Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, October 21, 1912, HOME, Page 4, Image 4

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4 DIV INSURGENTS' TRAP MILS Mexican Army Surrounded by Rebels of Double Number at Vera Cruz. MEXICO CITY, "«t 21 Generali Feltrani. the Mexican federal com- • majider, walked into a rebel trap tn- . rfav when hr **nd* at early attack upon > the city of V< a t'niz and is now sur rounded bv insurgent forces, who' threaten to crush hi- entire command I of 2,M»0 men. Two thoursn<: nsurgents under Gen eral Vguiar and General Llave, have Beltram’.- government forces surround ed and ti c federal commander will have to i-ut his wav through the rebel lines unless p. wants to give hattie to an army twice the size of his own After firing a few shells into the sub urbs of Vera <Tu*. Beltrnm discovered h|s pr.’di ament today and is now en rieavo ing to find way to retreat. The I'nited States cruiser Des Moines end a <;■ *mnn liner are in the harbor to protect f .*•«•, gn interests. c aptain Chas F Hughes, of lies Moines, has been Informed by General Diaz that the in- Burgants won no' molest foreign* r.- Protection For Foreigners Diaz has issued a proclamation to his r r be soldiers not to interfere with Americans or other foreigners. nor to Injure p-operty owner! b\ foreigners. Rebe.s seizing armaments or provisions arc expeetj-d to pay full value for them President Madero Is Dying to aise an a my of 10. non men to defend this city The situation i- eritiea' here An attack from the 3.non Zapatista, who arc gathered west and south of the capital, is believed imminent. i>ne report that wg<* current today was that Pa»i*u» Orozco, Jr former ’ebe' commander m the nortn. had come south tn heip cad an attack upon this city. News that the Twenty-first battalion, stg'ioned on the island of I'iun. in (lie harbor at Wra t'ruz. had gone over to the Diaz cause, was expected The loy ally of this battalion had been In ques tion since Diaz raised his standard at Vera Cruz. Mexico City got little sleep last night Humors of the most disquieting nature were circulated keeping the people In a fr'tnent. Rands of students paraded the streets, most of the night carrying aloft pictures of f’oritiro Diaz ■ A strong guard of rurales patrolled the streets and another detachment was placed upon the grounds of the national palace. ■' "MW THE BEST mint / Thoroughly cleanses your liver and bowels while you sleep. No odds how bad your liver, stomach or bowels, bow much your head aches, how miserable and uncomfortable vou are from constipation, indigestion, bil iousness and siuggien intestines -you always get the desired results with Casrarets and quickly, too Don't let your stomach, liver and bowels make you miserable. Take Pas carets tonight, put an end tn the head ache. biliousness, dizziness, nervous ness. sick, sour, gassy stomach, back ache and all other distress, cleanse your inside organs of all the bile, gases and constipated matter which is pro ducing the misery. A 10-cent box means health, happi ness and a clear head for months No more days of gloom and distress If you will take a t.’ascaret now and then All druggists sei 1 t’ascatets. Don't forget the children—t halt little insides need a good, gentle cleansing, too. (Advt,) KU. nil ± , CLEAN OUT YOUR KIDNEYS AND BLADDER Get Rid of Backache, Pains in Bones, Straining, Swelling, Etc. Th« kidneys and bladder n»ed a s''mutant to expel the accumulations of sugar and uric add which lodge in these delicate oigans and whi-n ai cumulations cause so much misery. Stuart > Hue hu and Juniper Compound 1- made so just such a purpose. This i rtedy , --ans out th, k’dneys and bladder like hot water cleans out g'-ease. Stuarts Buchu and Juniper Compound is uniik< any other kidney remedy and cures where all ei.se fails Even diabetes is cured by its us,- The sugar is quickly reduced after 'uking Stuatt e Buenu nd I itriiji, * Con,pom Wouldn’t It lie nice within a week or -u to begin to say good-bye forever to the scalding dribbling, straining, or too frequent passage of urir.e the forehead and the back-of-1 he-head aches; the stitches and pains in the ba- I- the gtowing muscle weakness spots before the .yes, yellow skin' sluggish bowels; swollen eyelids or an kles It g cramps unnatural short brea'h. sleep.