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CLUBS TO ■
WAR TOCOUIICIL
Four Organizations, Denied
Permits by Committee, Will
Fight to Last Ditch.
The members, of council who fought
the former report of the police commit
tee are preparing today to oppose the
report of the committee, refusing per
mits to four clubs—-the Moose, the Bees,
the Georgia Athletic and the Central
clubs. Council will consider the mat
ter Monday.
The argument of the opposition to the
committee, led by Councilman Aldine
Chambers, Claude C. Mason, and Aider
men John E. McClelland and J. W. Mad
dox, is that the police committee has
discriminated against certain clubs.
Regarding the Metropolitan, the Ow’ls,
the Beavers, the Central and the Moose
clubs, Police Chief Beavers recom
mended that if one was turned down all
should be turned down. He said he
would permit them only because they
gave a poor man an opportunity to join
a club.
The Georgia Athletic, the Bees, the
Knights of the Mystic Ark and the
Southern clubs had already been re
fused permits by council. The Georgia
Athletic and the Southern put in new
applications, but the committee decided
to make its former recommendation.
It is reported that the officials of the
Georgia Athletic and the Bees /slubs
supported Aldine Chambers in the may
oralty primary. The other clubs recom
mended to be closed by Chief Beavers
supported James G. Woodward. Jhe
flght of the Chambers faction is that
the chiefs report should be followed all
the way through or disregarded alto
gether.
The committee did not take up the
matter of stopping the serving of drinks
on Sunday. A state law already pro
hibits the dispensing of drinks on Sun
day. It is expected, however, that coun
cil will be asked to take some action
on the matter.
No clubs will be closed, regardless of
the action of council, until after the
hearing on the temporary injunctions
by the superior court, secured by the
banned clubs against the city.
The clubs recommended for permits
are:
Piedmont Driving, Capital City,
Georgian Terrace, Atlanta Athletic.
University, Elks. M. and M., Standard,
Atlanta, Turn Verein, the Theatrical,
the T. M. A., the Beavers, the Metro
politan, the Owls, the Eagles and the
Press clubs.
RAILROADS INVITED TO
CONFERENCE ON DEPOT
MACON, GA., Nov. I.—Mayor John
T. Moore and A. J. Long, chairman of
the Chamber of Commerce committee,
have addressed a letter to the officials
of ail the railroads entering Macon, in
viting them to a conference here on De
cember 10 in regard to the new depot
proposition. The committee states that
they would rather take this matter up
with the railroads, instead of going be
fore the railroad commission. The of
ficials are asked to inform the com
mittee ax an early date if they will at
tend the conference.
SUCCESSFUL FAIR AT
CRAWFORDVILLE ENDS
CRAWFORDVILLE, GA., Nov. I.
The Taliaferro county fair, which has
now been on for the past two days,
comes to a close today. While a few
of the women of Crawfordville are re
sponsible for its success, the matter
being first discussed in the Garden club,
the proportions of the fair have sur
passed even the expectations of those
who have had the charge of it. Sev
eral hundred dollars in premiums have
been awarded.
GIRL, MOTHER ACCUSED
OF INSANITY, MARRIES
MACON, GA., Nov. I.—Nolah E. Ful
ler, the 16-year-old girl who *was ad
judged insane several weeks ago and
who later escaped from the Institution
here to which she was confined, married
Frank Visconti, a young electrician, last
night. The girl was tried for lunacy
upon a warrant sworn out by her own
mother. The officers state that, on ac
count of her marriage, they will not mo
lest her.
MILLIONAIRE KILLED IN
FALL IN ELEVATOR SHAFT
NEW YORK, Nov. I.—l. C. Stump, a
retired mining millionaire, is dead here as
the result of injuries received in a fall
down an elevator shaft. He was 60 years
old.
Stump entered the lobby of the Broad
way apartment house, where he lived, and,
walking hurriedly, plunged Into the open
shaft.
WIDOwTwED 2 MONTHS,
ASKS COURT FOR SI,OOO
ST. PAUL, MINN., Nov. I.—From the
estate of her husband, who died less than
two months after her marriage, Mrs. Car
rie Amundson, of Chicago, has asked the
supreme court to grant her SI,OOO. The
widow claims the right to the SI,OOO under
the Minnesota law. The objection made
is that she is a non-resident of the state.
SHOP TALK |
The success of Tipton's Drug Stores
is shown by the opening of another of
the chain at Luekie and Forsyth streets,
which takes place Saturday. This is
the fourth of the Tipton chain, one
being located on Moreland avenue, an
other on Angier avenue and another on
Capitol avenue. Mr. Tipton personally
conducts the business of his stores.
