Fever. Throat
and Lung Troubles, and in upbuilding the
system. Does not contain poisons, opiates
or habit-forming drug- For sale by all
Jacobs' drug stores and other leading
druggists. Ask for booklet telling of re
coveries. and write to Eckman Labors
tory. Philadelphia, Pa., for additional evi
dence
(EXPECTORANT I
CURES IN A DAY
Coughl. Colds. Consumption. ■
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OBUGGISrSZSI ANO 50C J
WE WILL MAIL YOU $1
for each set of old False Teeth sent
US Highest price paid for old Gold.
Silver, old Watches. Broken Jewelry
and Precious Stones
Money Sent By Return Mail.
Phila. Smelting and Refining Co..
Established 20 Years
863 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia. Pa
TO DENTISTS
We will buy your Gold Filings. Gold
Scrap and Platinum Highest prices
paid
■m
INSANITY IS PLEA
IN‘RIPPER’TRIALS
I J
Attorneys for Negro Declare He (
Confessed to Slaying Wo
man to Gain Notoriety.
V
\V> .(,•■ youg to show this com t that p
:ius negro is insane on the subject of '
notoriety, that he becomes hysterical r
1
when iie gets excited, as-uines an an
of braggadocio ami confesses to things f
he m-vei did " said Judge Willingham, c
attorns > sot Lawton Brown, a mulatto, i
arraigned before Judge Roan in su- y
perior court, charged with the "
"Jack the Ripper" murders.
In outlining his defense to the jury, v
the prisoner's lawyer intimated that f
Brown confessed to crimes he had t
never heard of until sweated at police -
iieadquartei-. He a.so rted he would .
show th * tout t that the po l< e confes- I
sion.-, which detectives say Include ad
missions to several of the "Jack tip*
Ripper” crimes, merely were hallucina
tions obtained under the pressing of t
tile police "third degree. ' j
Brown was brought to trial today, r
charged with the murder of Eva (
Barnes, alias Eva Green, who was \
found with her throat cut in the Pitts- t
burg section several months ago. Chief t
of Detectives Lanford and Officers Co- i
ker and McGill asserted that Brown t
confessed not only to the killing of the <
Barrie- woman but admitted having
had a hand in several other of the un- |
solved "Jack the Ripper" crimes. 1
One witness, a cousin of the pris- ‘
oner, would have had the court be- j
lieve that Brown was chained to a 1
chair at police headquarters when the ,
confession was forced from him by the
officers. f
MISSIONARY SOCIETY
ASKS “JAP” EMPEROR
TO HELP CHRISTIANS
1,0 l ISA'II,LE, KY._ Oct. 18.—The
foreign Christian missionary society of
the international convention of the Dis
ciples of Christ adopted a resolution
appealing to Yoshihito, emperor of Ja
pan to intervene for the protection of
Chris-lans Imprisoned In Korea.
J B Briney, of Kentucky, offered a
resolution to bar the Hyde Park church,
of Chicago, and its missionary, Guy W.
Satvis, from co-operation in the for
eign missionary work of the church.
Dr Brim \ read from “The divinity of,
Christ." by the Rev. Edward Scribner
Ames, pastor of the church, in which
Dr. Ames states that lie does not re
gard the stmt of the virgin birth of
Jesus as literal fact.
The Rev. W. F. Richardson, of Kan
sas City, made a point that the Foreign
Missionary society is not competent to
judge of the orthodoxy or heterodoxy of
up church. Delegates sustained this
by a vote of 46* to 270.
VICTIM OF THOMASVILLE
SHOOTING MAY RECOVER
THOMASVILLE. GA.. Oct. 18.—
James 1,. Patterson, who was shot and
wounded here on Tuesday by J. W. Dil
lon. Jr., and who is suffering from
pneumonia caused by the wound in his
right lung, is holding his own, and his
chances for recovery seem better than
was expected. While there are rumors
of all sorts in regard to the cause of
the shooting, nothing definite is known,
as Mr. Patterson is too ill to talk and
Mr. Dillon, under advice of his law
yers, refuses to do so. The latter will
probably plead self-defense, should the
ease ever come to trial.
MASSIVE BEAM CRUSHES
WORKMAN WHEN IT FALLS
MACON, GA., Oct. IS.—A negro
named Bob Stevens was crushed in the
presence of 200 people when h cross
beam, twelve by fourteen inches and
weighing 600 pounds, fell three stories
and struck him squarely. He was a
workman employed on a building on
1 Cherry street and was standing under
' the beam when the chains broke and
the heavy timber dropped. Mrs. L. P.
1 Hazlehurst, who owns the building and
, who witnessed the occurrence, was
< prostrated.
I •
: PLAGUE COST $2,000,000:
20.000 HORSES ARE GONE
■ TOPEKA, KANS . Oct. 18 The horse
plague that caused the death of more
l than so.oon horses in Kansas and loss
I of more than $2,000,000 during August
I and September has disappeared as mys
I teriously as it came. J. C. Mercer, state
I live stock commissioner, has not bad a
I new case of the disAuse reported to hitn
I in two weeks
'school board wars on
ROUGE AND SILK HOSE
F BAYONNE. N J . Oct. 18.—Because
high school girls here paint their faces,
put carmine on their lips and wear silk
slot kings, the school board has gone on
the war path against such adornments.
