Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 11, 1912, HOME, Page 4, Image 4

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4 ■ DRUNKENNESS IS INCREASING HERE Police Court Cases in 1912 Ex- pected To Exceed 16.000. 15.000 Last Year. With returns 1n fr"in al! but two morphs, the total number of police court cases for the year 1912 is expect ed to exceed 16,00" The 1911 record was 15,013. The total nipnbe: of cases tried to date* is 13,491. Figuring the drunks for November and December at the same ratio as is " shown by the month of October, the number for the whole year will be ■ greater than the number of drunki for last year. The 1911 drunks totalled "2,636. To the first of November the to tal for |his year Is 2.459. During Oc tober 224 drunks were tried the small est monthly record of the ten , with 'Hie exception of January and February. The disorder!) conduct cases for 1911 totalled 6.902, while to the first of ■November this year the total Is 7,507. The greatest nutnhe- of disorderly con ducts cases for any one month this year • was I',ool in August. Volice officials attribute this increase mainly to exten sive violations of the fly screen ordl •nance, for which large numbers of cases were made tills summer and fall. Raids on Tigers Boost Total. This, with the wholesale raids on blind tjgers by the police, is given as the main factors fol the big court showing. “Many tigers have hit th. iliiat dur ing the year,” says Chief Beav.’fs A comparison of the: figures of this .year up to November, with the record ■of last year, is shown by the. following table: 1911. 1912. Disorderly Disorderly Drunks. Conduct. Drunks. Conduct 'Jan'... 208 795 141 ' 503 4 Feb. .. 244 634 179 569 March . 260 777 249 657 • ■'April .. 202 746 240 789 May .. If 702 226 652 • .lujle .. I'J 653 287 780 " Jujy . *34 844 278 995 Aug. ..’194 -308 317 1.001 Sept. .. 214 835 318 879 •Oct. . . 282 703 224 752 Nov. . . 191 569 ... ... Dec. . 304 734 Totals .2,636 8.802 TO HEAD KNOXVILLE HOTEL. B. M. Bradstreet, for seven years ,i clerk at the Piedmont and formerly connected with the Hampton Terrace at Augusta, lias accepted the position of manager of the Hotel Atkin at Knox ville, and leaves soon to take up his new duties. UPSET, BILIOUS. SICK? “CASCARETS” No Headache, Biliousness, bad taste or Constipation by morning. Are you keeping your bowels, livei and stomach clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passage way through these alimentary or drain ages organs every few days with Salts. Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative Waters? Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let r .. Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg ulate the stomach, remove the undigest ed, sour and fermenting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system al! the dbcpmposed waste matter and poi sons 1n the Intestines and bowels. A Casearet tonight will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep—never gripe, sicken or cause any inconvenience, and cost onlv 10 cents a box from your druggist. Mil lions of men and women take a Cas caret now and then and never have Headache. Biliousness, coated tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Consti pated Bowels Cascarets belong in every household. Children just love to take them. (Advt.) The Heating Power of Coal makes nil the dtfferenc< In the price, value, worth. The best grades of coal burn evenly and leave only a tine ash. cheap coal is full of clinkers, slag and slate, but the worst of it is. It chokes up the fire Just when you most want it. We sell the best grades of coal; coal that Is famous for its high percentage of heat units to the ton. b'or years that <‘oa! has given satisfaction to our cus tomers. Orders received In telephone and de livered the sann day. Randall Bros. PETERS BUILDING. MAIN OFFICE YARDS •da- etta street and North Avenue, both Phon. . :t7«: South Boulevard und Gear ailr.ad, It—ll Main l>3s. \t- Mel lanlel -Irt-et an. s .utl.ern :«ur. )( ul. Heli Mum |,l. yil.unu T.i «,4 r ■ pen | V 4|„ Atli * I’r st •. I ' i SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITIOS r By JAMES B. NEVIN. Senator Augustus Octavius Bacon is one of the most picturesque and inter esting figures in the United States sen- 01 ate, and Georgia ought to be proud of him —as, Indeed, of course. Georgia is. By reason of the death of Vice President Sher, man. the senior senator fro m Georgia will pre side over the fu ture deliberations of the senate, as president pro tem pore, for the re mainder of the present congress He was chosen for that distinguished honor by a com- bination of Democratic votes lie re ceived all the Democratic votes of the senate —and a coterie of Progressives. Bacon is universally esteem ed and very highly respected in the senate as an authority on foreign rela tions. As a matter of fact, he is ad mittedly the foremost authority in the senate on that subject, and the com mittee on foreign relations, of which he long lias been a member, is his favorite assignment. In the make-up of the next senate, it is an open secret that Bacon will he permitted to choose his chairmanship. Anything he wishes in that