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BROWN LETS KT
HOME SCSI DROP
Charges of Drunkenness Made
Against Maj. Winn Sustained
by Report of Trustees.
Governor Brown was expected today
■to stand pat on the Soldiers Home row
and allow the findings of the board ol
trustees to end tlie matter.
A partial exoneration of Winn is the
'finding of the board of trustees, who
conducted a thorough investigation of
the charges made by Mrs Mackie flare,
head nurse at the Soldiers Home.
The formal report of the board, placed
-In the hands of Governor Brown today,
declares that Colonel Winn did go to
the Soldiers Home on the night of Vic
tober IS in an intoxicated condition, but
dlil not offer personal insult or injury
to Mrs. Clare, the head nurse, as he had
Seen accused.
While the governor appoints the
members of the board, he Is* without I
power to remove them, ami the board j
In its action in completely exonerating i
Winn, has declared that it •will not j
prosecute the charges further.
Only two members of the board A j
J Snelson and R D. Lawrence vote'll
to convict Winn for drunkenness on Or- I
tober IS, and three— A. C. Pate, Charles I
F. McGregor and A. P Perham
thought that Winn had made imjtropet
advances upon Mrs Clare Captain
Bloodworth, of Savannah, and Captain
Charles Wiley, of Macon, were the only
members of the board absent when the
report was drawn up.
Colonel H. H. Colquitt, an inmate of
the homo. charged by Winn with being
a favorite of Mrs. Clare's, issued a
short statement, in which lie denied
Winn's allegations completely. He said
that Winn would not have dared to say
the things he did outside of the home.
In his remarks Winn took advantage of
his official position, Colquitt asserted.
WAYCROSS CHIEF OF
POLICE PUTS BAN ON
RED LIGHT DISTRICT
WAYCROSS, GA., Oct. 31.—8 y mid
night of November 7, all inmates* of
houses in the restricted district of
Waycross must quit the city or go to
jail. This is the gist of orders just
Issued by Chief of Police .1. W. Colley.
The orders came as a distinct surprise
to the residents of the district, who
have only in recent months gotten sat
isfactorily settled after much agitation
In the city as to their location.
The area now given oyer tn the ten
derloin will l.e cayefnily inspected on
the night of the 7th. and if any women
are found in th*- houses contrary to law
they will be jailed. The police will
make no exceptions, it is said.
Get Rid of
Piles at Home
Simple Home Remedy, Easily Ap
plied, Gives Quick Relief
and Prevents All Danger
from Operation.
Send for Free Trial Package and Pro ve
It in Your Case.
Don’t even think of an operation for
piles. Remember what the old family
doctor said: Any part of the body cut
- away is gone forever. One or two ap-
* plications of Pyramid I’fle Reipedv and
• all the pain, tire Snd tbrEurt- ceases.
In -i remarkably short time the con
gested veins are reduced to normal and
you will soon be all right again. Try
this remarkable remedy. Sold every
where at drtig stores. Send for a free
, trial package and prove beyond ques
tion it is the right remedy for your
case, even though you may be wearing
a pile truss.
Just send In the coupon below at
once for the .free- trial fTvat-mgnt. It
will show you conclusively what Pyra
mid Pile Remedy will do. Then you
can get the regular package tor 50
cents at any drug store Don't’ suffer
another needless minute. Write now.
FREE PACKAGE COUPON.
Pyramid Drug Company, 452 Pvr
amid Bldg.. Marshall, Mich. Kindly
send a trial treatment of Pyramid I’ile
Remedy at by mail, FREE, in
plain wrapper, so I can prove its splen
did results.
Name
Street
City State
'\ V *
I CHENEY’S 1
I EXPECTORANT I
CURES GN A. DAY
I Coughs, Colds, Consumption, |
■ Whooping Cough. Croup. Trickling ■
■ of the Nose. Watery lives. Drop- ■
■ pings in the Throat. Bronchitis ■
■ and all Throat and Lung Trou- ■'
■ ble.s Cheney's Expectorant r< ■
■ neves at once. Thoroughly test* i ■
■ for fifty years. H
OWUGGISTSgSr ANO SOC
White on the Pacific
toa t read the
hk Examiner
George 's Subjects Hear Good News From War
ATLANTAGREEKS REJOICE
A half-dozen waiters in white aprons
clustered by the coffee urn today in one
of those restaurants where customers
sit on stools and hang their elbows on
a horseshoe counter. The waiters were
buried in a newspaper just handed over
the counter by the oldest newsboy in
Atlanta, <'hristopoulos Danos, 60-year
old carrier for The Pan-Hellenic, and
the issue of The Pan-Hellenic which
reached Atlanta today from New York
bor*- great news, spread across the page
in a seven-column head.