IF YOU LIKE OOOI)
COMEDY. (iO TO THE
BONITA THIS WEEK
\ Night on a Roof Garden" is being
presented b\ the Bonita Beauts Coni
edv Companj at llie Bonita all this
_ week and for bright, < lean-cut amuse
i mmt intmspt-sial with pretty girls,
| [good ntusit and lots of new jokes, it's
I"- - offering in town Beautiful
I I new motion pictures are shown between
I leach performance. > limlnating all in-
J I adults 10c, children 5<- (Advt.)
I
•Eugenie Blair in “Madame
I; X,” next week at the Lyric.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 18. 1912.
Knights of the Rods Flocking to Balmy Florida
HOBOES WANT SUFFRAGE
The advance guard of southbound
hoboes, seeking the balmy clime jf
Florida for the winter, has arrived in
Atlanta.
Two of these "tourists," one of them
Panick Mullins, who has made these
annual pilgrimages through Atlanta for
the last ten years, spent the night in
the police station, and today resumed
their box car journey to the land of
warmth and flowers,
Mullins, who is a picturesque hobo,
says he is always glad to "hit" Atlarta,
because of the hospitable treatment he
receives in the “tramp ward" in the po
lice station. •
Just before he "pulled out” this
morning. Mullins entered into a. politi
cal discussion with several policemen
in the station sergeant's office, and ad
vanced a unique suggestion—a plea for
"hobo suffrage.”
I wish one of these presidential guys
would put a plank in his platform in
favor of votes for hoboes,” remarked
the tramp with a happy smile. “You
MOVING PICTURES USED
TO TEACH RAILROADING
MAi'oN. GA . Oct. 18.—Employees of
the Central of Georgia railroad will he
shown the proper methods of firing and
operating engines and coupling and un
coupling ears when moving pictures,
which were taken in Macon, will be
exhibited at an “educational meeting”
at th<s city auditorium tonight. This
is a part of the free course of instruc
tion given its employees by the Central
of Georgia railroad.
Lectures, accompanying the moving
pictures, will be delivered by D. C.
Buell, chief of the educational bureau,
and W. R. Barnes. It is expected that
there will be nearly a full attendance
from the 2,200 local employees of the
railroad.
GOT INDIGESTION? STOMACH UPSET
BELCHING UP GAS DR SOUR FOOD?
You don’t want a slow remedy when your stomach is bad —or an uncertain
one or a harmful one—your stomach Is too valuable; you mustn’t Injure it
with drastic drugs.
Pape's Dlapepsln is noted for its speed in giving relief; its harmlessness;
its certain, unfailing action in regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. Its
millions of cures In Indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach trouble
has made it famous the world over.
fil ll PAPE’S
I DiAPEPsm | m
| I MAKES DISORDERED STOMACHS JL-HtsU*!
Isl FEEL FINE IN FIVE MINUTES. I
I$ / CURES INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, IQ tzj /.
y "J/SOURNESS, GAS, HEARTBURN. Z
LARGE 50 CENT CASE-ANY DRUG STORE. MR*** 1 "' r
■ jL
| A“ Square Deal” I
I m r i Ihe “National Way” I
Rcputa- or Doing Business
| "JL-. NO EXTRA CHARGES I
BtC cWfnNI
| \ \Tt I | kill We are ONE price tailors. You I
I \ y pl/ can come in here, make your se-
/ [ \\/ W<6 lection from our entire stock of
/ J|| \ ’ /ylrm Vtl ovet half a thousand pure wool I
/ ' /rnlß Y\l fabrics, then tell us to tailor it I
/ff\ Nk f ANY style, whether its Norfolk.
f KA n yV*' English. Semi-English or regula-
I ■ ly'\ p / f tion style, you get it witli the
B*’ \|| I very best lining and without a
If X penny extra
■ W suit or ■
A 1 OVERCOAT
I I To Your Order B
lif r»lsie£o I
In r\\ Aw No Mote I
I > No Less
111 H \ “Quality, Style, Fit, |
j ‘ \ Our Success”
V. I Be a“1 ailor-Made” Man B'
LI oriel's Start 1 oday
Aarges/ A^U3 ' UeS t 0 | !
Tailors w our price sls
I National Woolen Mills I
I WORLD’S LARGEST TAILORS |
B Robt. F. Mobley, Mgr. 77 Peachtree
3 Doors from Auburn. Phone Main 126
fellows may laugh, but I mean that.
There’s just a whole lot of my kind who
would like to have a say as to who will
be our president, but we can’t vote be
cause we travel about so much. They
ought to fix it so a hobo can vote
wherever he may be at election time
and without having to pqv any taxes.
That’d b ■ fine business, you know.
“Teddy Roosevelt wants woman suf
frage—why not give us hoboes a I
chance. The hobo vote would mean a
big boost for somebody, and don't you I
forget it. And we'd come mighty near
sticking together, too.”
