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KIKSS READY
FOR PREMIERE
U 3ig Parade. Halted by Rain.
S Will Be Carried Out on
Friday Night.
S T _. fjr-i performance of the Elks'
H be given for the benefit of
■ t he riiristmas stocking fund, will be
H Pli ;i: the Auditorium-Armory to-
■ livery detail of the gigantic
B -....Ti.-.i has been worked out and
■ E.- players last night closed their
fcl strenuous weeks of drill at dress re
fl heai-al which went off smoothly. Tick
fl f 7 >btalned at the Auditorium,
fl ......; seats are SI, gallery 50 cents
fl ,I . fur Saturday’s matinee Just
■ half the night nrices.
■ y , big parade, which was to have
fl t „ :1 a brill!mt prelude to the Kirmess.
B .cir-lukd last night, was postponed be-
B ' t’, ■ inclement weather. Major
B i i'. S emans, of the Second squadron.
B The "« !iave been Biand marshal.
■ f o ,; ;l y the parade would be carried
B out on Friday night without the loss
H o f . sincle feature. It is planned to
■ have in line the Seventeenth infantry.
■ the Fifth regiment, drill squads of va-
B ri'”is lo'lm's, boy scouts and the cos
fl tumen performers.
■ p,r sm the most interesting feature
'I of the Kirmess will be a short repro-
B (ta'ti- n of the familiar scenes in "The
B jjolwinian Girl.” Mrs. Carthew-Yor=-
B torn, known in grand opera as Esther
B I’- "*n* and who sang recently at the
B Bur ay concerts, will feature this pro
fl duetion. With Mrs. Yorstoun will ap-
B pear on ex' optional! well drilled chorus.
■ Th- Ynma-Yama feature, an eccen-
■ tri' 1 rm nber danced by a score of girls
B of the younger society set. will get lots
B of applause. The dancing in this num
fl bcr probably will be the cleverest seen
B in 'dit Kirmess.
WOMAN BREAKS LEG IN
LEAP TO ESCAPE THIEF
| ST. IJ'I’IS, Nov. 7.—Mrs. Ella Duley.
B in fleeing from a burglar, jumped from
| a inflow at her home and her right leg
I ias fractured. Her daughter. Elsa,
■ bumped into her mother as she groped
I around the room in the dark, and the
B tightened woman believed the daugh-
B ter i ns the burglar.
KILLS MAN HE ALLEGES
GAVE DRUG TO SISTER
I il' iIiSToN, TEXAS, Nov. 7.—“1 have
■ ji-t been assassinated; shot from be-
I hr 1 " IJ. F. Bohannon, druggist, said
I v. n In was found dying.
"He killed my sister with drugs and
I i -d him,” jjrinkley Chanceley said.
The girl is dying from an overdose of
morphine.
pacificTinTrTrlaigs
SAILORS’ BODIES HOME
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL., Nov. 7.-
Pacific Mail liner San Juan is in
port h :e with the bodies of seven men
es the United States navy who were
ITli .! in the revolution in Nicaragua a
taior.h a~o. Three were killed in the
>'nent of Bairanca Hill and four
ver- ’>o’o?d at Leon.
You Should Have
Seen the Pimples
But n ow Her p ace j s Fairest
of the Fair, Due to Stuart’s
Calcium Wafers.
/Ar|| '
A } 'J
’-’WLr-
1 hose dimples are like pearls in a
1 'in cluster when Stuart's Calcium
" ilfers clear the face of every pimple.
U'ot and blemish. And even if you
h.ivent dimples, the clear, transparent
kin of a healthy, Calcium Wafer com
’■'‘xion is more radiant than the deft
h of an artist to the most exquisite
water color.