"Eet ees a great battle in Thessalon
eek-a," explained one of the waiters,
lured from the paper by a ten-cent tip
and an order for ham and eggs. “You
know Thessalon-eek-a? No? Me, I
was born by there, close. I know him."
He spread the Greek paper across
the counter and read, word by word,
translating with the aid of a greasy
thumb the headlines which covered the
page.
“My King George he wins,” said the
waiter. “Already they have killed
those Turks, thousands of Turks they
have killed. My brothers in Greece,
they are with him. My cousin, he left
Atlanta last week for the war. Me, I
HOWARD HELD fiS
THIEF IN Ml
Detective Doyal Leaves Atlanta
to Bring Automobile Man
Back for Trial.
Sought by Plnkert< r and city detec
tives for two weeks, William Young
Howard, formerly with the Buick Motor
Car Company in Atlanta, and who is!
already under bond awaiting trial on
another charge, is under arrest in To
ronto. Canada. Armed with extradition
papers from President Taft on Premier
Borden, of Canada, City Detective Doyal
- is on his way to Toronto to bring the
prisoner back to Atlanta.
Howard is charged with embezzle
ment. of fnpds of the Buick Company.
An alleged irregular sale of an auto
mobile also figures in the charges.
Officials of tin- Buick Company today
admitted that Howard is short with the
company, but were reticent as to de
tails, declining to state the amount of
the alleged shortage.
Howard has relatives in Toronto, and
was traced there by his baggage check
numbers
The first case against him, now pend
ing. grew out of alleged irregularities
with another company. Hi- was brought
back to Atlanta from Florida in that
case, giving bond for his appearance in
court later.
RECORDER BROYLES
JUDGE AND WITNESS
IN CRUELTY CASE
Judge and witness was the dual role
played 1 today by Recorder Broyles in
trying a case of aggravated cruelty to
a-nimals made again-t E. H. McDonald,
foreman of the Morrow Transfer Com
pany. in charge of the grading of the
new Hurt office building. McDonald,
it was charged, defied Special Police
Court Officer Ed Arthur. It became
necessary for the officer to threaten to
lock the foreman in a cell before the
latter would consent to give informa
tion as to his age and address, as is re
quired by police rules.
Judge Broyles became a witness when
Captain Lamar Poole saw a mule that
seemed to be badly in need of attention
as it passed police station, attached to
a Morrow wagon. He called Judge
Broyles. Who expressed surprise at the
negligence of the driver,
Captain Poole ordered the mule taken
off of the streets, and Officer Arthur
then made a case against McDonald.
Judge Broyles, from the bench, told of
his examination of the mule.
McDonald was fined $10.75.
MEXICAN SENATE OBJECTS
TO DIAZ DEATH SENTENCE
MEXICO (TTY. Oct. 31.—General Fe
lix Diaz, nephew of ex-President Por
‘firlq Diaz, who was sentenced to death
by courtmartial at Vera Cruz for insti
gating an uprising against the Madero
government, has been placed in soli
tary confinement in San Juan de Olloa
prison pending final decision on his
ease by the supreme court.
When the chamber of deputies con
vened today speeches of protest against
the government’s treatment of Diaz
were made. Senor De La Barra, former
ambassador to Washington, is leading
the fight for Diaz.
CAR CONTAINED WHISKY
AND NOT HAY. AS BILLED
BOLEY, OKLA., Oct. 31.—A car of
hay shipped from Oklahoma City to
Boley, the negro town in Okfuskee
county, old Indian Territory, weighed
too much and attracted the suspicion of
' railroad employees. An investigation
! showed the hay was a cover for casks
jof whisky and cases and barrels of
beer.
i The lot was confiscated by the Fed
j * ral government and the shippers ot
| the car arrested for violating the Fed
eral law.
