Newspaper Page Text
10
PIEMEN 'GIVE' ANDREWS
VIENNA, SMITH. PARIS.
TO SA VE WILSON BOTHER
Senator Hoke Smith is staying In
Washington and avoiding the bushels of
office-seekers’ mail which is flooding
his office; Congressman William Schley
Howard, confined to his bed by a cold,
has the counterpane covered with ap
plications from the faithful of the Fifth
district, and the coterie of Woodrow
Wilson men who claim credij for mak
ing Georgia go Democratic already
have fixed up a slate to sate President
Wilson trouble and have named ,1. R.
Smith for minister to France ami Colo
nel Walter P. Andrews for minister to
Austria.
Not satisfied with picking these two
plums, they have chosen Atlanta men
for everything In sight, from collector
of customs down to elevator operator,
and are preparing to send emissaries to
Princeton at once.
This much of the plans of the rock
ribbed original Wiisonians of Atlanta
came to light today when one of them
exhibited a list—a purely tentative list,
of course—of the picking' they Intended
to ask from the first president who ever
practiced law ,in Atlanta. And they
really have decided to urge “Gut Bob"
Smith to fill the embassj at*Pails,
where the styles come from, and Wal
ter Andrews for the post at Vienna,
home of the Merry Widow and the well
known hot roll.
Now, there are two senators in Geor
gia and twelve congressmen, and only
bne each comes from Atlanta or there
abouts. So it is rather probable that
one senator who lives in Macon and
eleven representatives who reside here
and there about the boulders, the red
clay and the wiregrass, will fl;, objec
tions against Atlanta makjng up its
slate so early In the game and expect
ing to cop everything which has a sal
ary or perquisites attached.
When Hoke Smith read in the Atlanta
papers that he was to be chief dis
penser of the patronaze. beginning next
March, he promptly decided not to
come home until after the next session
of Congress, and v rote to say lie would
be extremely busy In 'Washington pend
ing that occasion. But there 1« a va
cant room tn the suite of Peters build
ing offices occupied by the senator’s
firm, and into that room for the past
three days the porters have been lug
ging heavy bags of mall. Most of these
letters b. gin “Dear Senator—l write to
apply for.” and continue along that line.
William Schley Howard’s mail isn’t
quite so heavy, as he represents only
one district, so the center table, the
piano and one side of the bed in which
lie Is reposing at his country home is
sufficient to accommodate the letters of
congratulation, adulation and—well,
everything but hesitatiqn. But the door
bell rings a perpetual ragtime of call
ers. Mr. Howard said today that he
feared he would hardly have enough to
go around, though he would do the best
he could.
’’Seriously speaking," he said. ”1 do
not know what policy tin president will
adopt in selecting suitable persons for
vacant positions. If I should have any
say in the nominations for appoint
ments, I shall keep in mind solely the
efficient) of the person applying, the
wishes of the persons who are to be
served by the applicant, and the re-
GASH GROCERY COMPANY
Sells Saturday Recandled
Storage
EGGS
25c
Dozen
Guaranteed Country Eggs
30c
Dozen
CASH GROCERY CO.,
118-520 WHITEHALL STREET
BLOOD POISON
Pile* and Rectal Diseases.
CURED TO STAY CURED.
——By a true specialist
who possesses the ex
'faf \ perlence of years—the
LtfE’.. A right kind of experi
’lF* ence—doing the seine I
- \ thing the right way
'Wr hundreds and perhaps
T’ •-'5! thousands of times
P J with unfailing, pernta-
4\ nent results No <u'-
•q \ ting or detention from
>»,. y -sa-Hifc. business Don't you
WW think ft's about time
to get the right treatment' 1 I GIVE
606. the celebrated German prepara
tion for Blood l’o(son and guarantee
results Come to me 1 will cure you
or make no charge and 1 will make my
terms within your reach. I cure Vari
cocele. Hydrocele. Kidney Bladder
•mi Proetatlc troubles. Piles. Rupture,
Stricture. Rheumatism, Nervous De
bility and all acute and chronic d s
Chargee of men and women cured in
the shortest time possible If you
can't '-all. write Free consultation
anti examination. Hours. Sa. tn to "
. r tn Sundays. 9to 1
I DR J. D HUGHES. Specialist
Oppo-ite Third National Ban!
. North Broad St.* Atlanta, Ga
1 flection of credit upon the appointing
t power.
, "I do not expect to have much to say
about the appointments, as there are
others who probably will deservedly be
• consulted. My only interest will be in
seeing that my constituents get com-
i petent. honest and faithful servants, and
1 do not anticipate that any other kind
of persons will make application.'*
t NEW “WHITE WAY’’
WILL LIGHT ROUTE
TO BIG AUTO SHOW
, Nearly half a million dollars worth |
i of automobiles already have been re
ceived .in Atlanta for exhibition at the
' Atlanta Automobile show which opens
November 16 at the Auditorium-Ar
mory.
i Local exhibitors have been gathering
i their machines for the show for three or
, fout w -eks.