Stuart's Calcium Wafers act directly
";'” n me sweat glands of the skin,
' their mission is to stimulate the
‘x< letory ducts. They do not create
i” 1 spiration, but cause the skin to
out vigorously, thus transform-
L perspiration into a gaseous vapor,
calcium sulphide of which these
•'<ifers are composed, consumes the
m poisons In the sweat glands and
1 hence the blood makes a new,
"'"■'th skin In a surprisingly short
tune,
' "U win never be ashamed to look at
veil In a mirror, once you use
’ ’'art’s Calcium Wafers. Nor will your
1 'Ms giv e y O u hinting look, as
’ 11 ' to > *hj-—for goodness sake, get
1,1 °f those pimples.
le| e is no longer any excuse for
*' ljone to have a face disfigured with
( 11 < ruptions, when it is so easy to get
J" of them. Simply get a box of
‘b'rts < alcium Wafers at any drug
•>nd take them according to di
terns. After a few days you will
lr , <ll> .. r '‘ ( '”gnlze yourself In the mir
-1 h- change will delight you Im-
All blemishes will disa|>pea”r.
M ,r, ! ' lluss * s t s B *H Stuart’s Calcium
’ at ;»o renta a box.
Atlanta Women Have Not Forgotten How to Cook
CHURCHJDAFE ~ AIDS CHARITY
X >
• \
■ ir' '' j
O - ,
, , ...
■MI
wMI
\ ’ /
\ y
Ms
Members of All Saints Guild
Prepare and Serve Meals
Themselves.
Atlanta maid and matron are still
mistress of the kitehen as well as the
drawing room, despite the popular ut
terance of the cynic that woman forgot
how to cook when she Ivarned to want
to vote. Patrons of the Restaurant now
being operated by the guild of All
Saints church, 168 Peachtree street, will
bear testimony to the fact that culinary
skill is far from a lost art in Atlanta
homes.
The guild of All Saints has an ambi
tious program of charity and church
work for the yinter. Money is needed
to carry out this program and the guild
leaders, working on the theory that the
easiest way to a man's pocketbook is
through his digestive apparatus, decid
ed on a restaurant as the way and
means of raising their fund.
But cooks and waiters are expensive
and the only way to obviate the neces
sity of hiring them was for the church
workers to prepare the meals and serve
them with their own fair hands.
With a fine spirit they donned their
aprons and cast aside their antipathy
for grease spots. And the restaurant
has proved a howling success. Men
smack their lips when leaving it. The
custom may be vulgar, but it is ex
pressive.
Each day an individual member acts
as manager. Today Mrs. Harry M. At
kinson presided over the destinies of
the dainties. Mrs. Harry Stearns and
Mrs. George Bonney were In charge
yesterday.
Young women in the church act as
the waitresses and they have proved
almost as attractive as the menu.
Among those who are serving are
Misses Evelyn Ragland, Lottie Wylie,
Ada Donaldson and Rebekah Divine.
QUESTION FATHER IN
SON'S DEATH BY SHOT
BUFFALO, N. Y„ Nov. 7.—Arrested
at the funeral of his twelve-year-old
son, whom he shot and killed at Or
chard Park, John Guenther was the
principal witness at an inquest into the
cause of the boy’s death. Ugly rumors
have been afloat since the boy was
shot. His maternal grandmother was
responsible for the inquest, she telling
District Attorney Dudley that Guen
ther’s three previous wives had died
under mysterious circumstances.
TRIES TO DIE IN PACT
WITH HIS PET HORSE
BISBEE. ARIZ., Nov. 7.—His remark
able attachment for a horse, the use of
which had been denied, led Glen Ship
ley, a young miner, to kill the horse
and then attempt to commit suicide by
shooting after gaining forcible posses
sion of the animal.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1912
3liss Lottie Wylie, on left, and
| Miss Evelyn Ragland, two more
of the guild’s case servers.
[ SHOP TALK |
In less than one year the Hallet &
Davis Plano Company has been forced
to seek larger quarters and has moved
from the former home. 1226-27-28 Can
dler building, to 50 North Pryor street,
opposite the Lowry National bank,
where the entire first floor is occupied.
