Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 05, 1912, HOME, Page 6, Image 6

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6 PUN WIRELESS WORLD GIRDLE Marconi System To Be Ready to Handle Commercial *Bus , iness in One Year. | IXjNDON. Nov 5. A girdle • ( wire- Iftse” around the world this is ll>< work that the Marconi company is • a trying out with all dispatch, and within a year it Will be a commercial possibiltj to >end a. wirelees message from London •• Aus tralia, and receive an uisAi-r within an hour. A newspaper represenuitiv w,,.- siiovui. at the Marconi heaxlqparivrs in l.< ndoti, or Saturday, a Marconi map -f the world. Red lines which radiate . in every direction showed hu* th* :nos* remote .parts of the globe are to h< linked up by wireless. | Amid the myriad dots which marked j small and private stations, the routes w<re marked out by iuu great schemes which are to make ’’wireless” as usual a means of communication all over the * world, the same us the present telegraph ..wires and cables ' ?>.., The one is an imperial scheme, ai.u the other is an American trans<»< ean " scheme. It is the imperial scheme v»i.>«n 'Will link up England with Australia V-* Mr. Turnbull, of the Marconi •■< mpuny pointed out the ueilal route wbl< h Mar tz; jcon!<ianis will take on their long jour- to Australia. t-onr Route tc Australia. : “'Vken the scheme is ompleieu. In .. , ‘ said. “messages handled in l.< i mm will sent first to Alexandria. and trotn there -’.*to Mombasa; they will go • n to Bangalore ||. •, } ‘in southern India, thence to Singapore. Bakdiard from Singapore to Port Darwin. in he north of Australia T lie work of .■''erecting all u . • . • . • ; '’’on an rapidly a* possible * “Ot» ni long distant e se vie*'.* which A will be Working soon an from Christiania r tu New York and ft cm New York to Havana anl Hi’enos A vies p;.’ For the Amerr an .‘comm , winch will serve to link up the other lull of the I world, h powerful wireless .-!« >. nis be irg erected at Belmar. m.n Nev, York Bp city. Mebsuges frou then will bp sent Io a station in the Panama < ar.al zone, ■ts .thence to Hawaii, from Hawaii io Manila, £. Ruining up with the imperial service at | -r'.’ngapore Eouth Africa is to have a station at * Pretoria powerful enough ;o communk ate t ei luR A ' rr ' Hn ' s ’ e w / ' ea,an ' l will have its wireless station al Wcllhig ll* ion. DEAD MILLIONAIRE OF MEMPHIS BEGAN AT 25 CTS. PER DAY LOUISVILLE. KY . Nov 5. Patrick ■ Kglieber, the Memphis millionaire, who died in Milwaukee Friday, marled life | In New Albany. Ind . driving a < art for a quarter a day. He then became a po licaman In Louisville, but resigned; and went to Mtniphia. where he became watchman, wharf master and finally real estate operator, in which be made a great fortune. His will leaves the bulk of his estate to Michael Kalleher. a brother. Mrs. Mary Elliott and Patrick Kalleher. half brother an<i sister here, get $25.000 eaeh Mrs. Elliott keeps a boarding house and Kallaher Is a switchman ' . TEACH BOY TO BOX. SAYS THIS PARSON LONDON. Nov .. “Evert boy ought . to be taught to box and wrestle." de clared the Itev John Gower, the 82- year-old rector of Trcfrlw tWalest [ church, kitewu locall) a "the sporting ■ paWson,’ - to his congregation in a sermon in defense of the “munlj arts.' The ttge.l minister pointed with pride Jo his own career in the ring and on the mat. tie added that lie was still an expert I oxer and invited anx of liis auditors wl.o might be skeptical to take him on The challenge was not accepted REBELS AND BANDITS MENACE MEXICAN CITY *1 MEXICO CITY. Nov 5. \ horde el Zapatist rebels ami bandits have siir ; rounded I’urinvto a. capital of Morqlos. and are demanding its surtender Gen |. etal Blenuuet with 80“ fcdetals and a >■ machltte gun left hero today to succor the t d;y. Insurgents are reported to have tskett and sucked the town* ,f xautepec and Ncchitepe. assassinating all the town ol- F Helals SANITARIUM AND HOME BURN. . HAZLEHURST. GA.. Nov. 5. In .1 M. Halls sanitarium and furnishings jg, were destroyed In tire toilax. entailing a loss of JlO.OOtt. wit'a Insurance of 23.56’1. Dr. W. Al. Gritin.ill's residence p- was also destroyed bx the same lit, H The house WHS Valued .it y.i.oi"'. with Pr Insurance of SJ.Othi. Il< . l-o carried 81.OV0 insurance on his furnishings TO BE BURIED IN ATLANTA frAHHINtITt’N. HA N- x 5. Tl.