I While th< railroads are busy hauling
• in the show machines Head Decorator
V. W. Shepard Is working double time.
’ oval time anil most of the time, with his
full force of men. taking the necessary
steps and getting all the preliminaries
out of the way so that he can run his
whole gang to the Auditorium at the
stroke of midnight Sunday night and
start the work of placing the decora
tions
City Electrician K. C. Turner lias
granted permission for the erection of
ornamental “white way" posts from the
Auditorium to Peachtree street, and the
people who go to the show will pass
down the most brilliantly illuminates
street in all Dixie.
CITY ELECTRICIAN TO
RENEW HIS FIGHT ON
STREET LIGHT RATES
I
When the council committee on . lee- 1
trie lights meets this afternoon to eon- .
aider the bid of the Georgia Hail way an.
Power Company for the city’s str, et light
ing. City Electrician It. <’. Turner will i
contend that the company will make ,'.o
per cent profit on all but the White Way I
contract, and that It should reduce its
bids.
Mr. Turner said today that lie would
introduce as evidence the rates of other
cities.
He said he would also urge that some
other sort of light posts be secured to
replace the White Way posts on Peach
tree rind Whitehall streets, lie said the
posts there now take up too much room
NEGRO KILLS WHITE
BOY, THEN HIMSELF
S<’l I E,\T>’TA I >Y. N. V.. Nov. 8 A
negro about .% years old, known as Sandy
Williams, supposed to be from Canton.
Ohio, and known in Philadelphia as “Dia
mond Dick.” enticed Desaile, white.
18 yearn of age, into the cold storage
room of the Melton case, this city. today,
ami shot him in the face, killing him in
stantly. Then Williams shot himself in
the head, dying at once. There is nu
known reason for the crime.
THE MENTER CO. '
sls BLUE SERGE d»1 G CA
i SUITS, NOW 4>IZ.DU
tC, These Suits were real bargains at sls, and it’s just
like finding money to get them now for $12.50.
They are the latest Fall cut,
carefully tailored and of handsome,
durable serge. Any man who buys
one of these suits has a suit to be
proud of. and the biggest bargain \
in this city to-day. " I
C. Good selection of men’s Fall k
suits of all materials at all prices.
Overcoats, Hats, Shoes. SSBiB
LADIES SUITS I
AND COATS
Splendid showing of all latest,
nFall stylesand fabrics in Ladies’v so-x
Suits and Coats. Come here for '
your new Fall Clothing and charge
it. Beautiful ready-to-wear Milli
nery, Dresses. Waists, Skirts. Pet
ticoats, Shoes.
Our prices are low because we
own nearly 100 stores, and buy in .//
enormous quantities, thereby get- ‘A**
ting a much lower figure than
ordinary stores.
DIVIDED PAYMENT CHARGE ACCOUNTS
C, THE MENTER CO. offrrs « rcspertibla w«» for respectable people to ifess
well «>thoat iateareiueace. This plaa is open for you. Take adraatage of it.
I
THE MENTER CO.
• UCCLSSOR To'bUNTIR • ROUN«I.OQM CO.
71 1-2 WHITEHALL STREET
Ficot Stairway next to J. M. Hiph Co.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 8. 1912.
STRANDED LINER STILL
ON ROCKLAND IN PERIL
QUEBEC. Nov. B.—Although the 50-
mile easterly gale, which pounded the
stranded liner Royal George that went
ashore on the rocks in the St. Lawrence
river ten miles below this city the night
before last, had abated today the vessel
was still in a perilous position. Attempts
to release the liner failed, although her
nose had been turned into deeper water
and the tug captains who were standing
by hoped to release the ship At high tide.
All passengers are off.
The crew of the Royal George remained
on board
Clears Stuffed Up Head
and Catarrh Disappears
I
Breathe the Healing Air of the Eucalyptus Forests of Australia I
and Quickly Get Rid of Catarrh.
Hyomei will banish catarrh if you
will breathe it a few times a day. It
is the only remedy of its kind before
the people that can penetrate into every
nook, corner, fold or crevice of the mu
cus membrane and destroy the mi
crobes.
HYOMEI is squeezed from the green
leave’ of the Eucalyptus trees of in- I
land Australia, where catarrh does not
exist, and combined with Listerian an
tiseptics. Pour a few drops into the
inhalei and bieatlie this mighty germ
destroying air; an air more healing
than that of the pine covered Adiron
daeks.
Notice how quickly that stuffed up j
i
j LET’S CELEBRATE
| IN A
WOODROW
i
Our latest last.
■ I
We picked it for a winner.
1 iff
Kvei’v man who puts his foot in a pair says:
•‘They’ll do.”
Good for two terms.
Won’t yon come in and try on yours?
Ail widths—A to E—s4.oo and $5.00; made
to measure at $6.00.
CRAIG’S
RED SEAL SHOE SHOP I
93 Peachtree I
MARINES RETURNED
FROM NICARAGUA
HAD BAD CAMPAIGN
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. B.—The]
cruiser Cleveland, under Commander 1
D. W. Blainer, is in San Francisco har- i
bor today after a voyage from the,
scene of the Nicaraguan revolution. The j
Cleveland is the first of the American '
warships to return.
