Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 04, 1912, HOME, Page 4, Image 4

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4 ■i ms FOR AHBITRATION Cosmopolitan Life Insurance Tangle May Be Decided by Board of Umpires. As a result of litigation over the af fairs of the < •o>ii)«)..»iitan Life Inst - ance Company nine unfit T v.ny In thin! division of superior court, Joel F. Ariui. Stead, general mitn.iger of th<* cotup.iny and defendant in the (•tockhobh i < junction suits, told Judge Hell totla) that he would surrendei i< etmtr. t With the Cosmopolitan If tl eon.|.;n s affairs Wert sent to arbitration. His action, he said, <aint as t »•- suit of numerous conferences with tin officers and directors of the <•<■!>.pant, and had been submitted, to Imoir.-ti • < Commissioner Wright as well ;<< tin-; court. He proposed to submit hi- eon- ' "tract with the Cosmopolitan ;<• thn vctuaries, one named bj him. one bj he Insurance commissioner ami om by the dissatisfied stockholders, to decide whether its continuance woul, damage the company. Stockholders repr.--• uting soim <12.., 'DO worth of capital, who recently pe titioned the Insurance eommisHlotier asking that the state fnterv. n<‘. -titered tie Sudd, rth suit Imi.it Thtin wa t agues ted not to appoint a nuinr tin t<l the inmtrunce commission t mil the ttorney general had examined the ’ -tatusof the present action ami m.-ided pon a defilnte touts' In cas. the state authorities det ided to intertem-, t ' te court was asked to turn th. com pany's affairs over to the stat, autlmr t'iea rather than a c. irt receiver. .1 . Ige Bell admitted the Interv. ntion- Tn addition to the stoekholdei.< who ■ ntered the suit after petitioning the In surance commissioner. 26 stockholders, whose holdings aggregate about SSH,OUO, • tiled inlervetitlom to the original suit taking for a receiver. With th. ex ception of two. nil th.se or.' holders of five shares of stock. Two of the In DR. E. C. CRIFFIW’S SSJm. S9iUU 4® Our Scientific Cure Give* ddteEoife-., 'N- Modern Dental Health Set Teeth Only ss°* Delivered Day Ordered Gold Crowns $3.00 ’■ A . ? Perfeot Bridge Work $4.00 Phone 1708 Lady Attendant Over Brown A A'len’s Drue tor,- Whitehall Street Hall Caine’s Story * Tb e W° man \Thou Gavest Me” jliiiiL ew betters of Standard Oil HfflW rv MMillllW liBTO I liffllltHlilW lilllilii I ' This masterly / Zrx < work —“The Wo- O / / /\ V '• ■ Me” —is by thegreat- J A est living English author. It is / / destined to be the most notable story of the coming year. In it a reckless father j-acrificcs his young daughter to social ambitions His blind attempts to fill her future lite with the same sadness with which he surrounded her mother causes her refusal to obey his stern commands. In M Hearst s Magazine is told her life story. % I he Plot —The Marriage Bond 1 It is really a remarkable work. Its absorbing plot and sustained interest equal —or possibly exceed —that of the I author’s "The Christian” and "The Eternal City.” Read f it and enjoy a beautiful and powerful romance concerning > a woman's rights in the marriage bond I Standard Oil Correspondence n ■ These letters are published in the interests of truth and for the ■ enlightenment and information of the public. They clearly involve Roosevelt, Archbold. Penrose and others. You will find them all in W On Sale at All Newsdealers November Number Just Out—ls cents Hearst's Magazine H f 381 Fourth Avenue, New York City MOOSERS TRY TRICK TO GIVE ROOSEVELT PLURALITY IN NINTH CLARKESVILLE, GA.. Nov 4.—Pro g ssive li ..tiers In the Ninth congres sional district are scheming to carry this d. tr!- t for Roosevelt in tomor row > . . ,-tlon. They hope to draw Ih-mo. ratb votes to the Bull Moose candidate bj placing Congressman Thoi. ar \j Bell's name on their ballots and ther.-bj get Mr. Bell's friends to vote their ticket? These ballots have been sent to the voting precincts throughout the mountain counties of this distrh I for use tomorrow. Democratic leaders in Habersham anil adjacent counties today are en . avoring to offset this move by ex posing tie- trick of ■ the Bull Moose • a.h is T. v are warning Democrats io tot- th. -t sight Democratic presl . nti.il ballots, which also contain Mr. I;- s name as the Democratic congres sional nominee. There Is no Progres s . nt Republican congressional candl dat. n this dlstri.-t, WIFE GONE. MAN TAKES RAT POISON AND DIES \ AI.PARAISD, IND.. Nov 4—W11,. ~ 1.1 Meltz, a prominent farmer of k- .