Newspaper Page Text
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KAISER WILHELM'
MIGHTY NIMROD
Whales, Bears, and Wild Boars
Have Fallen Before the Em
peror’s Bullets.
BERLIN. Nov. 7. —Germany lioasts
that its statistical office is the most
thoroughgoing and highly organized in
the world. It keeps an eye on things
of which easygoing commonwealths in
other climes take no account. So no
body was surprised to read statistics
issued apropos of the kaiser's fortieth
anniversary as a huntsman -It seems
Tie has been a jager since September
10. 1872.
Over 70,000 game of all descriptions,
including a whale, have fallen victim
to his unerring aim. There are tens of
thousands of partridges and pheasants,
hundreds of wild boars and stags, a few
grouse and several bears.
Golf Grows Popular.
The progress that golf 1« making in
this country is shown by the fact that
the papers now and then take notice of
It. Indeed, there were quite surpris
ingly detailed reports of the last golf
tournament at Baden-Baden. There
are now about a dozen clubs in Ger
many, those at Berlin. Hamburg and
Baden taking the lead.
A writer in a Berlin paper has evi
dently only just fallen a victim to the
charms of the game, and he certainly
hita them off very well. "Golf,” he
tells his fellow countrymen. "Is fre
quently misunderstood. Whoever has
not played the game himself, or at least
tried to. is by no means in a position
to appreciate its niceties. In itself It is
a pleasure. In lovely clear autumn
weather, with a golf club in the hand,
to wander through the fields and drive
the little ball with clever blow through
the air toward the distant goal: but
the delicacies of the game only appear
when the question is how, by a spe
cially clever stroke, to rescue a ball
which seems already lost.
Football a Favorite.
“The great attraction of golf consists
chiefly in the variety of the natural and
artificial hindrances which one has to
overcome in the course of a round;
then, also, in the many-sidedness of
the strokes to be made. In any case it
Is a game which should have more fol
lowers among us than it has. "
The writer then passes on to other
sports and mentions that football is of
all outdoor games that mosth played in
Germany, with hockey and its 10,000
members in 150 clubs coming in a dis
tant second.
maconTity council to
KEEP OFF DEPOT FIGHT
MACON, GA.. Nov. 7.—The mayor
and council of Macon have decided not
to co-operate with the citizens in their
fight before the railroad commission for
a new depot, but to respectively confer
with the railroads with the view of ob
taining the desired Improvements
through amicable methods. A commit
tee, consisting of Mayor Moore and Ai
dermen Dasher and Hay, has been
named to confer with the railroad of
ficials.
In the meantime, however, the citi
zens, led by Colonel Robert L. Berner,
will vigorously push the tight now
pending before the railroad coinmis
•ion.
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I ANY dealer I
I will tell I
I you that the sale ;
I of FATIMAS has
increased faster
I than that of any
I other cigarette
I ever put on the
I market. This sen-
I the result of extra
quality put into
I the cigarettes, in-
I stead of into a
I fancy package.
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BUILDING URGED FOR
PERMANENT DISPLAY
OF ATLANTA GOODS
A permanent exposition of Atlanta
manufacturers will be established with
in the next year if the directors of the
Chamber of Commerce approve the idea
of the manufacturers' committee which
will be presented to the board this aft
ernoon. Brooks Morgan, chairman of
the committee, will recommend the
purchase of a lot in the heart of the
city ami the erection of a building of
four floors for the display of manufac
tures.
Bolling Jones, of the committee, has
drawn plans for the proposed building
and these will be submitted to the
chamber. The general Idea Is to keep
Atlanta-made goods on exhibition al!
the year round, that visitors may gain
knowledge of what is manufactured in
this city. A general subscription from
manufacturers will be the method used
in raising the funds for the enterprise.
This exhibit will not interfere with the
manufacturers' exposition held every
August.
