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HOPKINS BURIAL ’
CLOSES COURTS
Entire Bench and Bar Will
Attend Obsequies of Noted
Jurist in Body.
The doors of Atlanta court rooms
are closed today while members of the
bench and bar are paying a last trib
ute of respect to the memory of Judge
John L. Hopkins, nestor of the Georgia
bar, who yesterday died at his home in
Spruce street, Inman Park. The funer
al services will be held at the residence
at 3 o’clock this afternoon, with inter
ment ?n Oakland cemetery, and the
pallbesrers and escort of honor will in
clude many of the most prominent le
gal lights in the state
Net since the death, several years
ago, of Judge Logan E. Bleckley has
the'o been such universal regret in the
parsing of a lawyer and jurist of the
014 school. The older lawyers had
kaowr; Judge Hopkins well; the young
er knew him only by reputation as jur
ist and author, but all expressed regret
at the passing of a man who had been
an exemplary citizen, a distinguished
judge and a writer whose books on
special branches of the law are author
ity In the courts of the state he loved.
Judge Hopkins was the first presi
dent of the Atlanta Bar association,
and that body of lawyers met yester
day and adopted resolutions of regret.
The following members were appointed
an escort of honor by J. D. Kilpatrick,
president of the association:
W. T. Newman, J. H, Lumpkin, B. H.
HUI, J- T. Pendleton. George L. Bell,
W. D. Ellis, L. S. Roan. H. M. Reid. A.
E. Calhoun, W. R. Hammond, T. P.
Westmoreland, L. Z. Rosser, Alex C.
King, H. C. Peeples, P. H. Brewster,
General Clifford L. Anderson, T. A.
Hammond. John M. Reuben R.
Arnold, Spencer R. Atkinson. E. V.
Carter, H. L. Culberson. J. H. Gilbert,
Z. D. Harrison, E. C. Kontz, James L.
Mayson, A. A. Meyer, George M. Napier.
H. E. W. Palmer, H. M. Patty, J. Car
roll Payne. Joseph M. Terrell and John
L. Tye.
“Every member of the Atlanta Bar
association Is appointed a member of
the committee from the Bar associa
tion to attend the funeral of the Hon.
John L. Hopkins." said Mr. Kilpatrick.
"He was the first president of this as
soctetlon and deservedly commanded
the respect of every member of this
bar ’
Ihe funeral of Judge Hopkins will be
mstked by a cortege the like of which
has been given to but few of Atlanta’s
ci/lzens. Practically every' member of
tie bench and bar, the justices of the
<4preme and appellate courts, the judge
and staff of the United States court,
he attaches of the local courts and
(hundreds of other citizens in othet
(calks of life will join in the procession
to Oakland cemetery, the ancient burial
ground where so many of Judge Hop
; kins' contemporaries rest.
STOMACH MISERY
JUST VANISHES
No Indigestion, Gas or Sour
ness after taking “Pape’s
Diapepsin.”
If what you just ate is souring on
your stomach or lies like a lump of
lead, refusing to digest, or you belch
gas and eructate sour, undigested food,
or have a feeling of dizziness, heart
burn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in
mouth and stomach headache—tills is
indigestion.
A full case of Pape's Diapepsin costs
only fifty cents and will thoroughly
cure your out-of-order stomach, and
leave sufficient about the house in case
some one else in the family may suf
fer from stomach trouble or indigestion.
Ask your pharmacist to show you
the formuia plainly printed on these
fifty-cent cases, then you will under
stand why dyspeptic trouble of all kinds
must go. and why they usually re
lieve sour, out-of-order stomachs or
indigestion in five minutes. Diapepsin
is harmless and tastes like candy,
though each dose contains power suffi
cient to digest and prepare for assim
ilation into the blood all the food you
eat; besides, it makes you go to the
table with a healthy appetite; but
what will please you most is that you
will feel that your stomach and in
testines are clean and fresh, and you
Will not need to resort to laxatives or
liver pills for biliousness or constipa
tion.
This city will have many Diapepsin
cranks, as some people will call them,
but you will be cranky about this
splendid stomach preparation, too. if
you ever try a little for indigestion or
gastritis or anx- other stomach misery.
