Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 12, 1912, HOME, Page 7, Image 7

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ifi RULING ON iISURANCE LJUI Governor Asked to Have Felder Rush Opinion on Validity of New ‘Measure. TV ,-iate department of insurance [ expr ,<sed impatience today that no opinion has been rendered by the at toin. general with respect to the con stfturional query recently raised by the governor against the new insurance lav. H ..-as pointed out that the depart ment i_, being hampered more or less in the operation of its business because oft) ■ doubt cast upon the law’s con siitutionality and that, although this doubt specifically was cited to the at torney general’s attention sqme thirty days igo. it never has been set at rest or sustained. With an eye to getting the matter clear, i up. the department of insur ance has submitted to the governor a courteous, but insistent, request that he .ail upon the attorney general to an swer the question propounded by the governs in order that the embarrass ment of the department may be re lieved. Siner the matter was put before the attorney general, he has been busy with the supreme court of the state on the stab s business, and has had to make one trip to Washington, and these things have caused a delay in ansvy.er-( ing the governor’s question, which in volves heavy interests and may be of far-reaching consequence. STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, LUCAS, COUNTY, ss. Frank .1. Cheney, makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney .<■ Co. doing business in the City of Tole do. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUN PI’.IJ' DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall s Catarrh Cure. FRANK .1. CHENEY, Sworn to before pie and subscribed in mv presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. A. W. GLEASON, 'Seal.) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Fanuly Pills for constipation Is Your Time Worth 81=3 Cents an Hour ? I lie telephone is now rec ognized as the greatest pf all limo savers, in the home as well as at the office. Hie time saved in doing, •nit Ane errand a day would •asilv amount to an hour. Hut s one reason more peo pW are ordering Atlanta jiniies. costing only 8 and oents per day; not to ntion constant phone Flection. I A " many of these use our r' !v ' ,, e exclusively, pro tm-sivc merchants are in shilling private branch ex 'Jiauu(>s io meet the grow needs of these Atlanta ire Shoppers.” Atlanta Telephone and telegraph Co. It CONKLIN, lien. Mgr. Two Girls Denounce Their Fathers in Police Court BRIDE HAS PARENT FINED Police court today presented an un usual scenario when two pretty six teen-year-old girls appeared before the bar of justice to denounce their fathers and prosecute them. The two trials were replete with the dramatic. In the first trial, the star witness was’ Miss Ruth Griswold, the young girl who charges that her father, W. L. Griswold, a locomotive engineer, living in Plum street, struck her and snatched her purse Sunday afternoon in Marietta street. In the course of her story, the girl said: "My father has threatened to chain me to the floor. He told me Sunday afternoon that he has the chains ready.” The girl, who said she is unable to live peaceably with her stepmother, has been boarding with a friend for some time, and said her father made this threat in his efforts to get her to go back home. Girl Hysterical With Joy. Griswold admitted he had placed the girl in this boarding house on account of the friction at home, but skid he is now anxious for her to return to the WIFE HAS HUSBAND PUT UNDER BOND TO REFRAIN FROM WORK CHICAGO, Nov. 12.—Let others labor who want to, Mr. Joseph Girsch sits around all day. He has to. If he doesn’t he’ll go to jail. It’s a formal court order. Mrs. Girsch asked for the order. She had her husband arrested for disorder ly conduct. To the court she explained that her husbaifc, who is a molder, is very fond of whisky. When he gets a job, he overworks, then he drinks, then he beats her. She said she had plenty of money. “You’ll have to him under bonds to refrain from working,” she said. “Some men have all the luck,” mused the clerk as he entered the order. SUPREME AND APPEALS COURT JUSTICES SWORN Governor Brown administered the oath of office to the newly elected su preme and appeals court justices at noon today. The .ceremony took place in the governor’s private office. Those taking the oath were Mr. Jus tice Hill. Mr. Justice Lumpkin and Mr. Sstice Atkinson, of the supreme court, d Chief Judge Hill and Judge Pottle, of the court of appeals. HARVESTER SUIT POSTPONED. CHICAGO, Nov. 12.—The hearing of the government suit against the Inter national Harvester Company, sched uled to be resumed today, was post poned this morning until November 22. fGoldsmith-Acton-Witherspoon Co.l I November Clearance Sale of I I Furniture, Rugs and Draperies I Our holiday stock of Wagons, Doll Carts, Velocipedes, Doll Beds, Au tos, Hand Cars and the many other articles destined to fill with gladness the hearts of the little folks, is being opened and space must be obtained to properly display these goods. To that we must reduce our regular stock and that at once. Therefore, for one week only we offer I Furniture, Rugs. * I I and Curtains at prices sure to move them. In this sale will be found Furniture in matched suits and odd pieces for the reception hall, parlor, library, den, living room, bed room, dining room I —as well as kitchen cabinets and ranges for the kitchen. YOU KNOW THE CLASS OF FURNITURE WE SELL. Our broadest guarantee goes with every article that leaves our ware ill rooms. If any article sold does not measure up to your idea of perfection in ■ construction and finish I We Make It Good | If you will need anything in Furniture or the house furnishing line in the next few months it will pay you to I See Us During This Sale I If you do not care to pay in full at the time of purchase