DYNAMITE BLOWS
OFF WOMAN’S HAND;
CHILDREN BURNED
Mrs. Fitzhugh Lee, of Lakewood ave
nue, is suffering from the loss of one
hand today and her five children are
badly burned about the face and hands
because Mrs. Lee stuck a hat pin in a
dynamite cap.
Her six-year-old son, Y. T. Lee, had
found the explosive on the sidewalk on
his way home from school, and his
mother, believing it an exploded pistol
cartridge, was probing it with the hat
pin, when it exploded with a concussion
that smashed the windows in the home.
Mrs. Lee’s left hand was blown almost
completely off, the thumb of the right
hand nearly severed and she was hurt
about the face and breast.
All five of the children, Chester, aged
nine; Y. T., six; Julia, five; Watson,
three, and Davis, six months, were
burned badly about their faces and
hands, but none of the injuries is con
sidered serious.
Mrs. Lee was sitting in a porch
swing, and this was shattered by the
force of the explosion.
LORIMER’S DAUGHTER
TO MARRY LEADER OF
FLORIDA BULL MOOSE
TAMPA, FLA., Nov. I.—Accompanied
by Mrs. William Lorimer and Miss Agnes
Lorimer, wife and daughter of the un
seated senator from Illinois, W. C.
Hodge, gubernatorial nominee of the Bull
Moose party in Florida, spoke here while
Miss Lorimer was an enraptured auditor.
Miss Lorimer, chaperoned by her moth
er, has been a constant attendant of all
the speaking engagements of Mr. Hodge,
to whom it, was announced here she is
to be married. Miss Lorimer and Mr.
Hodge met immediately after the latter
made a speech at the Progressive party
convention In Chicago.
V , ***‘»**** , »*»***«*« , » , ‘** , » , »*** ,
mwComsttWOiir
Listen—
you sure
like this tobacco!
Men, here’s tobacco that gives you a
K fresh deal in pipe smoking. Tobacco
B that’s all ready for your pipe, that’s long-
burning, holds its fire close and can’t bite your
tongue, because the bite is cut out by a patented
process. Forget that old messy way of rubbing
anci to hacco in your hands. Pour Prince
Albert right from the tin and light up for the bulliest
enjoyment you ever got out of a pipe smoke, bar none 1
F Fringe Albert
w the national joy smoke
■ Get this into your system right, you cigarette smokers, because
I. - h jn. it’s good for what ails your spirits.
UL:--Prince Albert tobacco makes the finest
AHI®IUI 'I cigarette you ever rolled. It’s not only
crimp cut, which makes rolling simple and
|m 11 easy, but it saves waste.
nA Z \ p i dnef, deszefes, you get the delicious freshness and
l’ I fra £ ranceandflavorthat n°other tobaccoever
1 I 1 Can -g ive yOU ' Be a s P ort Put U P a nickel
IF 1 f 'll or d ’ me for one of those handy packages—
I J ,| 1 and go to it like you were after a good thing,
ff !■'. 1 t 1 Prince Albert is sold everywhere in
I | 11 to PPy 5c red bags, 10c tidy red tins,
| I (SSinMIP J 1 and pound and half-pound humidors.
| teAßemTOawcol 1 R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY
Li " mirr- Winston-Salem, N. C.
FOR YEARS A SUFFERER-
NOW PERFECTLY HEALTHY
Mr, J. S. Calicutt, of 55 Wyman
street, Atlanta, Ga., has suffered for
years with the worst form of stomach
trouble, bloating, belching and consti
uation. While in search of relief, Mr.
t'alicutt has taken many different
treatments, all to no avail. For weeks
at times he was unable to work. Mr.
Calicutt says he has not been able to
undergo the slightest exertion for at
least six weeks. At that time he called
at Coursey & Munn's drug store and
was advised to purchase one bottle of
Quaker Extract. Now. after seven days,
Mr. Calicutt reports that he feels bet-
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1912.
FLY SGHEENS GO;
OPEN SEASON ON
Judge Broyles Declares One
Billion of Pest Will Feast on
Atlanta Today.
Atlanta today has a population of
1,000,000,000 flies, says Recorder Nash
Broyles.
Whether the recorder has made a
house-to-house canvass in compiling
his census he has not explained, but at
any rate he's perfectly satisfied with his
figures.
And just think of it—the time limit
for fly screens, as prescribed bj’ city
ordinance, expires today.
Under the census figures of Judge
Broyles, a grand total of 1,000,000 flies
today will be privileged to legally
swoop down on Atlanta's restaurants,
cases, markets and other places—all
such places protected through the sum
mer months by the fly screen law.
Uhis ordinance requires screens from
May 1 to November 1. But so far this
fall there has not been sufficient cold
weather to rout the festive fly, and he
still reigns numerously—as Judge
Broyles figures—to the extent of a mil
lion in Atlanta.