The sales and show room is admirably
adapted to the purpose, and the instru
ments are artistically arranged and
every convenience is provided for the
benefit of the customer. William Car
der, manager of the Atlanta branch of
this factory, is delighted with the busi
ness done during the past year and is
now prepared to handle a still larger
business this year. With a capital stock
of $3,000,000 and one of the largest pi
ano factories in the world behind him,
Mr. Carder has great faith in the fu
ture.
GUNPOWDER IN POCKET
OF BOY’S COAT EXPLODES
HAMMOND. IND., Nov. 7. —A pecu
liar accident will cost twelve-year-old
Parker Tipton, of Madison county, his
life. Parker is a newsboy. He bought
five cents worth of gunpowder and put
it in ills pocket. While warming his
hands in front of a powerful headlight
on an automobile, the heat from the
light converged on the gunpowder and
it exploded. The lad was so seriously
burned that he can not live.
<
Special Sale of
10-Inch Sandwitck
Trays I. Sheffield
Ware at $5.00 lack J
In our north window we are
displaying a quantity of Sand
wich Trays which we have on
special sale.
There are eight styles of
pierced Sandwich Trays In nickel,
silver, heavily silver plated, bet
ter known in this section as
"Sheffield.”
These Trays are ten inches in
diameter, all in the new and pop
ular bright, polished finish. Shef
field is more durable than ster
ling sliver, and should last a life
time.
MAIL ORDERS PREPAID.
All mail order shipments are
prepaid. Safe delivery and satis
faction guaranteed.
Write for 1913 Illustrated cata
logue.
Maier & Berkele, Inc.
Gold and Silversmiths
31-33 Whitehall Street
Established 1387
Mis* 'la Donaldson, on left,
and Miss Rebekah Divine, two of
lln fair waitresses at All Saints
Guild's case.
| DEATHS AND FUNERALS
Weaver Kendall.
Weaver Kendall, aged seventeen
I years, of 320 East Hunter street, died
'at a private sanitarium last night. The
i b -dy was removed to Greenberg &
Bond’s, where the funeral will be held
some time tomorrow. He is suivived
by a brother. Cordie Kendall, of Chi
cago, and two sisters', Mrs. H. E. Nail
and Miss Elizabeth May Kendall.
Mrs. A. S. Stallings.
Mrs. Alfred S. Stallings, aged 44
years, died yesterday afternoon at 4:80
o’clock at the residence. 176 Davis
st eet. She is survived by her husband,
two sons, F. J. and Alfred S. Stallings,
and one daughter. Miss Frances Stal
lings. The funeral was held this morn
ing at 10:30 o’clock from the West
Hunter street church. Interment was
at Sylvester.
Mrs. Lula Clower.
Mrs. Lula Clower, aged 58 years, of
18 Hardin street, died last night at 12
o’clock at a private sanitarium. She
is survived by her husband, C. A. Clow
er, and one daughter. The body was
removed to Patterson’s chapel.
Mrs. Henrietta Egleston.
Funeral services for Mrs. Henrietta
Egleston. the pioneer Atlanta woman
who died Tuesday night in her eighty
seventh year, will be held tomorrow
morning at 11 o’clock in AU Saints
church, of which she had been a mem
ber for many years. Rev. W. W. Mem
mlnger, her cousin by marriage, will
conduct the services, and interment will
be in Westview.
WASHINGTON AND RE
TURN—SI9.3S.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
On sale November 8-14. Re
turn limit December 1.
FEEL RIGHT
ALL THE TIME
Don’t Let Periodical Spells of Lazy
Liver Ruin Your Temper and
Spoil Your Work.
If your liver doesn’t behave right all
the time —if it sometimes stops work
ing and you become bilious and
“headachy”—don’t take calomel, but try
l Dodson's Liver Tone.