-bo'x K: of Simon Ginsberg. ■ oath took place here yesterday, was taken to \t- b, lanta. today for funeral and mien.a nt b He »»s 50 year old and Lad beet in ill health sot sevetal month.- Surviving g him. besides bis wife and tour children, are A. Gipaberg of Atlania. Sam Uins berg, of Minneapolis, at . Mrs, 1 n ine, of New York bls brothers and sister “Broadway Jones." a thrilling story of "The Great White Way," based on George M Cohan s play now running in New York, will begin in Friday’s Georgian It is well worth reading ■■■■■■ FINE SHOE REPAIRING MBHBH ■ WELT SEWED SOLES B | AND HEELS ONLY I J We yua'antee the quality of the White Oak Tanned SOLE LEATHER used in ■ our REPAIRING. the BEST money can buy. [THE SHOE RENILIRyI liflßM 80 N. BROAD. BOTH PHONES MHB Here 's a Novel Event for a World’s Convention GAS METER RACE URGED Cow, Please -OH Please. -1 / F _£. 0.,Zx~? ( <3O SLOW HEXT MPKTH $ / j ANO I'M RU)HLU ' I IVE GOT EIGHT HO r t i I // * <— -y -J ... M A Atlantan Has Speedy Mechan ism He Would Like to Enter for Competition. Tm Atlanta Geolgian: Sirs Noticing in youi paper trial the gas compunir of tin world are to hold ■ i • oineiitimi and exposition in Atlanta .11 D. • • .uii I wt ite to suggest a novel |f' t it.' \. hu ll should be of iritereat to .ill I | ropes' ;< gas meter race, with ci.'-s, for competition among various m.intil i"tur> r- and private owners or lessees. If this van be arranged. I will enter tl'it three-year-old gas meter now on duty at my residence, provided the ex po.-ition authorities will furnish the gas. I hardly feel up to that added exii'-n-e. I will back my meter to spin at 3<>.o’>o revolutions per hour under ordinary < iti pressure, and just after being read and oiled It Is good for 40,- Oftu turns. Several of mj neighbors contend that their meter can make mine look as I slow as a Whitehall street clock, and [exhibit last month's .bills to prove It. I DEMOCRATIC BALLOTS i DISAPPEAR; PRINTERS RUSHING NEW TICKETS SPARTANBURG, S. C„ Nov. 5. I Every printing press in Spartanburg was put to w ork thi ;»morning print ing Heniocratic tickets, when It was found that every ballot in the city of Spartanburg had been destroyed or concealed. Tin chairman of the state Democratic executive committee, ex- Gov ernor John Uarey Evans, ts highly indignant and thinks that the tickets were destroyed by some of' the sup porters of the Bull Moose party. It is probable that other tickets will be realty in time fur the Democratic voters to vast tln ir ballots. Many man agers of elevtlon, appointed by the gov ernor, are said to be Bull Moosers. MISTAKING YOUNG WIFE FOR BURGLAR, HUSBAND KILLS HER LEBANON. KY.. Nov. 5. .Mrs. Sam uel Brpc.n was shot and killed last night at her home near hero. Her hus band says iie was awakened by a door shutting and. thinking a burglar was in the house, seized his revolver and tired, killing his wife. She was 23 tears of age and leaves a 11 ve-monlll s-old baby. M. 0. JACKSON HEADS TRANSPORTATION CLUB M. O. Jackson, assistant general man ager of the Southern Bell Telephone Company, today was elected president of the Transportation i lub, succeeding John Aldredg,'. There was no opposi tion. E. 11. Hinton was elected vice president These officers were “nominated last night by the committee, and a general luncheon was et ved to about 200 mem bers who gathered for the annual meet ing The Transportation club is one of tin- oldest organizations in Atlanta, and numbers hundreds of prominent busi ness men among its members. It occu pies (wo entire floors of the Walton building. AD MEN MEET AT LUNCH TODAY AT D. A. R. CAFE \tlanta ail men will enjoy lunch tills i afternoon at 1 o’clock as the guests of .'lw l ettx gill waiters of the I>. A. R. I ale iii the old Capital City club. The ! retrulii weekly luncheon scheduled for tin M. a M. elub has given way to the I new i ti office sos the club say a I number of matters of business are to be discussed. | FICHT CAUSES DAMAGE SUIT. WASHING T< <N <: A . X. x :. As oam ag> sustained in a tight mor a pair of trousers, M Weinstein is suing Pbil Ro sei.l...tg fur sP’.i'iO .u the superior court of Wilkes county Both Weinstein and II Rosenberg are merchants ot Washington. I The tig: t took i-.a.