Get some now, this minute, and for
ever rid yourself of stomach trouble
and indigestion. (Advt.)
ECZEMA SUFFERERS
Read what I. S. Glidden. Tatnpa, Fla.,
says. It proves that
Tetterine Cures Eczema
For seven years I had eczema on my
ankle. I tried many remedies and nu
merous doctors. I tried Tetterine and
after eight weeks am entirely free
from the terrible eczema
Tetterine will do as much for others.
It cures eczema, tetter, erysipelas and
•ther skin troubles. It cures to stay
cured. Get It today—Tetterine
500 at druggists or by mall.
SHUPTRINE CO., SAVANNAH. GA.
(Advt.)
I k i ■ Opium. Whiskey and Drug Habit* treated
I L J Hat Home or at Sanitarium. Book on subject
Ml DR. B. M. WOOLLKY, 24 N. Victor
Sanitarium, Atlanta, Georgia.
New York, 575 Feet Long, Built to Enter Canal
BIGGEST WARSHIP READY
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Bow of the dreadnought New York, which was launched yes
terday. A glance at the group of spectators gazing up at the
great fighting ship gives an idea of her size.
Giant To Be in Commission in
Eighteen Months—Crew to
Exceed One Thousand.
NEW YORK, Oct. 31.—Uncle Sam’s
newest fighting monster, the $6,000,000
super-dreadnought New York, slid from
the ways at the Brooklyn navy yard
yesterday as 100,000 persons cheered,
and President Taft, from a private
stand, smiled upon Miss Elsie Calder,
who crashed the bottle of champagne
against the steel hull.
The New York, together with her sis
ter ship, the Texas, now building at
Newport News, is the largest battle
ship in the world. She is 40 per cent
complete, and It Is estimated that with
in eighteen months she will be in com
mission, manned with over a thousand
men and commanded by sixty-three of
ficers. .
From the time the keel was laid up to
the present, thirteen months have been
occupied in constructing the hull, which
demonstrates, according to navy au
thorities, that the government ship
yards are capable of placing a dread
nought in commission as quickly as
any other nation.
When placed in commission the New
York will have an armament composed
of ten fourteen-inch guns—the largest
in the world on a battleship. The aux
iliary armament will be twenty-one
five-inch guns anji four twenty-one
inch submerged torpedo tubes.
Fully loaded, the vessel will have a
total displacement of 28,367 tons, or ap
proximately one thousand tons more
than the battleship Arkansas, at pres
ent the largest in the world. Her
length will be 575 feet, with a beam of
95.25 feet, which will permit her pas
sage through the Panama canal.
The New York will be driven at a
speed of twenty-one knots an hour by
two triple expansion engines, the four
teen boilers developing 28,100 horse
power. It is estimated that upon com
pletion the New York W’lll have <jost
$10,000,000, of which $6,400,000 was ex
pended on the hull and machinery.
The vessel will be protected up to the
water line by twelve-inch plating and
above that by nine-inch plates. The
turrets of the big guns will have armor
plating twelve inches thick.
Fortunes in Faces.
There’s often much truth in the say
ing, "Her face is her fortune,” but it’s
never said where pimples, skin erup
tions, blotches or other blemishes dis
figure it. Impure blood is back of
them all, and shows the need of Dr.
King’s New Life Pills. They promote
health and beauty. Try the(p. 25 cents
at all druggists. (Advt.)
ONLY $19.35 WASHING
TON AND RETURN Via
SEABOARD,
On sale November Sth to 14th, limit
December Ist. Tw ( > through trains
daily. City Ticket office, 88 Peachtree.
(Advt.)
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1912.
MONTGOMERY HEADQUARTERS.
MONTGOMERY. ALA., Oct. 31.—Ala
bama headquarters of the Southeastern
Underwriters association have been lo
cated at Montgomery, according to ad
vices received by the Business Men's
league.