THREE CONVICTS FLEE
FROM JOLIET PRISON
JOLIET. 11.1, , Oct 31. -By scaling the
prison wall while their companions were
eating, three convicts who were working
on ;• coal * * nveyer escaped from the Il
linois penitentiary
IT*- ’r in William Dunne, serving an in
determinate term for manslaughter;
Ftank Thompson, convicted of operating
a * '-nfiiien*'- game, and Tony Landers,
convicted of larceny are from Chicago.
THE VTLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.THL T RSDAY, OCTOBER 31. 1912.
go next mdnth. Two hundred dollars
1 need to go, but some I have saved,
some will be lent me. The society will
pay the tickets of trained soldiers, but
me, I have never been a soldier yet.
Therefore I must pay if I go.
"If 1 not go now, when the war is on,
I can go never again. If I do not l?elp
my country when she calls, they will
put me in jail when I do go home. One,
two, three years maybe they shut me
up. I am going soon. Maybe I come
back. Maybe no.”
The first edition of The Georgian ar
rived, with the news that QueenOiga
of Greece had gone to the front to join
King George and perhaps to bear arms
herself. The Greek boys went into a
spasm of conversation which sounded
like nothing at all to American ears.
One of them pointed to a colored picture
on the wall.
"There are Queen Olga and King
George,” ho said. “Every day we look
at them and wish them success. Every
day some of us save enough money and
go to New York for sail. If war keeps
on soon no more Greeks in Atlanta ex
cept the rich. Better they send their
money than lose their business.”
MOONSHINESTILL
HUBEI) M GUI
Deputy Marshals Destroy Big
Illicit Plant in Woods Near
Greenwood Cemetery.
Officials in the United States inleiTt.-il
reverie department. Pcdrsa.l building,
are looking today for several per Sons
who operated a well equipped distilling
outfit just beyond West End park tn
West End. only’ three miles from the
center of the city and almost in the
shadow of the shafts in Greenwood
cemetery.
Warned that the revenue officers
were approaching at midnight by a
devious route, the moonshiners took to
the-woods ami .scaped; bur the office's'
captured the still, used thelr“axes bn it
arid turned out on the ground l.OffO'gal
lons of beer and mash.
Revenue Officers .1. W. Martin and P
B. Bush went out on the case on infor
mation received from several young
hoys who had been roaming through
the fields and woods in the neighbor
hood of Greenwood cemetery. The of
ficers did not go through -West End
park, the usual route, but made a wide
detour and came upon the still from
the south side. They as
described, In a heavily wooded ravine.
The beer and mash were still warm
from late operations, and some glow
ing embers showed that a fire had just
died down. The officers made quick
work of the still with instruments car
ried along for the purpose. The kettle’s
capacity was 50 gallons, and kegs held
the product.
FIREMAN TO SELL ALL
HOUSE GOODS FOR DEBT
Richard H. Presley, a fireman on the
L. & N. railroad and a resident of Blue
Ridge, Ga., is facing today the proposi
tion of disposing of a perfectly good
organ, a cow and a calf, a house and
lot, a sewing machine and other things
worth $1,450. to satisfy claims for debt
aggregating $459.
Deafness Cannot Be Cured
Iby local applications, as they ran not
i reach the diseased portion of the ear
I There is only one way to cure deafness and
that is by constitutional reni<ylfes Deafness
!is caused by an Inflamed condition of the
mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube
When this tube Is Inflamed yon have a
rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, anil
when It Is entirely closed deafness Ts the
result, ami unless the In flam unit lon can be
taken ont and this tube restore*! to its nor
mal condition hearing will lie destroyed for
ever; nine cases out of ten are caused by
Catarrh, which Is nothing but an inflamed
condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CIIENET \ CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists. 75c.
'lake Hall s Family Pills for constipation
(Advt.)
CURE FOR WEAK KIDNEYS FREE
Relieves Urinary and Kidney
Troubles, Backache, Strain
ing, Swelling, Etc.
Stops Pain in the Bladder, Kid
neys and Back.