But the latfr’s limit expires today,
and the fly wins. The city law-makers
figured that the Customary fall frost
would put an end to flies by November
1, but in this instance the flies have put
one over on the law-makers.
ter than he has in years, and last, he
returned to work. He is loud, and just
ly so, In his praises and declares Qua
ked Extract is the best medicine in the
world. It should be known by all that
the Quaker Remedies are not cure-alls.
If you suffer with lung or throat trou
bles, fever, private or contagious dis
eases, the attention of your family phy
sician or specialist is necessary. Such
cases will not be cured by Quaker Rem
edies; catarrh in any form, kidney,
liver, stomach or bladder trouble, indi
gestion, constliiation, try Quaker Ex
tract at once, today. You will be most
agreeably surprised at the astonishing-
GEORGIA MUST KILL
TICK TO RAISE GOOD
COWS, SAYS EXPERT
That Georgia will never raise cattle
to any great extent or with any consid
erable success, unless the cattle tick is
eradicated, is the assertion of Dr. E. M.
Nighbert, head of the bureau of animal
husbandry in the Federal building.
“It is conservatively estimated,” he
declared, "that the cattle tick causes a
loss of between $50,000,000 to $100,000,-
000 a year to the South. It prevents
safe breeding, handling and marketing
of cattle because It transmits disease to
every animal it infests, but the cattle
tick is easily, permanently and inex
pensively eradicated by dipping cattle
in a concrete vat containing standard
solutions.”
In order to demonstrate what can be
done, Dr. Nighbert will install a vat at
the Fifth National Corn exposition to
be held January 27 to February 8, 1913.
in Columbia, S. C. Dr. Nighbert will
also address the convention on the sub
ject.
1.000 PRISONERS IN PANIC
AS FIRE LAPS THEIR CELLS
CHICAGO, Nov. I.—Fire in the crim
inal court building, adjoining the coun
ty jail, threw 1.000 prisoners into a
panic early today. Guards and keepers
had a difficult task quieting the pris
oners, who were terrified by the dense
smoke rolling through their cells. For
a time the flames threatened the jail.
GEM THIEF”WANTED IN
U. S. HELD IN BELGIUM
BRUSSELS, Nov. I.—Joseph Newak,
said by the police to be wanted in St.
Louis, Mo., and Paris, was arrested
here today in connection with a San
Francisco jewel robbery in a hotel in
that city. There was an SB,OOO reward
for Newak’s capture.
ly quick results. A great number of
local people have already been cured
and every day more and more cures are
reported.
Now, these are a few more good re
ports of the good the Quaker Remedies
are doing. Why will you wait and suf
fer when you see your neighbors being
cured all around you? If you suffer
with any of the above diseases, call to
day at Coursey & Munn’s drug store, 29
Marietta street, and obtain Quaker Ex
tiact, sl, or three for |2.50. Oil of
Balm, 25c, or five for sl. We prepay
all express charges on all orders of
$3.00 or over. (Advt.)
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MANUFACTURERS’ CLEARANCE
Sale at Bass’
The recent unlooked for warm weather played havoc with the plans of
' the big manufacturers of ladies ready to wear, sales estimates which figured
up into the millions slumped fearfully, and left thousands upon thousands
of newly made garments stacked up in the factory—something had to be
done quick—telegrams were sent out offering big reductions on quick
; express delivery, and we took advantage of the opportunity, and each train
from the East brings fresh bargains.
This Is The Bargain Event of the
Season, Don’t Miss It
Brand new Coat Suits, Dresses, Skirts, Cloaks, Sweaters and Furnish
ings are being sold 50c on the dollar and less.
Mail Orders Filled When Accompanied By
Check or Money Order—Prompt Service
Special Shipment of Tailored Suits
One of the first shipments to arrive was 800 fine tailored suits, the very
latest models, not ten days from the work rooms. Made to sell at from S2O
to $35, lined with beautiful guaranteed satins, in plain and fancy effects, in
i imported serges, whipcords, wide diagonals and all the . -|| -
! new novelties and mixtures. A complete range of o BFZX
I sizes in both ladies’and misses’. All the popular $12*50
■ shades and colors will be found in this offering. n o o
Alterations Free $15.00
SOOElegant Dresses Go On Sale Saturday
One manufacturer expressed us 500 beautiful Dresses. They are made up in
’ flic very latest Parisian fashions, and come in the new charmeuse, messalines,
; satins and serges. Black and all popular shades are represented. Some in
; the plain effects, and some daintily
- lace trimmed. Actual values range up '*
[ to S2O. Your choice Saturday at
; Ladies’ 54 Inch 300 Ladies’ Fine
Zibeline Coats Coats Sacrificed
i One of the greatest Coat values we have ever These Coats are the most dressy models
known, a truly serviceable garment, with . ... ~ . ~
I narrow or wide storm collars, belted or plain shown thls season; come ,n ch ™ hlll “.
