Newspaper Page Text
6
TWO BOY RUNAWAYS ARE
LOCKED IN CAR 4 DAYS
BOSTON. Oct 29. Hany Lee and i
Jesse Bolinger, boys from Detroit, Wi-ie
found locked in tv freight car where
they had been for four days without
any food except a few apples.
They ran away from the Goodwill i
Farm school in Hinkley, Maine, an 1
went to s eep in a freight ear at North
Monmouth the\ said today. When
they awoke they found they vv •re
locked in.
PAST FIFTY? YOU ~
NEED “CASCARETS”
What glasses are to weak eyes—
Cascarets are to weak
bowels.
Most old people must give to the
bowels some regular help, else they
suffer front constipation. The condition
is perfectly natural. It Is just as nat
ural as it is for old people tp walk
slowly . I'or age is never so active as
youth. The muscles are less elastic.
And the bowels are muscles.
So all old people need t'asi arets. One
might as well refuse to aid weak eyes
with glasses as to neglect 'this gentle
•id to weak bowels. The bowels mils*
be kept active. This is important at
all ages, but nevei so much as at fifty.
Age is not a time for harsh physics.
Youth may occasionally whip the bow
els into activity. But a lash can't be
used every' day. What the bowels of
the old need is a gentle and natural
tonic. One that can be constantly used
without harm. The only such tonic is
Cascarets, and they' cost only 10 cents
per box at any drug store. They work
while you sleep. (Advt.)
I COUGHS, COLDS,
WATERY EYES
CURED IN A DAY
by taking Cheney’s Expectorant--
also cures Consumption, Whooping
Cough, Croup, Trickling of the
Nose, Droppings in the Throat,
Bronchitis, and all Throat and
Lung Troubles. Cheney’s Expec
torant relieves at once. Thor
oughly tested for fifty years.
DRUGGISTS 2SC ANO soc
- " ll I —linn HI , ■' I < .111
jIGRrAT offer!
■extended!
I out MORE WEEK I
| $l0(f GOLD I
FILLED
I GLASSES I
IM ,0 ° I
ini--.. M . a—-
VICI »
il * •**
I Thousands of people in
all walks of life have been I
fitted with our special of- I
fer glasses with entire I
satisfaction. The major- I
ity of the people have I
opened their eyes to the B
fact that they have been |||
paying too much for their E|
glasses. |||
ASK THOSE!
THAT HAVE!
PURCHASED I
■ What You Get For |
I One Dollar I
| | A pair of 15-year. gold- |g|
filled frames and lens to E
j suit the eyes for reading r|
H or sewing, or distant vis ™
gS ion that will rest your
EM eyes for years.
I COLUMBIAN I
I OPTICAL I
| STORE i
81 Whitehall Street <
in Co umbian Book Co. -
•
MEAT PRICES DOE
TO HIGHER FEEDS
Hotel Man Says Farmers Are
Raising Less Beef and More
Alfalfa.
That the high cost of living in meats
is largely due to the high cost of feed
ing stuffs, the enormously increased
i onsuniption of veal, the defection of
the farmers from the cattle raising in
dustry to more extensive cultivation of
alfalfa ana other vegetable products is
the opinion of H. N. Dutton, president
of the Georgia Hotel association.
'The present high prices of meats
.. I- due to a number of causes.” says
Mr. Dutton. "The high cost of feed
ing stuffs: the converting of cattle
ranges into many granges. The cattle
ranges of the United States are de
creasing with remarkable rapidity. The
farmers in Colorado, Arkansas and
other states that were formerly the
cattle producing states have gone Into
cultivating their lands more extensive
ly. Several years ago these farmers
discovered that they could make money
raising alfalfa, etc.
"The consumption of veal tn this
country has increased enormously. This
means the Increased slaughtering of
calves which constitutes another fac
tor in bringing about high prices of
beef because if calves are not allowed
to grow' the natural consequence is that
the supply of steers will become less
and less with each succeeding year.