line \vill be conferred upon him by his colleagues— and the senate has made Its own committee assignments, regardless of the wishes and desires of the presi dent of the senate, who is the vice pres ident of the United States. Senator Bacon, it is s&ld. can have a cabinet portfolio, if he desires it, under President Wilson; but those who know the senator do not believe he would exchange his senutorship for a cabinet place—nor for any other place under the presidency, even if opportunity were offered him to do so While* Senator Bacon wist preside as president pro tempore of the senate, he will thereby lose none of ids reptesen tative capacity. His vote may be re corded whenever he desires it. The vice president is not permitted to vote in the senate, save in the case of a tie. Senator Bacon will enter upon his fourth term on March 4 next. He is the first and only senator ever given a fourth term by the state of Georgia . Gee whiz and goshullhcmlock'. I The sweet-tempered dispenser of wisdom byway of this column of up lift never for a. minute intended start ing anything in Home when, on Sat urday, lie said there would be only two candidates for the postmastership of Home under President Wilson, viz;- John 51. Vandiver and “Jack" Mc- Cartney. It seems that, besides Jack and John. Leonard Todd, Nat Hoyt, anti maybe others will throw their hats in the ring, too! Sidelights has been bombarded un mercifully for undertaking to hold down the fight to two —a measly two!—con testants. The imaginary fact that there were to be but two candidates for this fat job seemed to carry a large and un usual element of news to the story printed Saturday. That was the com pelling cause of the Item's publication, as it were. However, one might have known that was too good to be true! GEORGIA HUNTERS NOW SHOOTINGJN FLORIDA THOMASVILLE, GA., Nov. 11,—The season for shooting quail, ducks, etc., opened in Florida on November 1, and although it is still against the law to shoot on the Georgia side of the line, there is nothing to prevent the stepping across to the Florida side and taking a shot at the "little brown beauties." As the line is only about ten miles from Thomasville, sportsmen from here art not put to any hardship in making tin trip. Many from here are taking the opportunity to shoo; ducks on Lak .Miecasukie. where thp supply is said to be unusually tine and plentiful this yea: CHRISTIAN SCIENTISTS TO BUILD CHURCH IN MACON MACON, GA.. Nov. 11 Macon's Christian Science congregation lias for mulated plans for the erection of a church in the heart of the city's most fashionable residence section. A lot has been purchased adjacent to Wesleyan college, at the corner of Madison und Jefferson streets, for 86,000. and a hand some brick edifice will be erected at once Eight years ago there were but few Christian Scientists in Macon. »Nvw the congregation numbers nearly 200. RICH BRIDE’S HUSBAND IS HELD FOR FORGERY . • ST LOUIS. Nov. 11, James F. Bell, a bridegroom ot six weeks, was ar rested by detectives on a charge of passing bad cheeks. The arresT revealed that his bride, wealth) In her own right and member of one of the wealthiest southeast Mis souri families, had been working in a department stor- two weeks because she was too proud to let her relatives know she and her husband were In w ant. Is \ husband cross? An Irritable, fault-finding disposition Is often due to a disordered stomach, A man with good digestion Is nearly always good na'ured. \ great many have been t>er manently cured of stomach trouble b> taking Chamberlain's Tablets. For sale b) All .!•■..!• ■ . \. v t > e <J< ileloUF navers of tne bijjq f rt| o I ■ ' U : ■ MJ ' I AV' •IL’’. '1 V ■ I log! «-M owjids and ineuti , 1 THE ATLANTA GEQK<i lA.\ AM) SKWB. M()X DA Y. N()\HMBEK 11, 1912. it A Georgia editor has been hearing delightful things about the way domes tic .irs will be conducted inside the white house after March 4 next. rte has been reading some mighty fetching words recently uttered by I Mrs. Wilson, and particularly is he pleased with these: “We have always had cooks from , the South, or those who were Southern-born, and they know how to cook chicken better than any body in the world, the governor thinks. Hi would rather have •I chit ken Southern style than a for eign-cooked banquet. 'The govern or's idea of a tine dinner includes chicken Southern style, rice and candied sweet potatoes, with beans .rtid corn, fruit and a silad. Never do we have a meal without rice." Former Representative J. Lindsay . Johnson./>ne of .Georgia's best know n editors, evidently spoke light from the heart when, the day after the big vic tory. h<- exclaimed editorially. “Hur rah for Ellie Lou Axson-JA’llson! ’’ The Hon. "Bgrt’ Cox, of Gilmer county, who played a stal wart in the Morris-Patterson Judicial bo- ■ foie the state Democratic committee in Atlanta a few weeks ago. and whose grand, gloomy and peculiar political g-y- i rations were held in large measure re sponsible for the big Morris near-vic tory In Giltner, won out heavily over ■ his rivals in old Gilmer a few days ago, when he and his entire following swept the county for the local offices. The Hon. “Bart," who for a