Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 06, 1912, HOME, Page 5, Image 5

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ATLANTA'S GOAL SUPPLYSHORT I Fuel Famine Probable if Pro longed Cold Snap Hits City, Declare Dealers. Xtiar.ta s coal supply Is 30 per cent be ,cW normal and in the event of a sud jen arid prolonged coal snap a fuel famine '' ~! d he not unlikely, according to local They are filling orders so far, supply on hand is far below the I i.-ual amount. ' several reasons have contributed to I iT shortage, among them being a scarcity f . ears in Southeastern territory. I Traffic World says the shortage is bl , n j.'.,000 ears in the Southeastern while reports over the -whole ' show 50,000 cars under the num- | her needed. - rises among the miners of Pennsyl- I VJ ,' n ia and West Virginia, with the result fl .T,at tne mines ran far behind orders, also I | a ve helped to make coal scarce. J. Bu is i v , Campbell, of the R. O. Campbell Coal I Company, blames the car shortage and I Ji >wness of freight movements. T. H. I ks says the local supply is 30 per cent below normal, and in case of severe cold I al'IS could not possibly supply the i I city’s needs. MOOSE OFFICIAL GUEST OF THE LOCAL LODGE Krriu U. Jones, of Indianapolis, su- I nreme past dictator of the Loyal Order I ( ,f 1... if the World, will be the guest I of fit- meal lodge of the Loyal Order of I Moose, at the meeting tonight, in the I McKenzie building. I Mr. Jones is a prominent attorney of I Indianapolis, and an orator of reputa- , ■ tion, and in the recent campaign I stumped for the cause of Wilson and ■ Marshall. GIRL. 14. GETS DIVORCE; REWEDS IN 30 MINUTES n foiit worth, texas, Nov. 6.—just ■ 30 minutes after Mrs. Minnie Scogging, ■ 14 years old. was granted a divorce from H Will Scogging she entered the county H clerk s office with C. E. Lacy, obtained a B license and was married to him one hour B later Th'- girl is also suing for posses- B sion of her baby, six months old. Judge ■ Swayne, who granted the divorce, when fl he heard another license was procured, B went t" the girl and threatened to spank B her. I “ELIJAH” DOWIE’S SON IS ORDAINED DEACON » E CHICAGO. Nov. 6. —Gladstone Dowie, B e,n of Alexander Gladstone Dowie, found fl ,r if Zion city, has been ordained a <lea- H on in the episcopal church by Suffragan B Biiin.p William E. Toll, assisted by the B Rev. Herman Page, rector of St. Paul H churi'li. Kenwood, where the ceremony ■ was held. Young Dowie, still abachelor, H furso'ik i s father's faith about two years H ago and enrolled as a student in the B Western Theological seminary. BOY HUNTER KILLED WITH HIS OWN WEAPON K ''HTCAGO, Nov. 6.—Accidental dis fl ■ arge of a double-barrel shotgun caused B '<■ death of Harry Overand, sixteen years fl old. while he was hunting. B He di. while being carried into the |B s.-rth Chicago hospital. He was cllmb- H ing over an oil tank car when the gun H was accidentally discharged. Tlie “BEST PEOPLE ON H EARTH ’ ’ always do things on II biggest scale. ELKS’ GREAT gj CHARITY KIRMESS—7SO peo- | pie. Select performance. The 9 most spectacular show of the kind 9 ever pulled off ifi Atlanta. Audi || torium. nights of November 7-8-9. fl Popular price matinee Saturday, 9 November 9. Reserved seats and 9 tickets on sale now at Lester 9 Book Store, 60 Peachtree street. |l THE MENTER CO. I Waist Sale 98c PRESSED FLANNEL Regular Value. - $1.50 Thursday * nd Friday On Thursday and Friday we will *1 sell these desirable pressed flannel si tailored waists at 98c. Bargains HL'' ■ ’ I any time at the regular price, $1.50. Soft collar and cuffs. Pocket. Three colors, blue, gray, lavender. Very serviceable and AQ_ T ’ practical. Two days’ WfSt Sale at ... /. M'.l