"'According to the year book of the
department of agriculture the number
of milch cows in this country has not
increased in the past five years.. As
the milch cow is the source of the sup
ifly of beef we can not look for any im
mediate increase in the domestic sup
ply. We, therefore, must continue to
pay exorbitant prices for meats or turn
to the foreign markets for a supply
adequate to meet the growing de
mands.
"'The inevitable result of a continuance
of an increasing population with a
stationary food supply is obvious.
i “That there is a scarcity of cattle
in this country is demonstrated by the
fact that the present high price for
beef on the hoof would cause the cattle
raiser to market any he. might have
on hand.”
DON’T POLE OUT
THE GRAY HAIRS
[A Few Applications of a
Simple Remedy Will
Bring Back the Nat
ural Color.
“Pull out one gray hair and a dozen
will take its place,” is an old saying,
which is. to a great extent, true, If nc
steps are taken to stop the cause. When
gray hairs appear it is a sign that Na
ture needs assistance. It is Nature’s
call for help. Gray hair, dull, lifeless
hair, or hair that is falling out. is not
necessarily a sign of advancing age, foi
there are thousands of elderly peopk
with perfect headq of hair without a
single streak of gray.
When gray hairs come, or w'hen tin
hair seems to be lifeless or dead, som.
good, reliable hair-restoring treatmen
should be resorted to at once. Special
ists say that one of the best prepara
tions to use is the old-fashioned “sag.
tea” which our grandparents used. Th.
best preparation of this kind is Wyeth'i
I Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, a prep
aration of domestic sage and sulphur
scientifically compounded with late
discovered hair tonics and stimulants
the whole mixture being carefully bal
anced and tested by experts.
Wyeth’s -Sage and Sulphur Is cleat
and wholesome and perfectly harmless
It refreshes dry, parched hair, remove:
dandruff and gradually restores fade,
or gray hair to its natural color.
Don’t delay another minute. Star
using Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur a
once and see what a difference a fev
days' treatment will make in your hair
This preparation is offered to th.
public at fifty cents a bottle, and ii
recommended and sold by all drug
gists. (Advt.)
FINE HIGH-GRADE TOOLS AT
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES
Now is the time to supply yourself with a complete outfit of tools. No use to
do without them any longer. Prices good long as they last,
|oc Automobile Pliers ... 25c ' // f \
Mfil 40c Combination Pliers ...25c // / ii \ .
__J3L $3.50 Joiner Plane $2.00 : J/ / JI J Y
60c 2-inch Chisel 35c a.
T 3-4-ineh Chisel ...,30c ,
L IraHWlm
______ Padlock with brass works.
.J' sells for 75c. Regular, while
4(h‘ ('law Hatchet 25c >7®.-..XJ&s. they last 50c
-n /’I II « I ♦ on- fflSi- «■' n'6 Sintond’s hand
.»()<• (law Hatehet 30c MR' . g ' saw $1.25
50c Shingling Hatchets 30c ' Good assortment of sizes.
WEI r 30c .t-foot Zigzag rule. 20c
40c Shingling Hatchets 25c 35c 4-foot Zigzag rtile. .25e
♦I.OO Broad HaUhrt 76c W g BTSSS Sgg SfillS
85c Broad Hatchet 60c i auger bits in sets;
t.i n . i . on SI.OO sets of six, good
Bac Flooring Hatchet 60c quality .. 85c
10c Hatchet Handle 2c HnßraßH $1.50 set of six. so<J
IKK JS quality SI.OO
15c Screwdriver—good one.. 10c jW S 3 00 set of nine > «°o<i
lOe Screwdriver—all metal.,. 5c ssJio'set of' ‘thirteen ,2-5 °
10c Dixon’s 5H Pencils 5c bae Ball 1 cm Hammer .. 60c good quality $4.00
$1.25 Wood Clamp Xo. 1 ....75c i 40c Xail Hammer—all steel 25c ”q 5 u a i‘ty ° f thir . teen ’s3.oo
BETTER DROP IN TODAY AND GET YOURS BEFORE THEY ARE ALL GONE
KING HARDWARE CO. 53 PEACHTREE STREET
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY’, OCTOBER 29, 1912.