WOMAN BREAKS LEG IN
LEAP TO ESCAPE THIEF
ST LOUIS, Nov. 7. Mrs. Ella Duley.
in fleeing from a burglar, jumped from
a window at her home and her right leg
was fractured. Her daughter, Elsa,
bumped Into her mother as she groped
around the room in the dark, and the
frightened woman believed the daugh
ter was the burglar.
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.
WARM ALDERMANIC RACE.
COLUMBUS. GA., Nov. 7.—Columbus
has developed a warm aldermanlc race.
Five announced Candidates for the nine
places are already in the field and oth
ers are contemplating announcing with
in the next few days. The election
takes place the second Saturday in De
cember.
Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company
Atlanta New York Paris
Miss Jackson and Bon Ton Corsets
Miss Jackson Is One of America’s Fore
most Corsetieres and Bon Ton
Corsets Are—
Well, let us tell you about the way they are made. The Bon
lon factory is undoubtedly the most remarkable one in this
country It is known as the model corset factory—as unlike
most factories as a man whose hobby is cleanliness and order
could make it.
It stands in the midst of what might be called a park—with
its green lawns, its flower-edged walks.
Inside everything is spotless. Floors are kept clean, ceil
ings are high and white, daylight pervades every big room, fresh,
sweet, pure air is continually pumped into the building.
Young women work there under the most hygienic condi
tions.
Social workers, men and women interested in bettering the
conditions of working people, visit the Bon Ton factory just to
get ideas as to how comfortable and pleasant a factory can be
made.
One does not see worry-wrinkled faces there.
It is a contented, happy, harmonious corps of young women
who make Bon Ton corsets.
But why all this when we are advertising a- demonstration
of corsets?
To show you that it does not just happen that Bon lon cor
sets look so well made. It is the influence of environment.
They could not be otherwise than corsets of highest merit.
Also the state of mind that possesses a man to build such
a factory guides the whole business. Bon Ton corsets are an at
tainment; they express an ideal.
There is something about their fashioning, their lines, their
tit, that can not well be told of in words—something that a
woman could not describe did she come seeking these very
points—but she knows them none the less, certainly, when she
tries on a corset that embodies them.
So our recommendations of Bon Ton corsets must be more
sincere and earnest than our ability to tell you of their merits.
We want you to see and to know how good they are, to under
stand just as we do, just what graceful, beautiful lines have been
worked into the models this season.
And right now is the best time to see and know this, now
while M iss Jackson, a corsetiere of marked ability, is with us.
She takes great pride in helping women with corset troubles.
And we do not hesitate to say that, with this great stock of cor
sets here, she can help you.
Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.T H I KWAI. .NOVEMBER 7. 1912.
PRESBYTERIAN SYNOD
OF GEORGIA HOLDING
SESSION AT EASTMAN
EASTMAN. GA.. Nov. 7.—Tile. Pres
byterian Synod of Georgia is in annual
session in the Methodist church of
Eastman. The session was opened with
a sermon by Dr. Rutherford E. Doug
lass, of Macon, the retiring moderator.
Dr. E. E. Hill, of Athens, was elected
moderator and Rev. D. L. Patterson, of
Blackshear, was chosen as assistant
clerk.
Addresses of welcome were delivered
on behalf of the churches and the city
of Eastman by Rev. K. Reid, of the
Methodist church, and Rev. A. W. Beal
er, of the Baptist church, which were
responded to by Dr. Hill, the moderator.
A sermon by Dr. Thomas E. Con
verse, of Atlanta, preceded the sacre
ment of the Lord's supper, administered
by Dr. B. Watkins Mebane. A popular
meeting, in behalf of foreign missions,
was followed by an address by Rev.
Egbert W. Smith, of Nashville. Tenn.,
who is the general assembly’s secretarj
of foreign missions.
All the 1'25 ministers in attendance
are being royally entertained in the
homes of Eastman citizens, regardless
of creed or denomination.
REUNION AT CHATTANOOGA.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN., Nov. 7. —
General John T. Wilder has an
nounced that Wilder's brigade will meet
here In next annual reunion September
19, 1913. More than 2,000 visitors are
expected, including 800 veterans. The
date is tlie anniversary of the battle of
Chickamauga.