we welcome your account and will be glad to arrange satisfactory terms. I Goldsmith-Acton-Witherspoon Co. I 62 Peachtree Street 61 North Broad I Lifetime Furniture, Rugs and Draperies B THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1912. family. He also denied*the girl’s story of the incident of the purse, explaining ,that he was merely trying to induce her to return home. judge Broyles ruled that it would be better for the girl to remain in her boarding house away from her father and stepmother, and the young woman became hysterical with joy. The case of Griswold then was dis missed. As little Miss Griswold affectionate ly kissed her two little brothers and her sister and left the court room, her .place on the witness stand was taken by Mrs. Lois Harley, just sixteen, and a bride of but a month and a half. The girl severely arraigned her father, Chas. Dixon, of 159 Wheat street, and Mrs. Mattie Lou White. The girl had her father and the woman arrested by Po liceman Haslett. Father Draws Heavy Fine. The young bride charg.ed that both man and woman had been selling whis ky promiscuously, and this statement was substantiated by Policeman Has lett, who produced several pint bottles of liquor he had found in a trap in the Dixon home. Dixon and Mrs. White both asserted the girl was merely seek ing revenge because her father had at tempted to correct her. Dixon and Mrs. White were each fined $500.75 or 30 days, and were bound over to the state courts in bond of 1 SI,OOO eaclg As t* two walked back into the prison room, the daughter left the court room without speaking to her father. ■/MAKE A NOTE O’ WE DO THE VERY HIGHEST GRADE Shoe Repairing IN THE CITY AND CHARGE LESS FOR OUR WORK Welt Sewed Soles and Heels of the Finest f* Quality White Oak Tanned Sole Leather fl fl** Spring Step Rubber Heels 0n1y....35c wl O’Sullivan’s Rubber Heels, only . .40c Spring Step and Cats Paw Rußber Heels only 35c The Shoe Renury 80 NORTH BROAD STREET \ PHONES IVY 2310. ATLANTA 1492 ) All Work Called for and Delivered. MM $35,000 SABLE COAT LATEST ACQUISITION OF MRS. DROUILLARD —•— NEW YORK, Nov. 12. —A sable coat, cost $35,000 and which required one year of constant work on the part of six furriers to complete, is the latest acquisition of M<p. J. Pierre Drbuillard, of 1008 Fifth avenue, whose hobby is expensive furs. Mrs. Drouillard's garment is 57 inches long and weighs seven pounds. The skins are exquisitely , matched. Furriers combed every part of Europe getting material for the new coat. A Fighting Cock * I feel like a fighting cock ” is the expression of the man with an active liver —he tackles his work with vim— he is successful —nine times out of ten you will find he takes Tutt’s Pills which have been used bv' a million people with satisfac tory resujt. At your drug gist’s—sugar coated or plain. Chamberlin*Johiison=Dußose Co. ATLANTA NEW YORK PARIS From Estelle Mershon 20 East Forty-Sixth St., New York Have Come Many New Hats For the Winter Season Fur Is Prominent, and Gold and Silver The new winter hats! And how new they are! You must see them, for this display really amounts to an opening of the winter millinery season. • It brings to Atlanta the hats that the smartest of the New York shops are now showing for that inaugural event of the season--The Horse Show, in Madison Square Garden. There are hats for evening and for street wear. And fur trimmings are pre-eminent. One of the smartest you will see here is a fur set— a hat and muff to match. The hat is a rather large , black velvet shape, of soft crown with the side brim faced with chinchilla and further trimmed with a straight black ostrich; the muff is the new bag shape, of chinchilla, draped with black velvet. •* » A seal hat of high crown has a brim of gold; its only trimming is an opossum tail. A very chic turban is of brown fur, with a single upstanding quill trimming «wid a novel little un derbrim in the back. ------Taupe fur is favored, too—in a soft round turban of great charm. Another distinctive seal hat is rather large, high brim—very plain but for the richly colored tapes try flowers tacked irregularly around the brim and crown. Two beautiful and distinguished looking hats of transparent brims are, one of old silver, another of gold, rather large shapes. The one of old silver is graced with a single light blue ostrich plume. The one of gold has a tam-o’shanter crown wreathed with gold and dull pink roses. The brim is wrap ped with a piquot edge ribbon of old blue shade. There is much to be seen and admired. And we shall take a certain amount of pride in showing these hats. Do not stay away just because you do not plan to purchase one. Attractive Nickelware in the Bazaar There are literally hundreds of attractive and useful pieces of nickelware in the Bazaar—so attractive and useful that they recommend themselves at once as fitting for gifts. And we would have you know, too, that these pieces are the best grades of nickelware from domestic and foreign makers. Read the list of some of the things the Bazaar brings; Egg cookers fitted with alcohol burners. Trays and relish dishes of glass and porcelain, nickel mounted. • Casseroles with nickel holders. Coffee machines and percolators with alcohol burners or fitted for electricity. Combination electric toasters—for making coffee and toast at the same time. Chafing dishes—a splendid display of these. Steak planks—nickel mounted. Electric irons. Automobile wickers, fitted for four and six people, in all the necessary nickelware. The “Why” of Bon Ton Corsets Miss Jackson is here demonstrating Bon Ton Corsets. She will show you just why Bon Ton Corsets occupy such a pre-eminent place among the better corsets of ‘this country—the “why” is in the corsets. They are made in sure proportions, of the right materials, and in such a man ner that they never lose their shape. If you have corset ills, now while Miss Jackson is here * is the best time to remedy them! Chamberlin=Johnson=Dußose Company 7