- -sm ss and the despond, fti,' ; Take Stuart Ruchu and Juniper Compound for above troubles if y ~>i want t<» makr .. quick recover- Stu art's P-ueh-t arm Jnnlpe Compound ton'ain* or x put, ingredients and omck x ‘-h x« s ,t- |; oxer kidnex •’ ■ seat! x symptoms ■ tn ■■ $1 per large bottle a* drug 'tores. Samples free by writ ing Stuart Drug Company. Atlanta, Ga. 1 A -*4 X f »• 1 *w. 4 SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS By JAMES B. NEVIN. Secretary of State Philip Cook i prouder of nothing in his office titan lie is of an old-fashioned pictu'e of an old- jAMX-3 B NTEw-TXt fashioned gent •- man. who so. the unprecedented term of 4 4 years, was secretary of state for Georgia The pictu re hangs just back of the present secre ts ry'z chair, and it is mo r e or less faded with age., but It shows, nev ertheless, the rug ged lines and strong face of old Nathan Barnett, a Georgian of the ancient regime, and a., (ffilcial for many years with mit fear and without reproach. When Nathan Barnett was elected secretary of state that office was filled by the legislature, and not by tlie vote of the people, as has been the ease since the adoption of the constitution of 1877. When Bat nett was first elected, the lapltoi was in Milledgeville, and At lanta was not even on the map. Barnett served through the war -un der the father of the present governor. Joseph E Brown but went out in Re construction days, only to come back triumphantly after the "carpetbaggers’ had been tun back to their lairs up Nori h. When old Nathan Barnett left the secretary of state’s office, just after the war. he carried with him the- great seal of the stat* He kept It. too. until after Reconstruction days, and when he came back Into office he brought that seal with him and It is the great sea. in use today. Some histories have said that Gov ernor Jenkins took away and hid for a time tlie great seal of the state of Geor gia, but that is a mistake It was the executive seal that Governor Jenkins had. w hich is a very different article. Nathan Barnett died in office—h° was more than 90 when he passed away and before he closed his eyes forever he asked Governor John B. Gordon to appoint as his. successor the present secretary's father. General Philip <'ook as a personal favor to the then dying secretary. General Cook was an old man when the appointment was tendered him. an 1 was inclined to turn it down, but when [Governor Gordon told him all the cir cumstances of the case, lie agreed t> accept, ami served for some time afte? h's appointment. Georgia ha’s had fewer men to occupy the office of secretary of state than any other office under the constitution. Comptroller General William A. Wright thinks it speaks well for the new insurance law of Georgia* that practically every provision of it has been recommended to the West Mir glnia legislature by the state auditor for enactment Into law in that state The new insurance law is working nicely in Georgia. and both the comp troller and the deputy insurance com missioner think it will work a revolu tionary change for the better in loc.v methods of life insurance. The Georgia legislature has a curious way of enacting purely local legislation now and then under the guise of a gen eral measure —that is. as they call it in legislative circles, a general bill with a local application. This method of effecting legislation is not always creditable to the general assembly, moreover and frequently is of questionable constitutionality, so many lawyers think. From out the last legislative acts, for instance, which were published a few days ago. this scintillating gem is culled: Section I Be it enacted by the general assembly of Georgia, and It is hereby enacted by authority of same, that in cities having a popu- I lation of not less than three thou sand five hundred and fifty inhabi tants. and not more than three thousand five hundred and fifty two. according to the last census of the United States, the city tax as sessors shall not be permitted to value and assess for city taxation their own property, but the mayor and council shall have power and authority to value and assess for city taxation such