You are safe in taking Dodson’s Liv
er Tone. It’s a harmless, pleasant
vegetable remedy that starts the liver
without stirring up your whole system
as calomel often does. It Is especially
good for children who need a liver
tonic once in a while, but who should
not be dosed with strong drugs.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is sold by al!
druggists. They guarantee it with a
clean open and shut guarantee—your
money back with a smile if it fails to
satisfy you. Price, 50 cents a bottle,
and your money is as safe as If you
had it in your pocket. If you need the
medicine you need it badly—if it doesn’t
satisfy you—your money back. Buy a
bottle from any Atlanta druggist to
day under this guarantee. (Advt.)
Obtain New Life. Howells’
Lymphine
TABLETS
THE SUPREME TONIC AND VITALIZES
Restores the lost nerve force and exhausted vital
ity by replacing the dead nerve and brain tissues.
A remedy for Nervous Prostration. Neurasthenia.
Paralysh and all vitiated or weakened conditions
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for Dyspepsia and Indigestion Guaranteed free
from narcotic < I ruga Every Inch of improvement
comes to stay Write tor our new liook Each
package containing IT’LL 10 DAYS' TREATMENT
by mall, $1 < H. HOWEIXB A CO. 60 UhurcM
St.. New York City.
For eale at all Jacob*' Pharmacy Co.'a nine storea
In Atlanta; Brown A Allen. 24 Whitehall St. At
lanta. and leading druggists
YOUNG ATLANTAN
FIGHTING REBELS
J. W. Head Writes That Put
ting Down a Nicaraguan
Revolt Is No Picnic.
Central American warfare lofig has
been the subject of satire of humorous
writers, comic opera, libbretists. and
jokesmiths in general. But it’s no jest,
according to J. W. Head, an Atlanta
boy now in the United States marine
corps, who for several months has been
in Nicarauga endeavoring to preserve
peace with the aid of machine guns.
The young sea soldier has written his
father, O. T. Head, a thrilling account
of his experiences ,and from hi.- recital
there is little of the opera buffe to the
fighting that has been going on in
Central America recently.
"I thought I wan going to have a pic
nic,” he writes, "but after the dead and
wounded commenced to eomi in it was
pretty strenuous her-.-, and the worst
of it was the uncertainty of tic l tiling.
You didn’t know what time one of tin sc
stray bullets would hl’s, you out.
, “They have a kind of wferd sound —
not pleasant to hear, when they go
wlii-tling by. The federals have a for.
next to our camp, where they used to
shoot the prisoners and they would al
ways celebrate the event by yelling and
shouting.
“The women fight here, too —go to
war along with the men, some of them
carrying young babies. The boys shoul
der a rifle when they get about 10 or
12 years old. They have so many rev
olutions here that they are practically
raised in the battlefields. But even at
that, we have shown them a few thing
about fighting. \Ve have some brave
officers in this outfit, especially Major
Butler. At the battle of Mayaya, the
only gun that was doing tiny harm was
a machine gun. They had it trained
across an open space, and were mow
ing down every man that showed up on
it. But it had only fired about fifteen
shots when a lucky shot from outside
lammed the breeoh and put it out of
commission. It saved the lives of a lot
of our boys."
Head gives a glowing account of the
agricultural advantages of the country,
especially for corn culture, but he closes
with a wish to see Georgia's red hills
as soon as possible.
“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.
Hall Celine’s Story
“The Woman
Thou Gavest Me”
\WWh wii
Wil New Letters of
Standard Oil
/ ' is rnas terly ■
/ work —“' rhe w °-
J man ThouGavest I
' f\ \ ' Me” —is by the great -
J est livin £ English author. It is
// destined to be the most notable story
of the coming year. In it a reckless father
sacrifices his young daughter to social ambitions.
idjjßF 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
M Hearst’s Magazine is told her life story.
% The Plot —The Marriage Bond H
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
f it and enjoy a beautiful and powerful romance concerning
f a woman’s rights in the marriage bond.
I Standard Oil Correspondence I
K 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
the November Hearst’s Magazine.