Oil Heaters f T ■* O'JL xtfflb The Eagle
S3S Heating □toveslsß.so
A THOUSAND OF THEM at a DOLLAR a WEEK]
WE ARE overflowing with Heat
ers for you---for your conven
ience, your comfort, your pleasure. A perfect
army of Heaters of many kinds and styles
and sizes, but all GOOD. ALL sold on the
money-back plan. ALL guaranteed to heat,
and work, and please. A dollar a week puts one of these
fuel-saving stoves in your home. Can you afford not to
buy? A good Heater will not only give you a comfortable
home, but will save fuel every day, and on the terms we
offer the purchase of a good Heater is easy.
: —:
TT? shown in this advertisement is an exact reproduction of our great vlf CyJ
agl *‘ Ileat . er - havp so, d literally thousands of them in the past eight years, and (( t i!/
A A lIU every one is still giving satisfaction. The Eagle is made in five sizes to cover almost gvg? j'J/f
1 !UI,V f° r a Hig fellows to heat a big store or hail, down to good family ~ du?
■ 111 Heaters, and every one guaranteed to give perfect service. The terms are SI.OO cash
VA J B and SI.OO weekly, and the prices rt &Vm
$20.00, $17.50, $13.50, $11.50 and fc-
Qh o dcsy-Wo o <L
Ss
jbfrlSldJlMilrJljl rfcjjl / 50 I
103-5-7-9-11 Whitehall Street, Corner Mitchell — —l * J
MM ———
TEDDT, OLD SELF,
IS BACK 111 RING
Huge Audience Hears Mooser
at Madison Square Garden.
Demonstration Lengthy.
NEW YORK. Oct. 31.—Showing no
physical evidence of the shock of his at
tempted assassination in Milwaukee,
October 14. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt
last night faced for an hour and 20
minutes a Progressive political rally
which gave many thousands of his fel
low Next Yorkers a chance to accord
him an uproarious welcome.
For 42 minutes after his entrance into
crowded Madison Square Garden, Colo
nel Roosevelt stood at the edge of the
high speaker's platform, unable to make
himself heard above the din of cheers,
songs and band music. His gestures to
the crowd for silence served only to in
tensify the noises, and when after 20
minutes of cheering. Colonel Roose
velt. determined to begin his speech,
the immense audience was swung off
into another period of cheering by the
beginning of the chant:
“We want Teddy,” "We want Teddy.”
Stands Through It All.
Colonel Roosevelt then refused to sit
down or leave the rail that edged the
flimsy platform. Senator Dixon and
Governor Johnson urged him to be
seated, but he maintained his standing
position throughout the entire demon
stration; and when opportunity finally
came for him to begip his speech, lie
began it with a request to the police to
maintain order.
The attention and silence that greet
ed the address by Colonel Roosevelt
was as marked as the dmnonstratlon
that preceiled it. At the first attempts
to interrupt with applause, the presi
dential candidate motioned imperative
ly witli his left hand for silence; and
he accompanied this gesture with a
shake of the head which made the
crowd realize his desire to be allowed to
speak without interruption. The im
mense garden was crowded to its doors,
and thousands of persons were turned
away.
Governor Hiram Johnson, progres
sive candidate for vice president, ami
Oscar S. Straus, candidate for governor
of New York, preceded Colonel Roose
velt.
Colonel Roosevelt adhered to the text
of his prepared speech, without chang
ing scarcely a word throughout. His
voice was full and strong, penetrating
to the extreme corners of the amphi
theater. His right hand, because of
the wound in his right side, was
scarcely moved in gestures, although he
tapped with It emphatically several
times upon the railing. He gestured
vigorously with his left arm throughout
his speech.
rockefeller’s’pastor
CALLS MAN OWN IDOL
CLEVELAND, Oct. 31.—Worldly pleas
ures, business pursuits and man's own
self were named as "modem idols” by
Rev. \V. W Bustard, pastor of John D.
Rockefeller's Euclid Avenue Baptist
church.
Bryan Ridicules
Taft’s ‘Panic’ Talk
LINCOLN, NEBR., Oct. 31.—William
J. Bryan, in his Commoner, today edi
torially ridicules President Taft's "pan
ic” predictions.
“Don't be fooled by the panic scare,"
says the editorial. "Whatever may be
the name of the next president, the
sun will continue to shine, but you will
get better results from popular gov
ernment if you elect a president who
is devoted to the welfare of the many.
