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30 ATLANTA ALIENS SEEK
NATURALIZATION PAPERS
Paul Armstrong, United States nat
uralization agent, arrived in Atlanta
this morning from Washington H<
will aid in passing upon tin petition.'
•f thirty aliens v. ho nil be examinee
Bent Monday to ascent tin their tin >-
to become citizens of the United Stab -
Mr. Armstrong declan s at least -
per cent of the aliens seeking to become
citizens pass their examination'
A Rousing Appetite
Is a Keen Delight
And What Is of Greater Interest,
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets
Enable the Stomach to
Digest Whatever Is
Eaten.
We all like to «ee the waj healthy
children detour theft meals. Would we
could al. do the samel Eating ought
to be a delight. It is one of life's chief ■
enjoyments. People who can not relish >
a good meal are apt to fall into those
ill-tempered moods from which they
view the world as a sorry place to live
In. So lot us learn to employ the best
means of harmonizing our existence and
thus extract from our daily grind all
the pleasure there is to be had. This We
can do by keeping out stomachs in
prime, active working older.
A majority of people have come to
know the blessings which an occa
sional use of Stuart s Dyspepsia Tab
lets confer upon the stomach. They
•re unquestionably the most popular
remedy known, for the reason that
dyspepsia is the national disease, that
these wonderful little tablets have long
.*inc< acquired a national reputation
• s a throughly reliable and efficient
cure for all forms of dyspepsia and
indigestion.
No matter hoe. great the excess of
food taken into the stomach, one or two
of these tablets will digest every particle
of it. A package of Stuart's Dypsepsia
Tablets should always be In the house.
Many a person has saved himself from
a serious attack of acute indigestion
by using them after heavy meaels. such
as are eaten Christmas, New Year’s
Thanksgiving and other holidays and
festal seasons.
After attending banquets, late sup
pers. heavy fancy dinners, after-theu
ter parties, etc., where one has dined
sumptuously and luxuriantly, Stuart's
Dyspepsia Tablets should Invariably
he used, as they digest the food per
fectly and completely, and prevent all
possibility of dyspepsia, which, with
out their use, is more than likely to
ensue.
Americans are exceedihgly fond of
the good things of life, and there is
apt to be great excess of eating, and
the only way to overcome its bad
effects on the stomach is to employ a
powerful and efficient digestive such
as Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, which
always insure a good digestion.
Obtain a 60c box from your druggist
today. (Advt >
ChamberlinJohnsonDußose Co.
Atlanta
Silk Dresses===A Sale
I hese are the facts that will interest you—
Fifty silk dresses have lost almost one-half their prices.
The materials are charmeuse, crepe meteor, peau de cygne—the great majority,
however, are charmeuse.
I here are only one or two of a styk?—it is hardly possible to pen-picture just
what this sale has in store for you—we will hint though that you are going to be
beautifully surprised and delighted when you see that at these prices the dresses are
bringing all the style-marks of this season—the draped skirts, the frillings in sleeves
and necks, the crystal and silk buttons, the crushed si Ik gi rdles.
Colors are black, Copenhagen, duck blue, benjaise blue. navy, golden and seal
brown and taupe.
\ou could hardly find at regular prices a more charming or varied assortment
of styles and colors for afternoon or street wear.
Sizes ioi misses and women. And the prices—here is the wonderful part
Twenty-eight Dresses that were $1 C.OO
$25.00 and $29.75 are marked . 1
Twenty-two Dresses that were so 1 .75
$35.00 and $40.00 are marked 1
Chamberlin Johnson=Dußose Co.
MO GOES TO
GALLOWS JOKING
Black Slayer Enjoys Greatly
Auto Ride From Tower to
Douglasville Train.
Laughing and joking with the jailers
and hit- fellow prisoners about his exe- i
h ution end apparently enjoying an au-i
J tomobile "ide from the Tower to the'
I Terminal station as though he had been
ion a picnic excursion. Leonard Lewis, a
•negro slayer, thi- morning was taken ,
I from the Tow er to Douglasville, where
I he was hanged at noon.
"Good-bye, fellows. I guess I won't ,
set you again." called out the doomed ,
man to the prisoners In his cage as.
handcuffed, he was led away by Sheriff ,
W. A Baggett. of Douglas county
To Jaile: Golden he remarked:
“This is something new for me. all
i right, but I don't mind it as much as I
thought I would. I'd just as soon be
hung, anyway. It's all over in a few
minutes, and T don’t guess there’s much
pain about it."
As he was being sped to the Terminal
in the auto with Sheriff Baggett and
Deputy Sheriff Suttles, of Fulton coun
ty. the slayer laughed and chatted, and
never once displayed the slightest'sign
of nervousness.
No Regret For Crime.
"That negro has either got a nerve
of iron, or hasn’t any nerves at all,"
commented Deputy Suttles.