Not. since the Spanish-American war
have American sailors seen such hard
fighting as that in which the landing
parties of the Cleveland engaged, ac
cording to the vesseTs officers.
head clears; keep at it a. few days andi
your suffering and hawking and dis-,
charge of obnoxious mucus will ‘ceased
entirely. Then continue until every]
germ is destroyed; until the soreness
and dryness in the tliroat have disap- I
peared. HY< i.MEI is guaranteed for
catarrh, coughs, colds, sore throat.
I croup, deafness caused by catarrh or
money back. Complete outfit which in
cludes inhaler, can be obtained for SI.OO
at druggists every where.
To break up cold in head or chest in I
a few minutes, pour a scant teaapoon
ful of HYOMEI into a bowl of boiling
water, cover head and bowl with towel
I and breathe the vapor until blessed re
; lief comes in a few minutes. (Advt.)
Men and Religion Bulletin No. 29
THE LAW
“Think Not That I Came
To Destroy The Law,-
I Came Not To Destroy
But To Fulfill.”
To produce money, lawlessness must have undisturbed quiet.
IT HAD BECOME A VESTED INTEREST, SO TO SPEAK. IN
JERUSALEM NEARLY TWO THOUSAND YEARS AGO; AND
THE MEN, WHO FED AND FATTENED UPON IT, WRITHED
AT HEARING ONE SPEAK OF FULFILLING THE LAW AS
JESUS DID.
At first, they sneered and called Him crazy.
But, when He drove forth the thieves and grafters with their long
tolerated methods of grinding God’s poor, the men, whose pockets were
hit, planned to do more than abuse the Carpenter of Nazareth.
To protect themselves and their city, they felt compelled to act,
when men saw Lazarus alive and well; for great crowds were begin
ning to follow Him, who voiced and lived the Law of life and love
this Man, who caused those whom the world called dead to live again.
They met at a friend’s house.
“What do we?” they said. “If we leave Him thus alone all men will
believe on Him; and the Roman will come and take away our place and
nation.”
Caiaphas, the worldly wise, said: “Ye know nothing at all, nor do
you take account that it is expedient for you that one man should
die—”
And so they crucified the Christ.
Hoping to preserve their way of living, they killed Him, Whom
they could not silence, to keep the Roman from interfering.
But, instead of succeeding, their cruel injustice brought destruc
tion upon them.
The Roman came and, with carnage such as had never been seen,
destroyed Jerusalem.
God’s Law was, and will be, fulfilled.
“HAVING EYES, SEE YE NOT? AND HAVING EARS, HEAR
YE NOT? AND DO YE NOT REMEMBER?
God’s truth can not be throttled.
Sooner or later, men throw off the yoke of ever cruel ignorance.
Today, they are doing this not only here, but everywhere.
Fathers and mothers are realizing that “a boy is better unborn
than untaught.”
AND THROUGHOUT THE WORLD MEN ARE PUTTING AN
END TO THE SLAVERY OF WOMEN.
Crime against them is no longer condoned in the name of expedi
ency and hidden beneath hypocritical silence.
Rightly, in the South. Atlanta has taken the lead; without the ad
vice or interference of outsiders, her own Chief of Police has put a stop
to police protected vice, the buying and selling of women with the
knowledge and approval of public officials; instead of punishment and
persecution, her Churches have offered homes and help to the pitiful
victims of men’s greed, and many have accepted them.
But not one house of ill repute, known to the police, is, or will be,
tolerated in our midst.
HERE, AS EVERYWHERE. MEN ARE WAKING AND REC
OGNIZING THAT IN PRIVATE, PUBLIC AND BUSINESS LIFE
THE LAW OF GOD AND ITS FULFILLMENT ARE NOT TO BE
FEARED; IN IT ALONE ARE PEACE AND PROSPERITY
FOUND; AT LAST, HIS LAW IS ONLY COMMON SENSE.
In Boston, another city where policemen do not protect vice, Wil
liam Filene Sons Company, French Jews by birth, are today teaching
these truths to the world in away that can not be overlooked or for
gotten. •
In their great store, the minimum wage for girls is eight dollars a
week.
They will adopt no rule, nor policy, until it has been submitted to
their employees and approved by them.
When their profits reach a certain amount, they divide them with
their employees.
A hospital is maintained for them.
And rest rooms and recreation for their workers are provided in
their store
GOD’S SPIRIT IS AT WORK IN THE WORLD, WHEN MER
CHANTS, WITHOUT THOUGHT OF PREACHING, ADOPT A POL
ICY OF UPLIFTING AND UPHOLDING THEIR EMPLOYEES.
AND A LIVING WAGE FOR WOMEN, AS THE BEST METHODS
FOR DOING BUSINESS.
His Law can not be destroyed.
It will be fulfilled.
THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE OF THE MEN
AND RELIGION FORWARD MOVEMENT.
- J