f»• K' ■ Splendid Fall Stock Men’s Women’s and I, Children’s Clothing O 'A H Divided Payment Charge Account if you r H desire. Come in and investigate. yi I THE MENTER CO. auccassow TO BIBNTSH • HO»IH»LOOU co. ■j 71 1-2 WHITEHALL STREET. UPSTAIRS ■ First Stairway Next to J., M. High Co. SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS By JAMES B. NEVIN. Ole Miss Democracy certainly went on the warpath in Georgia yesterday, and what she did was a-plenty, and 27 1 r surely was calcu lated to hold some people for a while I Ole Miss had been hearing scan dalous things about what was to happen to the household in Geor gia, and it made her mad—indeed, it got her dander up, good and proper! She had been told that Teddy Taft and Willie Roosevelt, were coming around and cut all sorts of capers, right under her very nose. It was whispered that Teddy was go ing to steal the front gate, and that Willie actually planned to tie a bow of crape on her front door knob! Ole Miss hadn’t been bothering much about things of late. Shs had planned Io work in the collard patch all day yesterday—but when the neighborhood pest, Sorrell-top Tom, joined Teddy and Willie, and even went so far as to make faces at Ole Miss —sakes alive! but that made her sore! So Ole Miss put on her old gray' bon net, with the blue ribbons on it, yes terday, and she got her trusty broom stick, and she sallied forth to clean up that combination of Teddy, Willie and Tom! It was just a question of getting Ole Miss riled —and Teddy and Willie and Toni pulled the trick, all right! Well, it happened just as Samrnie Blythe, in The Saturday Evening Post, said it would. Therefore, nevertheless, however, but, if, notwithstanding, although, and on the contrary'. Wilson swept the nation. Samuel kept a large and nifty anchor to windward all the way through the stormy seas of prediction, and .Samuel’s figures were verified. It necessarily happened that way, for Samuel had a fine set of figures to fit snugly and beautifully any and all pos sible contingencies. It would be something of a job, per haps, to find one person brave and bold enough today to admit that he didn’t know all along what was going to hap pen! And yet it Is a lead-pipe cinch that a whole lot of people didn’t know. The problem the Georgia Democracy had to face was the problem of getting out the Democratic vote. Two things served to help along the effort—activity of the leaders and the opposition of Mr. Wasson. It is plain enougli that Mr. Watson's following balked at going to Roosevelt. That is, a large setion of that following balked. Moreover, Air. Watson's bolt to Roosevelt, after having participated in the primary and having been elected a delegate-at-large to Baltimore, aroused much Democratic resentment. He es- “It is a pleasure to tell you that Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is the best cough medicine I have ever used,” writes Mrs. Hugh Campbell, of Lavonia, Ga. “I have used it with all my chil dren and the results have been highly satisfactory.” For sale by all dealers. (Advt.) “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. IMPORTANT NOTICE. B. P. 0. ELKS—Meet at Auditorium at 6:45 this eve ning to turn out in Elks’ great charity Kinness pa rade. All visiting Elks fra ternally invited to join us. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1912. poused the cause of Roosevelt upon the flimsy pretext that Wilson had become a Knight of Columbus. Mr. Watson’s activity for Roosevelt likely carried two votes to the polls for Wilson yesterday to every one it car ried for Roosevelt. And to that extent Mr. Watson helped the cause of Wilson—unwilling ly and unconsciously, of course —but certainly, nevertheless. Then, too, the negro question was used to browbeat many a weak-kneed Bull Moose here and there. It was pretty cheap, and it was un worthy, but in some phases of the fight it worked. It had a humorous twist, too—it got many a good, if more or less unwilling, laugh in places. Here in Atlanta not a few voters ap proached the polls with Roosevelt tick ets in hand, only to be gibed and guyed with, “Have a piece of chicken. Brother Washington,” "Booker, pass the pie,” and similar chaste salutations. Every once in a while one would see a voter drop his Progressive ballot, grin a sickly sort of grin, and leave the polls in disgust—or ask for a Demo cratic ballot. It all figures backward and forward to the one proposition the Democrats had to tackle—the getting of the vote in the ballot box. There never was any question about the Democratic votes being within the state—there was considerable question of their going into the ballot box. A commendable circumstance was the faithfulness and aggressiveness of the Underwood men In yesterday’s tri umph of Democracy. The state did not go for Wilson in the preferential primary—and Georgia’s delegation to Baltimore onlv voted for him on the last ballot. Nevertheless, the Underwood men plunged headlong into the fight to land Georgia in the Wilson column, gener ously and unmistakably, and they stood to the guns to the finish. There was no sulking, no backing, no bushwhacking—all hands joined in a common cause! And the answer— Georgia for Wilson by a tremendous majority. It was inevitable. Health Restored By Eckman’s Alterative A Valuable Remady for Throat and Lungs R yo ! 1 ? re a suffcrw from glandular tuberculosis, or know of any one so af flicted, it might be well to Investigate this case, where the writer declares after a T ear suffering, he found permanent relief and full recovery to health by using Eckman s Alterative, a medicine which has been effective in many cases of tu berculosis: • 257 Laruston Street, Philadelphia, Pa. "Gentlemen: In March, 1909, I was taken sick and my doctor pronounced my case 'tuberculosis in the glands.’ Medi cal treatment did not help me, and on my doctor’s advice I went to a hospital to be operated upon, but relief was only tem porary. I lost strength and at times’would have cold sweats and fever. In April 1910, I returned to the hospital, but the continued operations were not benefiting me. "In the meantime, a friend of mine advised Eckman's Alterative, saying it was good for tuberculosis. The wounds in my neck were still open and in a fright ful condition when I started to take it. After using two bottles, I found I was im proving. having gained weight, could eat and was able to sleep. I continued using it until I was well, which was in Novem ber, 1910. Before I took the medicine I had three hemorrhages. Since I have been taking it, I have not had any. On No vember 11, 1910, I started to work, and since that time I have not lost one day’s work through sickness. I can highly rec ommend Eckman’s Alterative to any one who is suffering from tuberculosis or gland trouble, providing they take it as directed. I will gladly correspond with any party desiring further Information of what the medicine did for me." (Sworn affidavit) JOSEPH B. WHITE. Eckman's Alterative is effective in bron chitis. asthma, hay fever, throat and lung troubles and in upbuilding the system. Does not contain poisons, opiates, or hab it-forming drugs. For sale by all Jacobs’ drug stores and other leading druggists. Ask for booklet telling of recoveries and write to Eckman Laboratory, Philadel phia, Pa., for additional evidence. (Advt.) i i a | Opium. Whiskey and Drug Habits treated I ■ ■ Bat Home or at Sanitarium. Book an subject •'MI DR B M WOOLLBY. J4.N, Victor ■■■■■■■Sanitarium. Atlanta, Georgia. JELLICO LUMP $4.75 PIEDMONT COAL GO. Both Phones M. 3648 GOOD DENTISTS AND GOOD EQUIPMENT MUMS MORE PRACTICE AND LOWER PRICES. Gold Crowns ......... 