Lewis was hanged for the murder of
another negro, whom he shot to death
following a crap game After losing in
the game. Lewis went away, obtained a
pistol, and, later meeting the winner,
asked him to return the spoils. When
the latter refused. Lewis shot him.
Asked about the killing just before
he left the Tower, he showed no regret
at all, but showed an almost inconceiv
able spirit of bravado and revenge,
"If that nigger should jump up here
before me now I'd shoot him again," he
said with a grin. “When I fired the
first shot, he fell, but he kept kicking,
and I just simply kept shooting until
he got perfectly still."
THREE AMENDMENTS
VOTED ON TUESDAY
GIVEN WIDE MARGIN
Executive Secretary Hardy Dim was
hard at work today consolidating the
presidential election returns, practically
all of which are in.
The three constitutional amendments
‘ voted upon have been ratified over
i wheltningly, there being little opposi
tion anywhere throughout the state to
any' of them.
The returns w'll he certified to the
governor immediately upon the comple
tion of Secretary Vim’s work, after
w hich he w ill promulgate the names of
the Wilson and Marshall electors
chosen.
i Atlanta Financiers Have Pasture Pool Fever
! golf bug gets bankers
Atlanta bankers have the golf fevei
this season. It is worse, fat worse,
than the notorius bicycle bug which
Mung them fifteen years ago, and the
epidemic has nearly as many victims in
the financial world as the well known
motor mania. The links at East Lake
look like a coupon clippers convention
these snappy afternoons, and the only
men left indoors after 2 o’clock are the
third assistant bookkeepers and the
janitor*. Everybody else is pounding
the pil; about the pa.-ture.
Ernest Woodruff, head of the Trust
Company of Georgia, and a number of
other things sprang a great surprise
In financial circles by joining the golf
ing department of the Atlanta Athletic
club at East Lake. The announcement
is surprising because for many years
Mr. Woodruff has lent himself assidu
ously to business pursuits, to the utter
exclusion of athletics, politics and simi
lar frivolous pastimes. Time and time
again friends of the well known banker
and capitalist have suggested that he
go in for outdoor life and some light
form of sport. Mr. Woodruff is no
pigmy. Un the contrary, he is more
nearly in the class of the giant—not
very tall, but thick set, muscular and
determined as you please. But he has
persistently refused, and has gone on
evolving business schemes, putting
things under the brand of the dollar
mark.
Woodruff Blames Friends.
Imagine the consternation of his busi
ness associates, therefore, when lie
came in the other afternoon with a
blazing Scotch plaid goif cap and some
other fancy trimmings known best to
followers of the great national business
man’s game! A ripple of excitement
went through the whole banking pro
fession, and Mr. Woodruff is busy to
day explaining that it wasn’t his fault
by a great deal.
"You see,” declared Mr. Woodruff to
an intimate, "Frank Hawkins and Jim
Nunnally got me into this, and the fas
cination is keeping me in. Why, it’s
really a great game, and maybe I’ve
missed something all these years. I
haven’t yet given up business, but I’m
getting along fine and in a few more
days will be able to show the boys a
few fancy strokes. My percentage in
golf sticks and other accessories is 1.000
so far. and my average in puts Is grow
ing so fast that the older players are
beginning to marvel. Yes, slree, golf is
a great game.”
That is Mr. Woodruff’s alibi. The
story of a person who saw him play is
not exactly in accord with it, since this
Individual swore by the Great Book
that Mr. Woodruff required 700 strokes
to complete the course, and that in one
game, and at one stage of it he was so
far behind that he hasn’t finished yet.
Evor’body’s Doin’ Something,
In Justification of his action in re-’
reiving the sacred rites of the golf
club, Mr. Woodruff dwells on the recent
initiation of his faithful coadjutors.
Hawkins and Nunnally, the former Us
whom went in a year ago, more or less,
and the latter much more recently. Not
only that, but he points out that of
the younger contingent, John B. Wheat.
New York
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.ERIDA V. NOVEMBER 8. 1912.
secretary and treasurer of the Trust
Company; H. B. Kennedy, assistant
cashier of the Fulton National; Henry ■
W. Davis, cashier of the Lowry Nation- i
al, and J. D. Leitner, assistant cashier '
of the Atlanta National, are enthusias- I
tic golfers; that Arthur B. Simms, i
cashier of the I'ulton National, is a|
handball shark; that Barrington ,T.
King, assistant cashier of the Central
Bank and Trust Corporation, is a de
votee of motor boating; that John K.
Ottley, vice president of the Fourth Na
tional; Joseph T. Orme, vice president
of the Lowry National, and James
Floyd, assistant cashier of the Atlanta
National, are ardent horsemen; that
Paul Baker, cashier of the Farmers and
Traders; Henry Hines, cashier of the
Mitchell street branch of the Central
Bank and Trust Corporation; William
L. Peel and Robert F. Maddox, president
and vice president, respectively, of the
American National; William Hurd Hili
yer, vice president and treasurer of the
Hillyer Trust Company; W. S. Louns
bury, vice president of the Travelers
Bank and Trust Company; Captain
James W. English, president of the
Fourth National; Colonel Robert J.