I NEW YORK & AMERICAN DENTAL PARLORS
281<AND 321/, PEACHTREE STREET
BEST EQUIPPED IN DIXIE
Al! Our Work Made and Delivered
’ w Y° u W®'* (Guaranteed)
Special for GOLD FILLINGS . . . SI.OO
■ iw’Wi IO GOLD CROWNS • • $3.00
-C bridge WGRK • • • 54.00
Da y s SET OF TEETH . . $4.00
SET OF TEETH , , $5.00
SLAYERS INDICTED IN
RECORD-BREAKING TIME
MONTGOMERY, ALA., Nov. 7.—ln
record time the Montgomery county
grand jury has returned indictments
for murder against Will G. Oakley and
Nathaniel E. Rowell, white men, and
criticised officers of the law for fla
grant violation of their duties for fail
ing to arrest persons found with con
cealed weapons upon their persons at
the recent state fair in Montgomery.
Oakley last Thursday afternoon killed
P. A. Wood, his father-in-law, in the
state capital.
Rowell Is the locomotive engineer
employed by the Louisville and Nash
ville railroad who fatally shot J. A.
Bachelor, a constable. 1 His trial will
follow Oakley’s.
Governor O'Neal will probably em
ploy special counsel to prosecute the
slayer of Wood.
Scratched 40 Years
Used D. D. D. Six Months —
All Itching Gone!
This is the actual experience of Anne
Croman, Banta Rosa, Cal., with the
wonderful D. D. D. Prescription.
D. D. D. is the proven Eczema Cure,
the mild wash that gives instant relief
in all forms of skin trouble.
Cleanses the skin of all impurities—
washes away blotches and pimples,
leaving the skin as smooth and healthy
as that of a child.
Get a 50c bottle of this wonderful
Eczema Cure today and keep it in the
house.
We know that D. D. D. will do all
that is claimed for ft.
Jacobs’ Pharmacy, S-8 Marietta St.
Chamberlin Johnson=Dußose Co.
ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS
And Still the New Hats Come!
The charm of the novel seems never to end in this milli
nery store—thanks to the Estelle Mershon Shop of 20 East
46th Street, New York.
No sooner does one new and smart hat go to some happy
woman, than another takes its place.
You can not get an old or an outworn style here; our
millinery organization is such that this is impossible.
The Estelle Mershon Shop is in the very center of fash
ionable America. The success of what is acceptable there is
assured. And Estelle Mershon keeps our millinery depart
ment in closest touch with the new ideas as they are developed
Today’s shipment brings glad tidings to women who want
either hats for dress occasions or for street wear—we forego
the task of picturing them for you--there is too much and
too varied beauty. It remains for a woman’s eyes and a wom
an’s other sense—-of charming hats—to appreciate the exquis
ite lines, the unusual, the brilliant and again the delicate
color combinations.
Suffice it, these hats are sparkling with newness and love
liness—do you not think it will be a pleasure just to see them?
French Fur Sets
We take more than ordinary pleasure in announcing the
arrival of a number of very fashionable and exclusive French
Fur Sets--neckpieces and muffs.
They are novelties that Paris has stamped with her ap
proval—-and are assmart as Paris could make them.
In the Millinery Department.
Cliamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company
Hall Caine’s Story
“The Woman
\Thou Gavest Me”
iHR New Letters of
Standard Oil
/ r This masterly ■
/ work —“The Wo-
j man Thou Gavest
/A Me ” —is by the great-
J est living English author. It is
// destined to be the most notable story
LX 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
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
1 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
/ a woman’s rights in the marriage bond.
f Standard Oil Correspondence • ■
g 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.
W On Sale at All Newsdealers
November Number Just Out—ls cents
Hearst’s Magazine ■
381 Fourth Avenue, New York City
EVERY U/ANT AD HAS A MEANING
GEORGIAN WVMtM I KU ALL ITS OWN
BOTH TELEPHONES 8000
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