% On Sals at All Newsdealers
November Number Just Out—ls cents
Hearst’s Magazine a
381 Fourth Avenue, New York City
WOMAN CONFESSOR
OF 2 DEATHS DENIES
SHE POISONED BABY
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 7.—Mrs. Pansy
Ellen Lcsh. who confessed to poisoning
two women, today denied the new
charge brought against her, to the ef
fect that she attempted to poison the
infant son of Paul Bauer, a prominent
man of St. Louis. The charge was
made by the St. Louis police. An offi
cer is now on the way here to take the
woman in custody.
“I am guilty of poisoning two wom
en,” sobbed Mrs. Leah, whose wonder
ful fortitude has seldom been broken,
"but I swear that I never attempted to
poison the child. It is true that I was
accused of the crime, but 1 was freed.”
TWO POLICEMEN IN
FIGHT: BOTH DYING
HOBOKEN, N. J., Nov. 7.—As a re
sult of a fight between a Jersey City
and a Hoboken policeman, each of
whom suspected that the other was a
dangerous criminal, the two men are in
the North Hudson hospital, one with a
fractured skull ami the other with four
bullet wounds in the breast. Both will
die. In the fight one of the policemen
depended on a night stick and the other
used ills revolver at close range. The
two polk- men are Stephen Constello,
of Ji-isey City, and John Deitrich, of
West Hoboken.
STEPS ON RUSTY NAIL
AND DIES IN HOSPITAL
CHICAGO, Nov. 7.—As a result of
stepping on a rusty nail. John McGow
en died at Aiexian Brothers’ hospital.
McGowen was engaged in tearing down
a building at 1176 Crosby street, Octo
ber 26, when the nail penetrated his
foot.
ACUTE STOMACH DISTRESS
RELIEVED IN FIVE MINUTES
That lump of lead feeling will quickly
leave the stomach; the digestive juices
will commence to digest food and your
htomach will feel fine and satisfactory
in five minutes.
That is, if you will simply swallow
two MI-O-NA STOMACH TABLETS
—if you won’t, then you must suffer.
Perhaps you don’t
know that MI-O
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TABLETS are guar
anteed to cure any
case of indigestion,
no matter of how
long standing, or
money back.
Perhaps you know
that when your ■■
stomach is upset, tliat your food does I
not digest and consequently blood is not I
FLIES GURRIEHS
OF GHILD PLAGUE
Common Insects Distributors
of Infantile Paralysis, Ex
periments Prove.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 7—Ordinary
stable flies have been conclusively Iden
tified as carriers of infantile paralysis,
or poliomyelitis, according to a report
made to the public health service by
Dr. John F. Anderson, director of ths
hygienic laboratory, and Passed As
sistant Surgeon Wade H. Frost
The report gives the result of experi
ments with three monkeys, which, after
being exposed to the bites of flies which
at the same time were allowed dally to
l>lte two monkeys inoculated with virus
of the disease, developed typical symp
toms of poliomyelitis seven, eight and
nine days, respectively, from the date of
their first exposure. In each case the
diagnosis was confirmed by an autopsy.
further experiments will be neces
sary to determine whether this is the
only or usual method of transmission
of the malady.
t
rtywkeyei
First Class Finishing and En
larging. A complete stock films,
plates, papers, chemicals, etc.
Special Mall Order Department for
out-of-town customers.
Send for Catalog and Price List.
X. K. HAWKES CO. --Kodak Dep<Hmtn,<
, M Whitehall St. ATLANTA, CA,
furnished with sufficient nutrition to
. properly nourish the body.
If you are distressed after eating; if
gas or sour food is forced up into the
mouth, then your stomach is not right;
your food is fermenting, not digesting,
and you need MI-O-NA STOMACH
> TABLETS and need them badly.
It's an easy matter to set the stomach
MI-O-NA
CONQUERS
DYSPEPSIA
Druggists every-
| where can supply you at 50 cents a
I box. (Advt.)
3
right, and If your
stomach does not
properly digest the
food you put into
it, the proper thing
to do is to get a box
of MI-O-NA STOM
ACH TABLETS at
once.