property of such tax assessors. That s pretty funny, in away and if you will read it over a second time, carefully, the humor of it surely will occur to you It requires, for Instance, very little Sherlock Holmesing tn the big census book to discover that the one town in Georgia that possibly may be effect ci by this "general” legislation is dear old jc’edariown. in Polk county It is splitting the splits pretty a* - curately tn hold the application of this bill down to towns "of not less than 3.550 and not mot* than 3.552 a diffei enee of 2 isn’t much of a difference! There is a doubt that this law Is < on- Fortunes in Faces. Theio’s often much truth in the say ing ’ Ili-r face is her forttine." but It’s never -aid where pimples, skin erup tions. blotches or other blemishes dis figure it Impure blood js back of I then alt. and shows the need of Dr. King's New Life I’ilis. They' promote health ami beauty. Try them. 25 cents at all druggists. (Advt.) J. M • opeland, of Day ton. Ohio, pur chased .< bottle of Chamberlain's t’ough Remedy for h|s boy who had a cold, and before the bottle was all used the bo' s * old was gone Is that not bet ter than to pay a five dollar doctor's bill For sale l*> all dealers tAdvt.) Eugenie Blair in “Mad ame X,” at* the Lyric this i week. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1912 st *tutiona and certain y it seems to have been effected- -w ell. curiously enough, anyway! And there is a lot mote legislation of the same sort on the statute books, moreover, that possibly ought not to be there. I'nited States Senate Hoke Smith is very optimiztic with respect to the Democtatic outlook. He believes that Wilson is to win, hand** down, and that he is tn make a great president, moreover ‘ The senator has been working in the West. so far, but a few days ago he was called East, and left for Washington yesterday. After a day or so in the na tional capital, looking after some legis lative matte's, ne will go to New York city, where a program win be given him I that will keep him busy up to and ac tually including November s—election5 —election day. Senator Smith has devoted much of his Um*- to speaking in states where there is a prospect of electing Demo ■ ratio senators tn replace ' Republicans. He feels the great necessity* of having a * ongress to hack up President Wilson, and wherever he haa been able he has put in some licks for Democratic sena torial aspirants. "I think." said the senator, "that we shall control the senate from the very beginning of Wilson’s administration If so. we shall have, for the first time in many years, a real Democratic admin istration, from start to finish. It will lie difficult to enact the legislation we have In mind unless wo do give the president a congress of a faith similar to his own, I hope 1 may have been able to help that along in a way—cer tainly I have had it very much in mind as I journeyed through the West "I shall not return to Atlanta until election day- in the meantime. I shall be going all the time, as hard as I can.” GEORGIA FERTILIZER MEN IN CONVENTION TUESDAY MACON. GA.. Oct. 21. —Fertilizer men from all pans of the state will attend the annual convention of the Georgia Fertilizer Mixers association, which meets here tomorrow. Fully 200 dele gates are expected to ne present. The feature address will be made by Colohel W. L. Peel, of Atlanta, presi dent of the American National bank, of Atlanta, and also president of the Southern Fertilizer association. Other speakers will he Dr. R E. Stal lings, the state chemist: Dr. A. M. Soule, president of the State College of Agriculture: Dr. J. M. McCandless, late state chemist, and .1. G. Eubanks, of Union City. VV. R Hollingsworth, of Fayetteville, is president of the association. 