Wouldn’t it be nice within a week or so
to begin to say good bye forever to '.he
scalding, dribbling, straining, or toafe
quent passage of ruine; the forehead and
the back-of-the-head aches; the stitches
and pains In the back: the growing mts
cle weakness; spots before th * eyes; yel
low skin; sluggish bowels; swollen eyelids
or ankles; leg cramps; un-natural ’short
breath; sleeplessness and tho despond
ency ?
Take Stuart's Buohu and Juniper Com
pound for above troubles if yo*i want to
make a quick recovery. Stuart's Buchu
and Juniper Compound contains only pure
ingredients ami quickly shows Its 'power
over kidney anil bladder diseases. Cures
where all else fails All symptoms quick
ly vanish. $1 per large bottle at drug
stores. Samples free by writing Stuart
Drug Company, Atlanta. Ga.
(Advertisement.)
WE WILL MAIL YOU 41
j for each set of old False Teeth sent
UR. Highest price paid fur old Gold.
| Silver, old Watches. Broken Jewelry
and Precious Stones.
Money Sent By Return Mall.
Phlla. Smelting and Refining Co..
Established 20 Years.
663 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia, Pa
TO DENTISTS
We will buy your Gold Filings. Gold
Scrap and Platinum. Highest prices
111,5
BURKE FARMERS ON
TRIAL AT MACON IN
WHITE SLAVE CASES
MACON, GA., Oct. 31.—Clarence A.
Rhodes and Walter E. Rhodes, brother
planters of Burke county, and married
men, and Waiter Pound, their farm
overseer, are being given a preliminary’
hearing here today before United States
<’ommissioner Erwin on the charge of
violating the Federal “white slave” law.
It is charged that they transported Su
sie James, Lulu Addison and Ola Fra
zier from Bath, S. C., through Augusta,
to their plantation.
The government contends, and two
of the young women say, they were
kept on the Rhodes farm for four weeks
and not allowed to communicate with
their relatives. The girls say they met
the men in Bath, S. C., by appointment
and rode with them in an automobile
to Augusta, and later to Burke county.
The evidence so far adduced shows
that Ola Frazier has lived with one of
the men as his Wife, though not mar
ried to him, and that it was not her
first visit to the plantation.
20 CIGARETTES A DAY
FOR PINCHOT’S SISTER
NEW YORK, Oct. 31—Lady Alan John
son. sister of Gifford Pinchot, wife of the
ambassador to The Hague, just arrived
for a visit, brought 60 cigarettes with her
and blandly admits smoking 20 a day.
NEW PROPHET DUE~SAYS
PASTOR IN PITTSBURG
PITTSBURG, Oct. 31.—Another prophet,
Amos, “a voice of righteousness," is due
to rise from the common people. Rev. Dr.
B. W. Ruehinson, Methodist Episcopal
pastor, said in a sermon.
SKINSMARTING
BURJNG ITCHING
When Scratched Pimples or Welts
Would Rise. Humor on Ankle,
Legs, and All Over Body. Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment Cured.
Centreville, Miss.—"My skin began
smarting, burning and itching, and as soon
as I Would touch it the smarting would run
over me almost like electricity. Then I
would have to scratch or it seemed as if
I would faint if I did not. When I would
scratch pimples or almost welts would rise.
The Humor commenced about my ankle and
on my logs, and all over my body. Such
a tinlb I had then scratching! I saw where
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment were
a cure for what was called eczema or itch.
I wrote for samples at once. When I
received them I was so I couldn't rest nor
sleep a good night's sleep. I used them
by directions and got some more Cuticura
Soap and Ointment. There were signs of
pimples where 1 would scratch, but when
I used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment
it took all the scars away. It took less
than a week to cure me.” (Signed) M. T.
Holmes, Feb. 3, 1912.
For pimples and blackheads the following
Isa most effective and economical treatment:
Gently smear the affected parts with Cuticura
Ointment, on the end of the finger, but do not
rub. Wash off the Cuticura Ointment in five
minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water
and continue bathing for some minutes. This
treatment is best on rising and retiring. At
other times use Cuticura Soap freely for the
toilet and bath, to assist in preventing inflam
mation, irritation and clogging of the pores.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold
throughout the world. Liberal sample ot
each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad
dress post-card “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston."