83.00 Brld<e Work $3.00 Set Teeth $3.00 All werk rnnraateefl- ATLANTA DENTAL PARLORS c. A. 00M8TAXTIJTE, Prop. Car. Peachtree aad Decatur Sts. Entrance 10% CHICHESTER S PILLS , THE IMAMnNB BKANB. A I.adlaal Aak yaar 1... Fill. I. Had ul «l«ld inrt»llk\O) £X sFUrI £?'?• ”* i,J wl,k Rlbbo.. Pl eB etber. Bar ▼ lx M BiAMw'in iintsn fill.*, r SOLO BY DRUGGISTS EVf RYWWH ORDER BY MAIL FROM | M. RICH & BROS. CO. I 2;' | Rich’s Mid-Season | | Silk Clearance | | A Silk Sale to Stir the Town | It includes—Rich’s Mid-Season Silk Clearance S Plus $12,000 of New Silks to Sell for $6,800 5* Every November we set the town agog with our mid-season clearance of silks. J? Greater values than ever this year to create even a greater stir. For in addition to our own good fIC silks, we have acquired $12,000 worth of new silks under exceptional circumstances which we can sell for $6,800 at a profit. 3* These new silks, then, plus our own good silks, which all season have sold so freely at their full '4J prices, now go at these mid-season clearance prices. "J Rules of Sale ’ 75c All-Silk Taffetas at 33c 3 M C*ll Cl 4D ; Q 511 i M I jesa ian P r i ce Yor this beautiful quality of all-silk taffeta. Not the s=* .~ ® ilO □IIKS bOIO DCIOfC ohiil A. ill. thiii, sleazy kind, but the rich, crunchy quality that retails regularly over our Nn Fvrlmtifl-pc nr Dafitrnc counters at 75c a yard. Every piece perfect, and you can choose from 65 t 110 Extra salespeople to insure inches. The usual 75c silk for just 33c. prompt attention. Mail Orders Filled $2 Cashmere de Soie at $1.49 £ 9 ut -o f - town ® us * omer ? can wire , or 10 pieces black cashmere de soie—one of the prettiest and Su 3 them promptly DoKt ind for Jmpies’ “ ost P ractiral silks of the season. Soft and lustrous, fall in specify what you want, for silks at these in*, easy lines. Drape's delightfully. 42 inches wide and. only 1 —prices won't linger. $1.49. s& ; 3" S’” ‘5 $35.00 Imported Xtl QQK $30.00 Imported QCJ - 5 Dress Patterns A Dress Patterns S" ’ Imported French novelty dress patterns, each in an ex- The charm of the mystic East expressed in the prettiest Ml— ■ elusive pattern. Dreams of fairy elegance in chiffons, of silk fabrics—radiums, meteor crepes, finest of satin > charmeuse and facconi imprime; delightful fabrics with foulards. The designs are dreams of color harmony, dar- j _JB exquisite colored borders, ribbon stripes, wonderful Per- ing Oriental and Arabian combinations, exquisite Persian • sian borders and all the charming color combinations that borders, floral and all-over effects, solid colors with bor- ?jb only a French artist could conceive; 44 to 50 inches wide ders, etc; 28 patterns in all, and each delightfully differ- Jp* .J? in 3 1-2 to 7-yard lengths. Former prices $25 to SSO; now ' ent. Lengths are 3 1-2 to 7 yards and 44 to 50 inches wide. t at $12.95. Only 18 patterns in all—fair warning. Usual prices are S2O to $35; in this sale pay only $9.95. S 2” ' $1 Silk and Wool Z'q Black 59c 89c Black 3 ! J Poplins U47V Messaline OVt Messaline •OC ’ J? This soft Ihstrous fabric is in high This little price for a heavy all-silk . . ’ favor for pretty street and party black messaline with twill back that . P? PC * R 0 a rich, satin hlaok mes- ’2? dresses. Os silk and wool, soft and will give splendid service. A hand- sa ine. . yard wide—cuts to best S2* sheer and very serviceable ;36 in. some, lustrous surface. Desirable for a< van age. Pwill back, free flowing r wide. Choice of 30 pieces in all the waists, petticoats, dresses. Black ° u . nusua,l -y