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
The Honorable J. J. Brown, of the
state department of agriculture, was
feeling “mighty .fine” today.
I
B. XKVXMT
In fact, nobody
ever saw Brown
when he wasn't
feeling “mighty
fine"—or, at least,
when he failed to
say he felt that
way, vociferously,
smilingly and very
emphatically!
Once upon a
time, in Macon,
for a few minutes,
maybe, perhaps
but that's another
story. And it
wasn’t long, even
after that, until he
was feeling
“mighty fine”
again.
He refuses absolutely to be a pessi
mist, does J. J. Brown.
Monday night Brown went possum
hunting, and nobody ever so slightly
tainted with pessimism goes possum
hunting, of course.
Now and then an unsophisticated op
timist goes possum hunting—after
which he most generally becomes a pes
simist. One possum hunt frequently is
sufficient to breed great gobs of inerad
icable melancholy In a theretofore al
together happy and light-hearted per
son.
Any man who can get his own con
sent to go possum hunting a second
time either is an unshakable optimist
or a cheerful idiot!
And no man with sense enough to
get by a lamp post in the middle of the
big road would think of classifying J.
J. Brown in any variety of the latter
catalogue of human beings.
Anyway, Brown went possum hunt
ing over in Carroll county last night,
and he and his party caught six big
ones.
“We let six more get away." said
Brown, explaining things today. “In
fact, the very biggest one in the entire
lot got away!”
“He was fine, mighty fine—the one
that got away!” said Brown.
Nobody said anything—everybody
smiled.
You’ve got to be a Joy while Brown
is reciting—Glooms can not live in his
vicinity!
Brown also is some fisherman, and
tells some fish stories now and then
equally as entertaining as his possum
stories.
The Macon News throws an inter
esting sidelight on the late "pink ticket”
controversy, in the following edito
rial :
It being the party arrangement
for the candidates for congress to
have the national tickets for their
respective districts printed and fur
nished to the various county com-'
mlttees, Chairman W. J. Harris, of
the state committee, forwarded to
Hon. Charles L. Bartlett, the can
didate for congress for this dis
trict, “fifty official ballots” printed
on “pink" paper to go by in having
the tickets for. his district printed.
Chairman Harris wrote:
“Acting on the suggestion of Hon.
T. W, Hardwick, we have adopted
pink," etc.
The above Instructions were also
given all the other candidates for
congress in Georgia.
Judge Baftlett followed the in
structions of the state chairman
and had fifty thousand "pink” bal
lots printed. He is in receipt of
i telegrams from Chairman Harris, "
however. Instructing hint to hold
] up the “pink" ballots and substi
tute white ballots, and, of course,
he will follow' these instructions.
Those “pink tickets” seem to have
evoluted into “white elephants,” all the
' way round!
I
Judge A. W. Fite, whose fine of SSOO
for contempt was paid to the clerk of
By JAMES B. NEVIN.
the court of appeals yesterday, says
there is one nhase of his case he thinks
the public generally is not familiar
with, and which, in justice to himself,
he thinks it should understand.
"The court of appeals undertook to |
compare my case with the Shope case I
in my own court," said the judge.
“The cases were very different. In the I
Shope case the alleged contempt was ;
immediate and in the presence of the !
court, while the court was sitting and
hearing the very case. Shope discussed
editorially. In my case, the court of
appeals had disposed of the case it held
me in contempt for—my alleged con
tempt was not in the face of the court
and while it was hearing the very case
discussed.
“Lawyers—and laymen, too. for that >
matter -will readily see the very great >
difference.
"I am not seeking to raise the old is
sue w’ith Air. Shope—that has been set
tled and is past, so far as I am con
cerned. But I do think the public
should understand the difference be
tween the two cases.”
Just because the cruel—only it
wasn’t particularly cruel, so’ far as he
was concerned —gubernatorial war is
over in Georgia, and John M. Slaton
has been overw'helmlngly elected to the
chief magistracy of the commonwealth,
it does not follow that he will not here
after be able to find open dates for
such parties as desire to hear him
speak now and then.