- this county, is dead after suf f' -Ing terrible agony for four days from taking most of the corftents of a box of elei'iu rat paste. He was de spondent bi-iaue- his wife had left him and started suit fur divorce. He left five i llihlrell. THIRST OF NEW YORKERS TOLD IN DRY FIGURES WASHINGTON, Nov. I Every week New Yorkers consume 30,000,000 qua;t» t In i ' lu.i’iHi qua. ts of champagne and ' .0n.....mi quarts of whisky, according to R'-v J. Harry Smith. in a statement. t. iv.nlo claim to own 50 shares of stock each. Attorney General T. S. Felder was in ■ ourt todat at the request of Insurance <.mm --loner Wright to determine the .om > -of the -tat.- in the proceedings. IL said that ii" action would be taken bx authoritl. s until after a thorough •xi .nation of the company's affairs. It is under food that various stockholders ar. urging the state to refrain from ac tion. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS MONDAY. NOVEMBER 4. 1912. CHANLER WES WESTERN MAID Sheriff Bob Reported as Hav ing Found Balm for Wound Inflicted by Cavalieri. NEW YORK, Nov. 4.--Robert Win throp Chanler (Sheriff Bob), ex-hus band of Lina Cavalieri, and artist, has been heard from. Three months ago (July 24, to be ex act) Sheriff Bob turned the key in the door of his studio in New York and si lently faded away with his friend and fellow worker, M. Geo’ges Chretien. He hlfited that he was going down to • fallup, N. M., and other spots in the vicinity to study and paint the Moqui Indians. No v word comes through a returning traveler that Mr. Chanler arrived per schedule and has been Moquiing around among the Indians ever since. What is more interesting, the announcement is made that he has found surcease from the sorrow attendant upon the stirring f ’avallerl episode, in a young woman of the region to whom he is paying de voted court. There Is no mention of M. Georges In the latest reports from the scene of Sheriff Bob's present ac tivities The returning traveler gives a deli cious description of Chanler's doings In New Mexico and Arizona. Whether he has serious intentions in his latest af fair" do coeir will not develop until he returns to this city—probably ner spring. At the snake dance of the Moqui In dians in Arizona, Mr. <’hauler and the young woman were the center of at traction. Mr. Chanler was attired I* b ow n breeches of kahki, Norfolk jack, et, high laced boots and broad-brimmed soft hat. His companion, who is of medium height, a trifle inclined to stoutness, with curious reddish hair wore a dress of green velvet to the knees, below which was a broad band with white pearl buttons. She also wore a Norfolk Jacket and high laced tan boots. Gauntlet gloves, a small felt hat that fitted close down upon the ears and a Navajo sliver necklace com pleted the novel costume. WATCHMAN SUFFOCATES IN ELEVATOR GRAIN PIT < HI''AGO. Nov. 4. Luke Chupek, | 1712 North Ashland avenue, watchman • for the Northwestern Yeast Company, tell into a pit of grain in the cotnpa- • tty’s eh ~.( it Ashland avenue and ’ Bloomingdale hi.a , and was suffocated. Tht> elevator was emptied, but the body ;Was not recovered for two hours, too AGNES SCOTT GIRLS TO SING AT JUBILEE OF PRESBYTERIANS Twenty Presbyterian churches will unite in the annual jubilee next Sun i day at the Auditorium. They will have as their guest of honor Robert E Speer, I noted religious speaker. Mr. Speer has i been for many years the secretary of | foreign missions of the Northern Pres byterian church. Among the special features will be the appearance, for the first time in the history of the jubilee, of the entire body of Agnes Scott students as a grand cho rus. They will be seated on the plat form and will sing one of their fa vorite hymns. The faculty and students of the At lanta Theological seminary, the Con gregational seminary of the South, will be seated on the platform. One of the best numbers of the entire occasion will be the singing of a well known hymn In antiphony. PASSENGER. THROWN FROM MOVING TRAIN, IS KILLED VALDOSTA, GA., Nov. 4.—The dead body of a man, identified by papers in his pockets as W. E. Overstreet, of Kissimmee, Fla., was found lying by the track of the Georgia Southern and Florida railroad four miles north of this city, and brought here. Overstreet had evidently fallen from a south-bound train. A heavy suitcase and a smaller handbag, both of which had apparently been burst open in the tall, lay near his body. Overstreet was found on a sharp curve and it is apparent that in moving from one coach to another he lost his balance as the train struck the curve. CHORUS GIRL’S FRIENDS GIVE HER TROUSSEAU NEW YoRK, Nov. 4. —-Grace Ham mond, one of the show girls in ‘‘Hanky Panky" at the Broadway theater, who married Frank DeMont, a Chicago law yer, was presented with a $350 trous seau by the rest of the chorus as a sur prise package at the end of the show. Just as the curtain was about to fall E. L. Bloom, manager of the show, called Miss Hammond to the front of the stage and told the audience of her engagement. Before she could recover from her surprise the rest of the girls bounded on the stage and made the presentation, GIRL PUSHES BURGLAR OUT OF HER WINDOW < IHICAGO, Nov. 4.