i backs, in gray mixtures and black; some of diagonal stripes and beautiful English mix- I
- them nicely trimmed with braid; real $15.00 tures. They are handsomely tailored, and
> values at (all QiHl should sell readily at $25.00; £4 ft
sizes) your choice Saturday Zp I UaLIU
' Ladies’ Serge and Whipcord Skirts
) Only 300 in this lot, and every one a beautiful style, either plain or tastily trimmed effects, CQ GC
) in black, navy or browns. Regular $8.50 values, at vJSO.SJSJ
. Special Sale of Ladies' Ready-to-Wear Hats 300 Ladies’ Silk Velvet Dress Hats on Sale
! . , . , , , . , Beautifully trimmed and the equal of any of the
I Soft felts in reds, blacks, navies, light gray, tan, ten and flfteen-dollar hats ever offered before. The
1 electric blue and lavender, with wide roll brims trimmings of aigrettes, feath- LOT NO. 1
» ers and white silk bands, more ak
, and the new high crowns Very effectively trim- than equal the cost of the hat
I med, and right up to the minute in R A complete. We have assorted LOT NO. 2.
[ style. Values up to $3.00, at Jpl.OU thenl ln two lots- $3.95.
Ladies’ Two-Toned Shapes
1 Beautiful, stylish models in satins and velvets, worth up to $5.00, your gg
! choice
All Silk Msssaline Petticoals Black Taffelallne Petticoats
I All colors, with nice deep fluted flounces, actual
$5.00 values, in all colors, OA w,th heav Y fluted flounces, actual OQa
choice dollar values, your choice at ww®
" Ladies' Outing Gowns, full lengths and qQp Ladies’ heavy fleece-lined Union Suite, /j
l extra wide, 75c and SI.OO valuesw worth 85c. at . —O
Ladies' full bleached fleece-lined CiQp, Ladle.?' all-wool Sweaters, white and all 1 OIS
Vests, worth 75c. at V popular colors, worth upto $3, at .......V ■
Ladles' full bleached fleece-lined Children's all-wool Sweaters, white
Pants, worth 75c, at wO’.J and colors at
Special Sale ci Children’s Dresses Special Lot of Ladies’ Waists
In plain white linen shirts and pretty allover
A nice lot of percales, ginghams and madras, In embroideries, good quality lawns and lingeries,
I new and catchy styles, values up values up to $2.50,
to $2.50, choice at a gQQ
■»«ii ■' "
Manufacturers’ Sacrifice of Silk Waists
i A special new lot of taffetas and messalines, all the latest styl Including the dressy Robespierre col
lar effects, white, browns, tans, black and the new taupe shades. Regular $5.00 QIC
Ladies’ and Misses’ 54-lnch Plaid Raincoats. | Children’s Cloth and Velvet Coats, sites 2to 8
Regular $6.00 and $7.00 values, <t O QC years, worth $5.00 to $6 00. QE
guaranteed | your choice at
, , ,1— I
I Men's Coat Shirts of excellent quality madras and Yard-wide French Percale Remnants, <E ..
' percales, all sizes, in SI.OO and $1.50 69c 2 to 8-yard lengths, at j
L Men's’’and 'Ladies'' Neckties in pure' silk and knit- Full Double Bed size hemmed Qftft
1 ted materials, white, black and colors. Sheets, at
I Real 50c, 75c and SI.OO values, at u Full eize hemmed bleached Pillow Cases, E?
Genuine R. & G. Corsets, extra long <49c 5 to a customer, each Oft
Real Human Hair Switches, all shades El QO 100 Dozen hemmed Huck 4 ~
long and fluffy. Regular $6.50 values, Towels . "wW
! New Style Ladies’ Hand Bags, 49c
- 9x12 Matting (£ < QQ I Best Opaque Window 4| Qj-.
! Art Squares Shades. Full length.... XwC
; Special Sale Bargains In Dress
Os Dress Goods Goods Remnant «
> This is a wonderful lot of acceptable rem
! Serges, whipcords, clay worsteds, Pana- nants in worsteds, fancy mixtures, pana
mas and fancy mixtures in 54, 60 and 66 mas, serges, clay worsteds and whipcords
inch widths, black and all popular colors; in 54, 60 and 66-inch widths, black and all
) regular $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 QQa popular colors; choice per yard
; values, your choice atvOG for $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 values.. vwv
■■ Store Open Saturday Nights ’Till Ten o’Clock
> We Give /S, ' 18 West
i Green Mitchell,
? Trading Near
?
ra , co
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