Mr. Slaton specializes in one variety
of oration exclusively—the educational
address. It is rather a curious cir
cumstance that he never made one po
litical speech during his entire cam
paign for governor. He was heard in
many parts of the state, and heard
w’ith pleasure and approval, but not
once did he mention politics in any ad
dress delivered during his race for the
governorship.
When, however, it comes to discuss
ing educational affairs, the governor
elect is right there with the goods! He
glories in educational talk —he has all
sorts of it down to a fine and precise
point of nicety. He is always willing
to say a word, or mayhap a bunch of
them, to those thirsting to be informed
on educational topics. •
On Friday of this week the governor
elect will address the citizens of Ran
dolph county. He will share the hon
ors of the day with State Superintend
ent of Schools M. L. Brittain at the
fair which opens Thursday.
Down In Fort Gaines they are seek
ing to prevail upon former Representa
tive Ben Turnipseed to become a can
didate for mayor.
The former member from Clay does
not seem to fall very eagerly for the
suggestion, however. The election
takes place on November 6.
Mr. Turnipseed was one of the safest
and sanest members of the last house
of representatives, and Fort Gaines
could hardly select a better man for
the mayoralty.
There is to be a great fight in Sa
vannah for and against a commission
form of government.
Former Solicitor General “Billy” Os
borne. at one time a genuine Warwick
of Georgia politics, has taken up the
cudgels against it —and that means a
rare old fight.
TWO-TON ENGINE CRUSHES
MAN AS BRIDGE TOPPLES
ROME. GA., Oct. 39.—With a bare
chance for recovery from Injuries which
he received when a hoisting engine
weighing two tons fell on his lower limbs
and which necessitated the amputation of
one of them, Wesley Mullinax, of Rock
Run, Ala., is in a local sanitarium.
Mullinax and his father, Brady Mulli
nax, were moving the engine, and were
attempting to cross a bridge near Rome
when the structure gave way. The young
man fell first, the engine on one of his
legs, crushing it to a pulp. He lay
pinned beneath the engine until his father
could get assistance in removing the
heavy mass of Iron.
EIRE FOUND SLAIN
ON WEDDING EVE
Daughter of Prominent Balti
morean Killed for tier Jewels
in Chicago Hotel,
CHICAGO, Oct. 29.—Sophia G. Sing
er, daughter of u Baltimore family of
note, was 'murdered in a South Side
residence hotel here today. Death over
took the young woman on the eve of
her wedding. She was to have become
the bride of William Randolph Warth
en. also of Baltimore.
Robbery was the motive behind the
murder. Jewels, said to have approxi
mated SI,OOO in value, and a pocket
book containing S6O in bills are missing.
The police are seeking Charles Con
way, a high "diver, and Beatrice Ryall, a
chorus girl, who was much in his com
pany. They have been missing from
the house in which the murder oc
curred. The dead girl was found wrap
ped in bed clothing, bound and beaten
until her head was a mass of bruises, in
Conway’s room. Conway, it is assert
ed, also came from Baltimore, although
little is known of him.
Warthen found the body when he
returned to the hotel, after having been
out during the evening. He was over
come with grief. He was held as a ma
terial witness. The police are con
vinced that Warthen is not to be sus
pected of the slightest connection with*
the case.
Planned Secret Wedding.
“I had known Miss Singer for five
years,” said Warthen. "Ours was a
true love affair. I was coming to Chi
cago to try fortunes anew. I had a lit
tle money. Miss Singer had more. She
said she would come along. We were
to marry and she was to return to Bal
timore. The marriage was to be kept
secret a year, then she wag to come
into an inheritance of $50,000.”
Warthen told the police Miss Singer's
mother is Mrs. Loufre Bertha Singer,
717 Lenox street, Baltimore. He added
that Miss Singer had been married
once, but was divorced and resumed
her maiden name.
Warthen said that Conway and the
Ryall woman had eaten dinner with
Miss Singer and himself on Monday
evening and had seen him hand Miss
Singer a roll of bills.
The coroner discovered that one of
the towels bound around the head of
the dead woman had been saturated in
chloroform.