Mullins, though his clothes are worn
and tattered, gives evidence of having
been well educated. Despite his num
erous visits to Atlanta's police station,
however, he has never revealed any
information concerning himself, fur
ther than to say that he has relatives
tn Chicago.
Mullins has for a "pal" this trip a dog
which he says he picked up in Cincin
nati a few days ago.
DALTON TO DON HOLIDAY
ATTIRE FOR UNVEILING
DALTON, GA., Oct. 18.—The complete
program for the unveiling of the Joseph
E. Johnston monument here on next
Thursday has been arranged. Local mer
chants and business men will decorate
their business houses, and the colors of
the Confederacy will be-in evidence on
all sides.
Judge Moses Wright, of Rome, will de
liver the principal address. Miss Belle
Kinney, the sculptor, will give a descrip
tive talk on the monument design. State
Senator M. C. Tarver will make the pre
sentation speech. Acceptances for the
■ state by Solicitor S. P. Maddox and for
> the city by Mayor J. T. Harris will fol-
■ low Suesylla Thomas will unveil the
shaft.
CAR SERVICE MEN
OF SOUTHERN LINES
CONFER IN ATLANTA
Per diem rates and the adjustment of
local rules to govern general conditions
were the main topics up for discussion
yesterday at the meeting of the South
ern Association of Car Service Officers
at the Piedmont hotel. Both morning
and afternoon sessions were held.
Another live topic tyas that touching
the Intel change of freight cars between
railroads. There has been considerable
discussion of this recently because the
smaller roads are alleged to have kept
a larger number of cars of the big roads
than they should have kept.
Officials present included J. T. Man
ey, of Nashville, who presided; F. C.
Tucker, of Macon, vice president, and
E. W. Sandwich, of Savannah, secre
tary and treasurer.
NATIONAL GUARD’OFFICERS
TO DISCUSS STRIKE DUTIES
MACON, GA., Oct. 18.—The annual
meeting of the Georgia National Guard
Officers association will be held in Ma
con tomorrow at the Volunteers armory.
About 200 are expected to attend.
A topic for discussion that will
doubtless arouse much interest will re
late to the duty of officers In times of
strikes, with particular regard to the
recent shooting of civilians by soldiers
in Augusta. •
Addresses will be made by General
Clifford L. Anderson, General W. G.
Obear. Congressman Dudley M. Hughes,
Major F. H. Palmer. Brigadier General
R. K. Evans and Colonel AV. A. Harris.
WANTED ’ Atlanta and vicinity to
—— ■. = fill out the coupon in
this advertisement and
see how easy it is to secure, without money, one of these
Atlanta {Georgiam
MARATHON'
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FREE = FREE
New—Noiseless-Swift as the Wind
Made to Last, Bwlt
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It’s the only sensible device
jWal of the kind manufactured, and
was accepted by The Atlanta
| Georgian after twenty differ-
I ent l YP es machines were
I tested. It isn’t a straight-away
coaster, because it may be
easily guided by the rider. It
is absolutely noiseless.
The Georgian Controls the ExcGosove Factory
Output. You Can’t Get Them at the Stores
It’s better than the so-called “push-mobile” because any
boy or girl can propel it by the swinging motion of the body.
It’s healthy exercise—fine recreation.
Boys and Glrfls, Fih Out This Coupon and Send
Dt in Today. Don’t DeDay
j MARATHON RACER DEPARTMENT
§ THE ATLANTA GEORGDAN !
CARCI LATloyt DEPARTMENT. 20 RAST ALABAMA ST.
Please send me instructions telling how I may secure one of the Georgian Marathon Racers without money ■
s Name . Age-
! Address ;
5 City —— ——— State
Sample Cars are on display at The Georgian office—2o East Alabama street. You are
cordially invited to come in and try this new and popular Car.
DAUGHTER OF CALLAHAN
IS HIS SLAYER’S NEMESIS
JACKSON, KY.. Oct. 18.—Four men
charged with murdering former Sheriff
Ed Callahan have been indicted by the
grand jury, arrested and are now in jail.
They are Govan Smith. Will, D. F. and
James Deaton.
The activity of the grand jury is the
result of incessant efforts on the part of
Callahan's daughter. Mrs. Clifton Gross,
to bring the assassins of her father to
justice.
YOU’RE BILIOUS! YDURLIVERAND
BOWELS HUE INICIHE-CISCIIIIETS
Furred Tongue, Bad Taste, Indiges
tion, Sallow Skin and Miserable Head
aches come from a torpid liver and
constipated bowels, which cause your
stomach i? become filled with undigest
ed food, whnjfc sours and ferments like
garbage in a swill barrel. That's the
first step to untold misery—indiges
tion, foul gases, bad breath, yellow
CANDY
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ALSO 25 & 50 CENT BOXES •
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Eugenie Blair in Madame
X,’’ next week at the Lyric.
skin, mental fears, everything that is
horrible and nauseating. A Cascaret
tonight will surely straighten you out
by morning—a 10-cent box will keep
your head clear, stomach sweet, liver
and bowels regular and make you feel
cheerful and bully for months.
Don’t forget your children—their lit
tle insides need a good, gentle, cleans
ing, too, occasionally.