1 ji rm .... f An Important Question: Am I developing a cash reserve <r\ which will provide an income or gs enable me to grasp my oppor tunity the moment it arrives Do you know of a better way to develop a reserve than to deposit your income in this bank and pay it out by check? That plan will give you an incentive to keep your balance growing, and your account, large or small, will be welcome. AMERICAMNATIONALBANK ATLANTA, GA. Hall Caine’s Masterly Novel “The Woman Thou Gavest Me” This series is the most talked of story of the season. It has to do with the rebellion of a young girl acainst the efforts of a reckless father tn sacrifice her to social ambitions and blight her life, as he did her mother's. Ils absorbing plot and sustained in terest equals and even exceeds “The Christian ' or “Tim Eternal City'" by the same author. You can not afford to miss this great story New Standard Oil Letters GeorgE Randolph Chester 's great \Vall Street story. Roald Amundsen's own account of finding the South Pole. Guglielmo Ferrero on Trial by Public Opinion. With Maxfield Parrish's 4 Color Cover, “The Sleeping Beauty” NOVEMBER NUMBER y y 9 /I • Now on All Hearst s Magazine Newsstands MINDS MADE BIBLE MIRACLES, ASSERTS SCIENCE LECTURER Atlanta Christian Scientists and their | friends are discussing today the dec-I laration of Judge Cliffo d B. Smith that ; the miracle- of the Bible were not ab- j normal manifestations of God s super-j natural powei. but simply the results of] ‘the states of mind of the people who witnessed them. Judge Smith deliv ered a lecture yesterday afternoon at the L.vrie theater before an audience of several thousand persons. Judge Smith declared-that the secret of divine healing, lost for eighteen cen turies. had been found again by Mrs. Eddy ami by het transmitted to the church she had founded. He declared that the eternal principle of healing is found in the Christian Science faith and its principle lies in having the proper state of mind. HE MAKES $1,000,000: DIES WORTH $2,000 NEW YORK. Oct. 21.—Official account ing of 'he estate of William T. Bur bridge. who was at one time declared to have won more than a million dol lars in gambling establishments in New- York city and Hot Springs, Ark., shows how uncertain is a fortune built on chance The property left by Burbridge, who died in Havana September 14, totals less than $2,000. FINED SIOO FOR BEATING HIS SLEEPING SPOUSE CHICAGO, Oct. 21.—For beating his wife, Joseph Mazurka, of 65 West Twen ty-first street, was fined $lO and costs by Municipal Judge Newcomer. At the time of the attack Mrs. Mazurka was sleeping with her year-old baby, she testified. ACTS ON THE LIVER Dodson’s Liver Tone Livens Up the Liver —Is More Than a Mete Laxative. Calomel was for years the only known medicine that would stimulate the liver. But calomel is often danger ous. and people are not to be blamed for being afraid of it. Within the last few* years many med icines have been put out to be used in stead of calomel, but their effect is on the bowels—not on the liver. All At lanta druggists say that the only real liver medicine to actually take the place of calomel is Dodsons Liver Tone, a mild, harmless, vegetable liquid that is recommended to take the place of calomel and which gives prompt re lief in cases of constipation, biliousness and sluggish liver. So confident are Atlanta druggists that they give their persona! guaran tee with every 50-cent bottle of Dod son’s Liver Tone. You can be sure that you are getting Dodson’s by ask ing at these stores if they are giving you the medicine they personally guar antee to refund money* on if unsatis factory. DALTON FOLK RAISE FUND TO PAY JUDGE FITE'S FINE DALTON. GA., Oct. 21. —Despite Judge Fite's statement that he would pay his own fine of SSOO to the court of appeals, a petition was circulated here Saturday in order to raise money to help pay* the fine, and a considerable sum was pledged by friends of Judge Fite. The list was headed with a statement that Judge Fite knew nothing of the movement tn raise the money It was cir culated by Sheriff Gilbert and several court bailiffs. WAYCROSS TO HAVE MARKET. WAYCROSS. GA.. Oct. 2L—The Ware County Farmers Association pro poses to eliminate the trouble their members have in disposing of farm products by establishing a centra! mar ket in Waycross. - Chamberlin-JohnsoivDußose Co. ATLANTA NEW YORK FARIS Here Are All the Rich Velvets, Corduroys and Plushes So Prominent in the Fashions This Fall We intend that this silk department shall reflect the fash' ions fully and accurately as they are brought out in Paris and in New York. That is why so much importance is given right now to the rich and lustrous velvets, plushes and corduroys. For