bne silk for ■ leading street and evening shades. only, and only 10 pieces. Buch a httle P nce - Ool y 73c - 3~~ ~ | $1 Paillette $2.50 Satin d* 1 $3 Cashmere (fr *| ■ 3 de Soie • J/C Charmeuse <pl»vu Charmeuse *P A•• «3 JJ . A beautiful silk of the messaline Every woman knows what char- The queen of all black fabrics; soft St I 2! family with a wonderfully bright rae y ß ? is > 80 we Predict a rally.for it and satiny> drapes classic 141 satin surface. Pure dye silk, full at this pnce. Fine imported French Imported> now shoWQ for tJie flrst I plump weight. Drapes delightfully. tabnc, ne\ ci before on sa e or ess time the extreme width, 54 Black only. Too bad we have only than $2.50; 50 pieces in every wanted inches _ it takes very Httle for a * > 10 pieces. and Bhade s no black ’ 42 lncheß gown; 10 pieces in black only. t § S6O Imp. Tunics Cl Q7C Trimmings at S r* and Robes, at 1 • O Half Prices Surely the work of fairy fingers. Sheer nets, chiffons .. * ' .^ r * iaia ’ . s^ pve grouped all odd fltl, tyfl 3 , . ~ , x , lines, slightly soiled trimmings, various left-over numbers, and marquisettes are beautified by rhinestone and crystal brokpn lines of new trimmings—and now we say choose at t trimmings. Some with rosettes and garlands of flowers just half the former prices. are exquisite. Others in the regal Oriental colorings. Va- There are band braids, all-overs, metal bands and edg •t —fca riously in semi-made robes and tunics in light and dark ings, garnitures, pendants, floral trimmings, ball and silk Tfl colors, white and pastel shades; 83 in all, and every oue trin/.<s ev< ri t ing, m fact, used in a season that has been Jjt. imported. Each bears the imprint of Paris. The lowest u mar <i > - ’■immmgs. ar - , light and pastel , price rob? or tunic in the lot is $35; some are worth $100; ‘ " °. l 2 n^8 ’- Bnl ’IJ ‘ 4[ ? r . S L'.L an< e^ eDia S dresses. ' “sci L • • i r«u ■ d.Ki-r- Were 50c, 7oc, $1 to sls a yard. 5 the aVerage pnCe 1S eaS ' ly s6 °' ChoWe sl9 - 75 ' Now 25c, 38c, 50c to $7,50 a yard. J 5 $2.50 Black d* I £*Q $ 1.50 to $2 Chis rQ _ j 59c All Silk _ S Charmeuse 4* * *o*7 tons, Nets, etc., Messaline jj. 3jß 10 full pieces of this -the season's Chiffons, nets, marquisettes and Choose any shade you wish and ,7* most popular silk. Imported French chiffon cloths over foundations of black or white in all-silk messaline. , grade; soft and rich like satin, yet 8 , '. ’bi in solid colors, floral and Pure silk—note, we said, “pure,” not —more souple, more subtle in its luxu- Persian designs; 42 in. wide. Rose, poor—in a rich, crunchy quality. I “gJ piousness; in black only, 42 inches. Copenhagen, navy, reseda, gray, Choice of 60 pieces. All colors, 19 in. S* ' maize, copper, tan, berry, white, etc. wide. S ’ j ® f $1 and $1.50 z'Q- 59c to $1.50 IQ $2.50 and $3 d» 1 rn S’ Fancy Silks O»C Silks at ISC Crene Meteor $ 1 .59 fc 45 pieces of fancy .ilks-the brok. ■ A general eettrns of stocks to Imagine a heavy crepe de chine j en lines from our ovin good stock. rlg ht ß , so all odd shades, many brok- w i th a charming hair line stripe and l>J Choose from fancy taffetas and ines- en lines shelf worn, and slightly you have a faint conception of this ...■J salines in checks, stripes I ersians. tender silks, short lengths and rem- loveliest of silks. An imported * ' * pkiids. floral |iis. hair linos* Hants arc* swont <>lll sit u»»vt tn t? i *n 40 * 1 ■ 1 /n *9l-'. -Jb 1 A • 41 a 11 an pi um ai in< next-ro- Brencn silk. 42 inches wide. Choice » everything that !.»« bcm, m vogue noth,ng pne.- of 19c, Ito l(>.y«rd of 20 pieces in maize, nnvy. primrose. Sr" the past season or so; 20 to 27 m. lengths, some full p.eees, 19 to 40 Copenhagen, royal 'gray. Alice 5" MCU & BROS. order by 5