Lowry and Thomas L. Meador, presi
dent and vice president, respectively, of
the Lowry National; Asa G. Candler,
president of the Central Bank and Trust
Corporation, and W. S. Witham, head of
the Witham chain of banks, all are vi
tally interested in automobiling. Fur
thermore. contends Mr. Woodruff. Mr.
Witham raises alfalfa out near Buck
head, at the rate, according to Mr.
Witham, of eighteen tons per acre.
Everybody’s doing it.
FINDINGS IN WINN
CASE AT VET HOME
UP TO GOV. BROWN
The findings in the Winn ease at the
Confederate Soldiers Home were hand
ed to the governor today by Captain
“Tip" Harrison, a member of the board.
The governor did not consider the
findings immediately, but will take
them up shortly.
While nothing was given out official
ly as to the verdict, it is understood
that the board convicted Major Winn
of drunkeness, but not of anything else
charged against him.
The governor has not said what his
course of action will be. in the'event
the findings of the board are approved,
as he is not altogether clear in his
mind as to his authority and jurisdic
tion in the matter.
BEAUTY OF DIPLOMATIC
CORPS IS BETROTHED
WASHINGTON, Nov. B.—The most pic
turesque event of Thanksgiving week will
be the wedding of Senorita Malvina Pena,
the most beautiful girl in the diplomatic
corps, and the handsomest man in the
corps, Senor Don Alejadro Herquinigo,
> secretafv of the Chilean legation.
Miss Pena, who is the youngest of the
t'oiir daughters of the minister from Uru
guay and Mme. De Pena, was to have
made her debut this fall, but will be a
bride as well as debutante.
Paris
STEWART’S UNDER-PRICE BASEMENT
ILs J' 1 H HEm
Saturday and Monday Only
We offer 375 pairs of Women’s f ggrago
Patent Colt Bluchers; all sizes fl | W ||| O O
2to 8; also 150 pairs Ladies’ Spl W. JB
Remnant Odds and Ends; all B|
styles; broken sizes $3.50, $4.00 (Rm ga|
and $5.00 shoes for Saturday I W p S V
and Monday only P
HOSIERY HOSIERY
Chamberlin Johnson Dußose Company
Atlanta New York Paris
A Happy Day Tomorrow
In The Junior Department--Third Floor
An occasion of first importance; made so by some unusual
prices—on Junior suits and coats. Plan right now to go to
the Junior Department tomorrow, as early tomorrow as you
• can-—put aside whatever you may have expected to do. It
can wait—these values will not. Too many mothers still
have suits and coats to buy for their daughters.
That our enthusiasm and great expectations are fully
warranted---read.
$22.50 and $25.00 $ 1 O 50
Junior Norfolk Suits JL O
Although you well may. do not take our valuation of them—see for
yourself if ever there were more attractive Junior Suits at $22.50 and $25.
\\ ide wale serges in navy. Copenhagen, brown and black, beautifully
lined and even more beautifully tailored and fashioned with their wide
plaits down the back and their smart little belts.
Rest assured that daughter will like them for their style and you for
their style and price.
$15.00 and $17.50
Junior Coats JL
And not .just one or two or a half-dozen, but a big rack full. Which
means a wonderfully wide range of styles.
Yours may be a full length coat or it may be one of the shorter, the
three-quarter length “Johnny” coats—whichever ma\ strike your fancy.
The materials are th good looking, heavy mixtures in browns, grays, tans
and the lik< —materials you would never expect in coats at this price.
And in the face of this exceptional value we wish to direct your atten
tion to this Junior Coat stock in general. 'l’he word COMPLETE tits it.
There is nothing new for misses this season that this stock does not show.
I’he styles are the styles that specialists in young women’s wear have
brought out —notable among these are some newly arrived white chinchil
la coals and polo faced blue, tan and white broadcloth coats priced from
$16.50 to $30.00.
$12.50 Junior Mackinaws
$17.50 Junior Mackinaws
The mackinaws are a novelty that has come to stay.
They are serviceable.
<_'oats of heavy plaid materials with hats to match. Rain does not af
fect their beauty—they are made to withstand the meanest winter weather.
Those at $6.75 are box coats. Those at $12.50 are of sturdier materials fash
ioned Norfolk style.
And lest you forget little daughter and son. let us remind you of the
slicker coats and hats that rain can not get through—these in sizes from 6
to 14 years at $3.50. \nd “Bestyette” rain capes at $3.50; another quality
made by the same people at $3.00.
ChamberlinJohnsonDußose Company