good many years has been clerk of the su perior court of Gilmer, has Just been elected ordinary, and all the way down the line the county plum tree was shak en successfully for the Coxites. The so-called “boss of Gilmer’’ still ■ is on the job in his vicinity, it would seem—and it looks as if he may be I there to stay put indefinitely, inore ; over. * Even those who .dissent-are admit ting the logic and authorimtiv*4less of Chairman Murphey Candler’s opinion, handed down as part of the record in the mileage “pulling" decision recently tendered by the railroad commission. Mr. Candler is a very studious man, and he went deeply Into the subject in hand, because he was particularly anx ious to go upon the record clearly, and with fairness to all parties to the hear ing. It is interesting, too. that the deci- ■ sion leaves Mr. Candler and Governor Brown on common ground with respect to the disposition of the traveling men’s petition, for Mr. Candler was appointed to the railroad commission by Govern or Brown’s political opponent for so many years. Hon. Hoke Smith. ■ Mr. Camfjer’s attitude is being cited by his fW-nds, however, as convincing evidence of his impartiality and rigid non-partisanship in matters coming be fore the board. It may be stated upon most excellent authority that Judge Newt Morris is to be "taken care of" under the adminis tration of President Woodrow Wilson. Those very close to Mr. Wilson are said to have interested themselves in Judge Morris to such an extent that the former Judge ,>f the Blue Ridge is to have something of a particularly satisfactory sort —indeed, it is said that he is to have the position now held by fbrmer Congressman Carter Tate (the district attorneyship for north Geor gia), tn which event it is probable that Hon. Hooper Alexander, who first was slated for this job, will be switched to “something equally us good." That Morris surely is to “be taken I care of," however, may be accepted as a fact -that much has been decided upon ? f ■ '"’W 1 :iVoice?«O Every woman’s heart rest mds to the charm and sweetness of a baby's voice, because nature intended her for motherhood. But even the loving , nature of a mother shrinks from the ordeal because such a time is usually a period of suffering and danger. Women who use Mother’s Friend are saved much discomfort and suffering, I and their systems, being thoroughly I prepared by this great remedy, are , in a Yealthy condition to meet the time with the least possible suffering and danger. Mother’s Friend is recommended only for the relief and comfort of expectant mothers; it is in , no sense a remedy for various ills. I but its many years of success, and the thousands of endorsements re- I ceived from women who have used it are a guarantee of the benefit to be derived from its use. This remedy does not accomplish wonders but sim ply assists nature to perfect its Vrork. Mother's Friend allays nausaa, pre vents caking of- - breasts, and In every way contributes to ST'. ■*if* strong, healthy 1 IVIIU motherhood. Mother’s Friend ia sold at drug stores. Write for our free book for expectant mothers. BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga. OPEN ALL NIGHT BOTH PHONES 461 r |?pT<* S '2j)R; J 6STURFA FORSYTH AND LUCKIE I “They won’t tease you for pennies so much if you get them this goody that lasts" P BUY IT BY THE BOX « —of any dealer. It costs llttlo by the package, but fess by the box. You save hundreds of pennies by this long lasting confection. You save your children’s teeth. You save their digestion. You save much bothering. You save much ‘stickiness’. This delicious mint leaf juice confection saves in every way— benefits in every way. Look for the spear * The flavor lasts — l -■. - ■ ■— ."■..'l,- * » o Jacobs’ Pharmacy ’ ’ • Invites You to the Opening of their Remodeled and Enlarged Store * Z; 23 Whitehall Street Monday, November Eleventh At 4 to 10 P. M, * Music Come and enjoy with us the pleasure of this festival event. At 4 o’clock in the afternoon we shall throw open the doors of a store which will not only commandyour first enthusiasm and commenda tion but genuinely merit your lasting appreciation. The premises have been completely remodeled, and you will be welcomed to one of the most comfortably arranged as well as one of the most attractive stores in the city. The soda fountain and cigar departments are under our personal management. We have installed a handsome fountain, to serve Jacobs’ ice creams, pure fruit syrup drinks, coffee, chocolate, etc., prepared in our own clean and sanitary kitchens, and well deserving their fame. » New departments are presented and the old ones are enlarged and improved. The entire basement floor is included as a part of the store, with comfortable spaces, good light and pure air. The prescription depart ment is located in the basement in a quiet, professional atmosphere •and where it is more quickly accessible than in the general store. Other changes we shall not mention, for there must be some surprises to greet you. The reception opening will be held from 4toloP. M. Orchestra music. You are cordially invited to attend. JACOBS’ PHARMACY. i • * GEORGIAN WANT ADS BRING BIG RESULTS • I