—Leaping out of bed and without uttering a scream, Miss Anna Larson, employed in the home of William Hereley, 4714 Sheridan road, seized a burglar who was crawl ing through an open window in her , "oom. The girl, who is eighteen years old, gave the surprised marauder a vio lent push backward, which sent him sprawling into the yard, a distance of ten feet. He lay stunned for a few moments, but finally regained bis feet, looked back to see if the girl was pur- I suing and limped away in the dark ness. ATTENDANCE OF 93 IN SUNDAY SCHOOL PERFECT John J. Eagan, acting as superintend- I ent of the Centra! Presbyterian Sunday school, awarded 93 diplomas Sunday even ing to pupils who had perfect records of attendance and study for periods ranging from one to four years. Thirteen of them were to pupils who for four years had never missed a Sunday without a doctor’s certificate showing illness. In a special sermon which followed the presentation Dr. Dunbar Ogden told of | Ihe work the Sunday school of the twen tieth century is doing in cooperating with the family in the building of youthful character. "THE MAN FROM HOME" "iS ATLANTA OFFERING TOMORROW When a sense of personal acquain tance g' ts across the footlights, as it sometimes does, the result is something like the feeling of audiences toward ■William Hodge, in the character of Daniel Voorhees Fike in ''The Man From Home," which comes to the At lanta Tuesday and Wednesday nights, with a Wednesday matinee. Officially, Mr. Hodge is a man from Indiana. Still his drawl and nasal twang can be asso ciated witli several other regions where the Yankee strain Is pure. He might come, for that matter, from Missouri, as his inquiry of the heroine suggests at the fall of the curtain at the end of the third act. or he might come from New Hampshire. The point is that, whatever his place of nativity, he is like somebody else. Election returns Tuesday. MOTION PICTURES OF AFRICAN HUNT COMING TO ATLANTA Paul J. Rainey, a 'Cleveland multi millionaire and a great lover of ad venture and sport, was the first big game hunter to the African jungles to provide that the thrilling experiences and incidents of his liuut should be shown to an American audience, through the medium of the motion pic ture machine. The Rainey African hunt pictures will be seen at the Atlanta theater on Thursday, Friday and Sat urday, November 7, S and 9. NEW HOTEL FOR AUGUSTA. Al Gl STA, GA., Nov. 4.—Bryan Lawrence, former proprietor of the Al bion hotel of this city, has purchased a lot in front pt’ the Union station here and will put up a $200,000 hostelry. FUNERAL NOTICES, ROSSER The friends and relatives of Judge an.i Mrs E. B Rosser are Invited to attend the funeral of Judge E. B Rosser Tuesday , Novem l**r ?' 12 1 ?' 2:30 o'clock from the First Christian church Dr. L. O. Bricker will officiate. Interment wili be m Oakland cemetery. The official board of the First Christian church will a<-t as pallbearers and honorary escort and will please meet at the of fice of H. M. Patterson Son at 2 o clock. WIGHT—The triends and relatives of Mrs. Clara S Wight. Colonel and Mrs. Ed L. Wight. Mr. and Mrs W. S Wilson. Mr. and Mrs A P Coles Mr. and Mrs Clyde King and Mr and Mrs. R E. Rushton are Invited to at tend the funeral of Mrs Clara S. Wight Tuesday, November 5. 1912, at 11 a. nt. from the residence of Mr. A. P Coles, 565 West Peachtree st. Rex . Dunbar Ogden w ill officiate. In terment will be in Oakland cemetery. The grandsons of the deceased wili a<.t as pallbearers and me-1 at the "ffb •' of H M Psttersop ,<• Hon at PROBE OF FACTORY GIRLS’ CONDITIONS PLAN OF PREACHER Asserting that "the lives of thou sands of working girls are being ground out by sweatshop conditions in Atlan ta," Rev. Hugh Wallace, pastor of the Jones Avenue Baptist church, declares his intention of compiling actual sta tistics of the situation, "which will open the eyes of Atlanta people.” "The working girls are being op pressed by men who are making thou sands of dollars off of their labor, and many of them spending it in riotous living. We have a condition here that should be exposed and that demands remedying at once if we would save our Imperiled working girls,” he said. At the night service Mr. Wallace preached on the subject. “The Wages of Sin Is Death," and in his discourse scored the cheap moving picture shows and other things characterized as "com mon evils.” LAWYER SAYS HIS WIFE HIT HIM WITH A STOVE CHICAGO, Nov. 4.