-e when the former ae tin latter of falling to pax fur the I THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.TUESDAY. NOVE3IBER 5. 1912. I have no doubt that thousands of At lanta meter fanciers can.produce speci mens which will make a splendid show ing and which they will be glad to en ter. While the gas meter as a household pet lias not attained the wide popular ity of the Skye collie or the Blue Oi pingdotte in Atlanta, it is intelligent to a fault and sue.eptibie of unusual energy and animation at times. It can be made useful and entertaining, too. The phonograph or the player-piano may be coupled on to its main driving gear anil operated without appreciable diminution of speed, while the steady song of the meter in the well known gloaming is music of rare quality. My own meter is infallible in this respect. Never, even at midday just previous to a cold lunrh, has ft ceased ite merry hum. Never has it failed to greet me with a cheery click, and often, just before the first of the month, it nearly shakes its differential off in its mad glee at greeting the reader. lam satis fied that the scientists who. have la bored so many centuries toward solv ing the perpetual motion problem have worked on the wrong trail. A brief study of the gas meter would have shown the problem already solved. In case your valuable paper desires to espouse the proposed meter race. I sug gest that quarter-in-the-slot machines be barred or placed in a' class of theit own. I have no desire to be disqualified in an event of my own suggestion. 1 am, sir, Y'ours, A. CONN SOOMEH. Quick Home Cure for Piles Trial Package Absolutely Free— Will You Spend a Post- Card for It? If xou are a sufferer from piles, in stant relief is yours for the asking, and a speedy, permanent cure will follow. The Pyramid Drug Co., 403 Pyramid Bldg.. Marshall, Mich., will send you free, in a plain wrapper, a trial package of Py amid Pile Cure, the wonderful sure and certain cure for the tortures of this dread disease. Thousands have already taken advantage of this offer, thousands know for the first time in years what it is to be free from the pains; the itching, the awful agony of piles. Pyramid Pile Cure relieves the pah: and itching immediately. The Inflam mation goes down, the swelling' is re duced and sopn the disease is gone ab solutely. No matter how desperate you think your case is, w rite in today for the free trial treatment. Then, when you have used it in tile privacy of your own home and found out for yourself how effica cious It is you can get the full-size package at any drug store for 50 cents. Every day you suffer after reading this notice you suffer needlessly. Simply fill out free coupon iwid mail today. FREE PACKAGE COUPON PYRA.MIL> DRUG COMPANY. 403 Pyramid Bldg. Marshall, Mich.: Kindly send me a sample of Pyra mid Pile Cure, at once by mail, FREE In plain wrapper Name Street Citx State (Arix t . I^ H EXPECTORANT I CURES IN A DAY I'oughs, Colds, Consumption, I Whooping Cough. Croup. Trickling ■ oi the Nose. Watery Eyes. Drop- B pings in the Throat Bronchitis, ■ and all Throat and Lung Trou- ■ bles. Cheney’s Expectorant re- E lleves at once. Thoroughly tested ■ tor fifty years. ” DRUGGIST ■» 2SC ANO SOC NDPREAGHERSON VICE COMMISSION ! Macon Mayor Refuses to Name Ministers or Women and Selects Business Men. MACON. GA., Nov. 5. —A vice com misis<.n, composed of fifteen conserva tive Macon business men. has been ap pointed by Mayor John T. Moore, sub ject to the approval of tlie council to night. The mayor acted after he was repeatedly urged by. the Ministerial al liance. The personnel of the. commission was selected jointly by the mayor and by a ministerial committee consisting of Revs. T. J. Christian, Charles H Lee. C. B. Coble and T. W. Callaway, rep resenting four Protestant denomina tions. The ministers had agreed upon five women as members of the com mission, but Mayor Moore absolutely refused (o consider their names. He also declined to name a minister mi the | commisison. “Women have no business meddling |in vice matters,” the mayor told the I ministers, "and clergymen should not soil their office by handling such af fairs, either.” The commission will at, once begin a thorough investigation of vice yoiidi tioris in Macon, rendering a report to the mayor and council within the next 30 days, with recommendations. A Gift