this is their day! Many costumes from Paris are entirely of velvet, others of velvet and charmeuse, and for evening wraps, velvets and plushes seem to hold entire dominion. And the velvets are not just the plain velvets that you have always known. The wonderful weavers of France have added richness to richness and the result is two-toned velvets, corded velvets, plushes of a weight and suppleness that lends itself to soft folds and drapings. Colors, too, are often those that these fabrics in days gone by never knew. It is an interesting display—-one to enjoy-—one we would have you enjoy—even if you do not consider purchasing. Here are some of the wanted ones: Chiffon Velvets, 40 inches wide, in black and colors, in cluding shades of purple, brown, blue and taupe, priced at $5 and $5.50 a yard. Pompadour Velvets, a new velvet that is corded and that shows two colors—-a splendid variety of these in many color combinations, 40 inches wide, $5 a yard. Black Velvets, 40 inches wide; a rare display of these ranging in price from $3.50 to $9 a yard. Silk Plushes, 40 inches wide, in such shades as taupe, wis taria, navy and Copenhagen, at $7.50 a yard. Corduroys for suits and dresses, imported, which accounts for their fine lustre. In brown, navy, green, garnet, gray, black and white at $1.50 a yard. Velveteens, a full color card, showing many shadings of the wanted colors, priced at $1 to $1.50 a yard. Many of the Newly Arrived Hats Are in Taupe Tomorrow you may see the use of the taupe shade in mil linery as it is new in New Y’ork. It is a soft and very charming shade, one that is very prom inent throughout the fashions of this season. But these hats that we invite you to see tomorrow are not merely taupe hats, they are taupe hats from the Estelle Mershon shop of 20 East 46th Street, New York—and they have more than their color to make them beautiful They have all the newness and smartness of line and trim ming that the women of Atlanta are coming to associate with hats from this unusual little shop. Here is one, a medium-long shape, of taupe plush with two pale blue ostrich feathers gracefully poised at the side. Here is one, a rather large hat, of taupe plush, with brim upturned at the side and trimmed with two-toned ostrich plumes, the shades of which are pink and lavender. You will notice, too, the prominence of two-toned plumes—-they may be seen here in several exquisite combinations. Another taupe hat is a chic, jaunty little shape that pulls well down over the head and with the back crown flaring in tam o’shanter style. But while we are mentioning taupe, we are neglecting beautiful hats of purple, of brown, and of black and white com binations, all of which, showing so many new and interesting little quirks of shape and trimming, it is hardly necessary to tell you that the expressman just brought. And what do all these.new hats here mean? That you will find here the one most becoming to you! Chamberlin Johnson=Dußose Company SKUNK TRAPPER SUES CITY FOR DRIVING AWAY GAME POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.. Oct. 21. Alvah Richardson, a trapper, has sued New York city for SSOO because work men sent down to labor on the Ashon kan dam have driven away the skunks through which he made his living. BOY. 9. BEATS HIS WAY ALONE OVER 2.000 MILES BLOOMINGTON, ILL.. Oct 21. -Nine year-old Wayne More, after beating his way from Los Anglees to Bloomington, a distance of 2,000 miles, was arrested at the homo of a playmate here. His par ents recently removed from here to Los Angeles, but the lad pined for his old home and playmates and ran away two weeks ago. LIFE SAVERS REMOVE 21 FROM BURNING SHIP IN RAIN AND HIGH SEA NORFOLK. VA.. Oct. 21.-Wk . high seas, wind and rain lashed i-* steamer Berkshire of the MerL ..n? and Miners Transportation Comp an * on which fire was. discovered yester.Tv' the 21 passengers on board were laKon off at Lookout Cove near O a p e Look, out. N. C., today. The Berkshire was at anchor „ Lookout Cove, where she anchored yesterday after fire was discovered in her forward hold. The sea was s ' rough last night Cape Lookout Tfe° fivers could not remove the passed Although the fire was still burnint today, tite crew believed they had *• rler control.