—August F. Siebel, an attorney, in answering hi* wife's di vorce complaint, claimed the distinc tion of the most henpecked man in the world. His wife hit him with a stove, he said. TRAIN KILLS NEGRO. COLUMBUS, GA., Nov. 4.—John Ro zier, a negro, was killed by a Southern railway passenger train last night, near Midland. The negro had gone to sleep on the track, using the rail for a pil low. He Is supposed to have been drunk. The body was brought to Columbus for burial. Chamber!in=Johnson=Dußose Co. ATLANTA NEW YORK • PARIS It Is Too Late Now to Delay Blanket Buying And since it is blanket weather it ought to be interesting to you to know the Facts about this best stock of blankets and comfortables— Every pair of blankets, every comfortable here is fresh and new and clean—every one has come to us from the makers with in the last month. It is the most varied and complete stock, we believe, that has ever come to Atlanta. We know what has gone into every blanket—-how much wool, what grade of wool—we know what the comfortables are tilled with We know quite positively that each one is the best that the price can buy. So now that it is blanket weather and that you must be up and doing in regard to comfortable bedding, this stock offers you your best opportunities. It matters not what size blanket you require—what weight you want, what price you wish to pay —you will find here a selection to choose from. 11- lan and Grey Cotton 12-4 Blankets, seven-eighths Blankets, blue or pink bor- wool, white with pink or blue der, atsl.2s to $2.25 borderss7-50 to Sio 12- Grey Cotton Blankets, 12-4 Blankets, heavy, fleecy, blue or pink border, at $1.50 finest combed wool, white 11-4 White Cotton Blankets, with silk round edges, at blue or pink border, at $1.50 $12.50 to S2O t 052.50 72x84-inch Maish Cotton 72x90-inch Fancy Cotton Down Comfortables, the Blankets, dark colors for “warmth without weight” bath robes, at $2; others of kind $2.25 to $4 ’ richer patterns and colorings 72x72 Down Comfortables ats3 50 and $4 00 for twin beds atss 11-4 Plaid Blankets, three- 6x6 feet Down Comfortables, quarters wool, at $4 and $5 covered with French satin. 11- Blankets, three-quarters to $lO wool, white, with pink or 6x7 feet Down Comforts, silk blue borders, at $4.50 and $5 on one side, French figured 11.4 All-wool White Blank- satln on other ' at ?I2 's° ets, white or pink borders 6x7 teet Down Comforts, cov- atss and $6.50 with rich silks, at sls to S2O 12- Plaid Blankets, all wool. A 1 f , 6x7 feet Down Comforts, cov- about all colors of plaids. e red with brocaded satins, a t and $8.50 at 522.50 to $32.50 The Demonstration of Bear Brand Yarns Continues this week. The demonstrator will give lessons every day in knitting and crocheting, showing you how to make many useful and pretty things that will be most acceptable as Christmas gifts. In the Art Goods Department. Chamberlindohnson=Dußose Company EVERYBODY HUNTING BEAR WITH CIDER JAG BINGHAMTON. N. Y.. Nov. 4.—The whole countryside about the town of Windsor, near here, conducted an arm ed hunt for a big Intoxicated black bear. The animal has been systemati cally robbing farmers of eider for days, averaging half a barrel each night. It was last seen lurching about the Mon roe Rickard farm. Attempts to shoot the bear were unsuccessful, owing to Its intoxicated gait. TWO VERY SPECIAL TRUNK VALUES A Fiber Covered A Canvas Covered Dress Trunk Wardrobe Trunk SIO.OO $25.00 Heavy brass trimmings. A full size, 45-in. trunk, sole leather straps, good with splendid hardware, all handles and lock. This riveted. Has a capacity of trunk is full cloth lined. 12 to 15 gowns, two hats with deep hat tray and and drawer space in skirt tray— plenty— slo.oo $25.00 LIEBERMAN’S The Trunk Store 92 Whitehall STARVED GIRL PROVED TO BE HIS LOST SISTER NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—Restored > the brother who has been searching her for nearly a year, Melia Schick, years old, is taking a new lease of Hf, In Bellevue hospital. She was tak™ there starving. William Schick, of No. 446 West Thirty-ninth street, having read tha " girl named Schick had been f4F- *' starving in the street and taken to ths hospital, called there and discovered that the girl was his sister.