for You Every Purchaser of One Box of 50c CARMEN POWDER At JACOBS’ CUT PRICE, 40c Will Receive One Full-Sized 25c Jar of T?T"? Carmen Cold Cream ** KXLr* THIS OFFER HOLDS GOOD ALL WEEK All Jacobs’ Pharmacy Stores | Hall Caine’s Story “The Woman Gavest Me’ ’ WlnSr ew Letters of Standard Oil < \7 - - I |?S5y This masterly I wor k —“The Wo- / man Thou Gavest p Me”—is by the great- B Jf< est livin £ English author. It is B / / destined to be the most notable story of the coming year. In it a reckless father sacrifices his young daughter to social ambitions His blind attempts to fill her future life with the same sadness with which he surrounded her mother causes her refusal to obey his stern commands. In A Hearst’s Magazine is told her life story. % The Plot —The Marriage Bond •’ 1 It is really a remarkable work. Its absorbing plot and I sustained interest equal —or possibly exceed —that of the I author’s “The Christian” and “The Eternal City ” Read I it and enjoy a beautiful and powerful romance concerning f a woman’s rights in the marriage bond. / Standard Oil Correspondence I ■ » These letters are published in the interests of truth and for the K enlightenment and information of the public. They clearly involve Roosevelt, Archbold, Penrose and others. You will find them all in ■ the November Hearst’s Magazine. W On Sale at All Newsdealers November Number Just Out—ls cents Hearst’s Magazine ■ 381 Fourth Avenue, New York City SURVIVORS OF SHIP ROW 200 MILES IN AN OPEN BOAT TO LAND LIVERPOOL, Nov. 5.—A harrowing tale of suffering at sea was toid today by three of the six survivors of the crew of the Criccieth Castle, recently lost in the south Atlantic. They are in a hospital here. When the vessel began to Sink from a leak the lifeboat and gig were launched. The gig. With -even on board, has never been heard from. In the lifeboat were the captain, his wife and son and fourteen others. Four died that night and were buried at sea. The survivors had to row 200 miles before they couid hope to sight land. One of the sailors composed a stirring chorus which they sang constantly to keep up their spirits.- They had in the boat only two kegs of xvater, one bag of bread and half a dozen cans of meat. These were all gone seven days before they sighted the Falkland islands. When they ar rived they were in the last stages of exhaustion and had to be carried 'ashore, where all but six died. JUDGE CHARGES JURORS TO PROBE 8188 ELECTION ■MACON, GA.. Nov. 5. —Judge H. A. -Matthews, of the Bibb superior court, delivering his first charge to a grand jury in this county since his accession to the bench, advised the grand jury to investigate the recent primary election which resulted in two re-counts, several controversies, the discovery of some seeming irregularities, and the change of the original returns. The grand jurymen were told that they could ex amine the voters and registration lists, and then, if they detected anything ir regular, they could open the ballot boxes and examine the ballots. RECORD GRAIN YIELD. MINNEAPOLIS. Nov. 5. —That the grain yield of the Northwest this year would exceed all records by 5.000,000 bushels was the prediction today by G. H. Tunell, chief deputy gram in spector. LOVELY HAIR FOR WOMEN Parisian Sage Puts Life and Luster Into Faded Hair. One Application Stops Scalp Itch. If you haven’t enjoyed the marvelous benefit derived, from using delightful, refreshing PARISIAN SAGE, the mod ern hair grower, beautifier and dan druff remedy, you have missed a real treat. Every woman should use PARISIAN SAGE Hair Tonic not only to banish dandruff and other hair troubles, but to prevent falling hair, baldness, grayness and faded hair. PARISIAN SAGE puts life and luster into any person’s hair. It keeps the scalp and hair immaculate ly clean, and causes the hair to come in thick and abundant. PARISIAN SAGE Hair Tonic is not a dye. It does not contain a piarticle of poisonous lead to discolor the hair, pr any injurious ingredient. Get a bottle today, madam. It only costs half a dollar and is sold at drug and department stores and at toilet goods counters everywhere. (Advt.) We Save You Money Wednesday and Thursday A Solid Carload Fancy Ben Davis, York Imperial, Wine Sap Apples PECK 16 CENTS A Solid Carload Fancy Georgia Yellow Yams PECK 16 CENTS Rogers’ 36 Pure Food Stores