"The panic bug is a sort of a four
year locust. It comes out of the ground
about tile middle of October, grows rap
idly for two weeks, reaches its majority
the day before election and dies the
next day. There are three kinds of in
sect powder that are fatal to it: First,
the history of panics; second, logic,
and. third, patriotism.”
SUFFRAGETTES GET OUT
PAPER IN MILWAUKEE
MILWAUKEE, Oct. 31.—A feature of
the wind-up campaign for the adoption
of a constitutional amendment in the
coming election- granting votes tor women
in Wisconsin, came when prominent suf
fragettes appeared on the streets selling
a special suffrage edition of The Leader,
the local Socialist publication. The suf
fragettes edited and "got out" the edi
tion.
Prominent in the work were Mrs. Rob
ert M. LaFollette. Mrs. Victor L. Berger,
Mias Flora Gapen and Miss Gwendolyn
Mills.
No More
Poisonous
Stomach Gas
Fermentation, Sourness and that
Miserable Wrong Feeling in
Stomach Goes in Few
Minutes.
Stomach misery after eating the hear
tiest repast will never appear if you
swallow two little MI-O-NA Stomach
Tablets; not a cathartic, mind you, but
a most efficient remedy that banishes
poisonous gases, prevents fermentation
and sourness, and helps the stomach to
properly digest the richest food. Thou
sands of traveling men throughout this
broad land are never without MI-O-NA
Stomach Tablets.
At the first sign of distress this friend
of the stomach is brought forth and
many a man has been saved from se
rious attacks of indigestion by taking
MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets in time.
But bear in mind that Ml-O-NA does
more than give relief; if taken regular
ly as directed it will put an end to any
case of indigestion no matter how
chronic.
MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets are com
pounded from a physician’s prescrip
tion; take them for dizziness, sick
headache, acidity, nervousness, foul
breath, heaviness and despondency, and
if they do not give satisfaction, your
money back. Large box 50 cents at
druggists everywhere. (Advt.)
ALL HALLOWS DAY
IS CELEBRATED AT
PUBLIC LIBRARIES
Preparations are on in earnest at the
Carnegie library and Its branches for the
celebration of AH Hallows day. The story,
of Halloween will be told Friday after
noon at 3:30 at the main building by Miss
Henrietta Masselling, when 200 children
are expected to be in attendance. Miss
Thetis McLaughlin, Miss Valerie Rankin,
Miss Clara Frisch and Miss Valeria Rice
will be dressed as witches, and little Miss
Martha Stanton, three years old. will be
a little witch. Miss Hattie Colquitt, chil
dren's librarian, will have charge in the
basement of the building, where decora
tions already are up.
The occasion will bring together the
members of the children’s story class,
which meets only on Friday.
The Anno Wallace branch, In Luckie
street, will celebrate tomorrow afternoon,
and the Oakland City branch Saturday
afternoon.
Alien’s Tans
Indian Summer The Tan Shoe
Season Os the Year
Just at this season 1
of the year there is | » /
nothing more desira- iSj I
ble than a nice pair ] S \
of tan lace or button / y*)
boots. We have /V J
them in all the new
designs, from the ex
treme low heel in the
English walking ef
feet to the high heel twenty button
Musketeer Boot.
Our stock has never been more complete
than it is now, and we are well prepared to
give you style, comfort and service.
We have one of the most varied stocks of chil
dren’s shoes to be found and we will take great pains
in fitting the little folks whether parents are with
them or not.
J. P. Allen & Co.
KIRKWOOD MOOSERS
TO RALLY TOMORROW
A mass meeting of the citizens of Kirk
wood and surrounding towns will be held
at the Kirkwood auditorium tomorrow
evening. The call was issued by J. St. Ju
lien Yates, Progressive presidential elec
tor for the Fifth congressional district.
It is announced that Democrats are in
vlted to attend and discuss the platform*.
Women are also invited.
A HEAVY HEAD is a
pretty sure sign of a
torpid liver —let
Tutt’s Pills
aid nature in its work. You
will be surprised at the
beneficial results. At your
druggist—sugar coated or
plain.
7