Tender-faced men should use Cuticura
Boap Shaving Stick,. 25c. Sample free.
A A m
if $ 1
[TURKISH KW|
r BLEND tW’kSffEl
J j
A? I
I TDRCM ocean
■ to ocean
there is more
j money spent
{ for Fatimas than
for any other ci
garette. A Turk
ish-blend of re- B
markable quality.
Suits the Ameri
can taste to a tee!
20, in plain pack-
B age—allows us to
I sell at 15 cents.
I
gg ’'Dittindlvely Indlcldaal**
■I CZ 1
Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company
ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS*
News of First Importance
From the Junior Department, Third Floor
The unusual values told of below are the results of a re
cent trip of the buyer for the Junior Department to New York.
The savings for you are just what the figures and facts
say they are—no question about them one way or the other
just such dresses, coats and hats as we are glad to bring to
Atlanta at regular prices under ordinary conditions.
Here are the details:
$1 For $17.50 Junior Wool Dresses
Sizes fifteen and seventeen years. Dresses that the
Junior Miss will put on with a great deal of satisfac
tion. For besides being underpriced they are very
becomingly fashioned, of serge, with sailor collars, V necks
and net yokes. Often a satin tie is run in and out through
the collar; metal buttons, folds and embroidery of contrasting
color are th£ trimmings—navy with Copenhagen, brown with
green, brown with tan.
$*7.50 For Children’s SIO.OO Coats
.< There are just twenty-five of these divided into sizes
■ from six to fourteen years. They simulate, in youthful
lines, the novel cutaway “Johnny” coats of the grown
ups. These are full length, of splendid materials—rich rough
mixture weaves with plaid backs. They even have the very
smart black braid edges.
$1 .69 For Children’s $2.75 to $4 Hats
Six dozen of these. They should certainly go quickly if
the combination of charming little hats and very small
prices is interesting. A number of different styles—one a
medium small hat with round up-turned brim, crown wrapped
with satin; another, a tricorne hat with a single trimming, a
festoon at the side front; another is a rather larger roll brim
sailor with an Oriental satin band. You may choose from red,
brown, navy or Copenhagen.
Exquisite Party Dresses at $21.50
For juniors. Fresh and youthful in materials, in colorings, in
trimmings, in styles. Chiffons and nets over light and soft silk and
crepe do chine in light blue, cream, pink and green—their skirts
show the tendency of the drapings of this season—the waists are oft
en trimmed with silver bands with wonderful satin girdles, with lit
tle clusters of flowers—sometimes hidden under the chiffon or net.
Indeed, they are exquisite for bright young faces and laughing eyes.
Children’s Plush and Velvet Coats at $5
I hey are, we believe, a little better looking than those that $5.00
usually buys—this, because of the way they are fashioned with their
little revel's and their frog trimmings. In sizes from one to six years.
And yet to take this $5.00 line of Plush and Velvet Coats and not to
mention the wonderful scope of this children’s coat stock, with prices
ranging from $3.50 to $25.00, hardly seems fair—but this we do
know is fair—you will find cloth, velvet, corduroy, zibeline and chin
chilla coats at every price that you will like for their real worth.
Wash Dresses
in Sizes 2 to 6 Years, 48c; 6 to 14 Years, SI.OO
Ihe practical and very serviceable Wash Dresses that mothers
will want three, four, live, a half-dozen of—once they see how much
better they are than their prices indicate. The materials are ging
hams and percales, in thoroughly dependable colorings, stripes,
cheeks, figures, plaids. T hose at SI.OO are, of course, trimmed and
fashioned more elaborately. Plaited skirts, long-waisted effects.
Children’s Sweater Sets
They consist of “ woolly little sweaters and leggins, and caps to
match, and are just as attractive as could be. They are in sizes from
one to six years, and are priced from $3.00 to $5.00 —white, red,
brown and Oxford.
And many young girls are going to want one of these. ,
Striped Norfolk Sweaters
Besides having all the smartness of the Norfolk, they have the
additional charm that comes of the mixture of colors. Along with
these are other new sweaters with roll collars, V-necks and high necks
we intend that you shall have the stvle vou want —priced from $2 to
$5.00. ‘ ‘ 1
Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company