FAYETTE RALLY PLANNED.
FAYETTEVILLE, GA., Oct. 29—The
Fayette County Democratic executive
committee is planning for a meeting of
the Wilson and Marshall supporters here
next Saturday afternoon at 2 o’clock. A.
O. Blalock, J. W. Wise. J. W. Culpepper,
W. B. Hollingsworth and others will
speak.
Out
of Sorts ■
When everything goei
wrong and the future look*
black, instead of moping
around go right to your
druggist and ask for
Tutt’s Pills
You will find this a short
cut to happiness, because
they will remove the cause
of your trouble which is
nothing more than a slug
gish liver. At your drug
gist—sugar coated or plain.
“Market By Wire” via
the Atlanta Phone
It means the saving of
time, trouble and rar fare in
any weather, and the chance
of catching cold on raw
rainy days;
The small cost of an At
lanta Phone in your home
for 8 and 1-3 cents per day,
places it within reach of all.
By summoning immediate
aid in emergency, it may
save even life itself.
Is your stoie. Mr. Gro
ceryman, properly equipped
to meet the needs of those
who “Market by Wire,”
many of whom use our ser
vice exclusively?
Atlanta Telephone
and Telegraph Co.
A. B. CONKUN. Gen. Mgr. »
DEPOT CAMPAIGN PLANS MADE.
MACON, GA., Oct. 29.—At a meeting of
the depot committee of the Chamber of
Commerce yesterday afternoon plans were
devised for maintaining an active cam
paign in the behalf of the petition now
before* the railroad commission for bet
ter depot facilities at Macon.
Don't buy nevWTT
HAVE YOUR OLD OP
at the SHOE RENURY 90
AND SAVE THE DIFFERENCE FOR SOMETHING ELSE.
WE DO THE BEST SHOE REPAIR WORK IN THE City*
AND USE THE HIGHEST QUALITY OAK TANNED
Sole, leather possible to Buy, and guarantcc-
the quality of OUR WORK- Welt SEWeD Soles JY V _
AND H££ls-ON2UY 9O<t* —251 C
s//ob rt&vuß, y~ 80 A/~ BRoad
I
810 demonstration]
ALL THIS WEEK
f
L-- 'fy. ] \ ot the celebrated
Cp-v “WEAR EVER”
Aluminum Cooking Utensils. |
~~~ ' J =•’ The ware that lasts a genera-
tioYi.
They are superior to utensils made of other materials be
cause
They are light in weight, bright as silver, absolutely pure
and wholesome. There is no enamel platings, flake or wear
off. There are no joints, seams or solder to leak and give
trouble.
One 1-quart Sauce Pan Nest of three—regular zt».
One I 1-2-quart Sauce Pan \| 1/
One 2-quart Sauce Pan price $2.15 (pUlfa
KING II IRD» iKf CO. ’ £“
fiJi
/z| vwn M
i I As
\ i /Z i —-¥ t
\ i T P $ |L-W 'T
Wil
|MSjr rtW/ZA
J_S
Our Boys Styi es
Represented in our Boys Clothing Depart
ment are the Newest and Smartest Ideas in
Boys Fashions
Overcoats in long douhle-hreasted styles—
some with convertible collar, buttoned close un
der the chin—ss.oo to $16.50.
Juvenile Coats and Reefers, Norfolks, Rus
sians, etc.— $4.00 to $12.50.
Suits in double-breasted styles, Norfolk,
Russians, Sailors and Middy styles—- $4 to SD.
Beautiful mixtures, plain fancy colors, biues
and blacks
The Style Effect of Our Boys Clothes is
the Perfection of Richness and Refinement
Agents for the celebrated K.. E. Blouse
Eiseman Bros., Inc.
11-13-15-17 Whitehall St
POULTRY SHOW FOR WAYCrZ
WAYCROSS. GA., Oct. _n *
ter Marvil, president of the Ware f 0 < *’
! ty Poultry association, will cai .
• ing shortly to plan for a
for Waycross some time during
• winter. The poultry industry u ”
trig rapidly in Ware. ' S Ow ‘