Newspaper Page Text
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1 SCOTT LETTERS
STOLEN, 15
CUMMING
Georgia Road Counsel Declares
Unions Obtained Correspond
ence Through Fraud.
Major Jos-ph B Cumming. ■’ Au
gusta. repl • nt rg J. IJ. ' uiiming
and Bryrn Cun'.mir.g. gen- . our. <■!
the Georgia railroe.:. «I<* > at the
arbitration hearing tocla* that the let
tars iti the Memory damage < ast hao
been taken "surreptitiously. frauuax ut
ly and as a tnef: from my office."
The Memory case coneerne.; a suit
f,,. S3OO tv" ge- to W It M-'tiioty,
a Greensboro negro whom It was al
leged had been stru?.< on th" i,w.th
a bilile by Conduct..; I’asch.il.
“I took the position with M Scott,”
declared Majo <'u ninlng. "th..; it
Would b<- a mistake so; Paschid to be
dismissed from the . . ;v,’e of the .. ....
on the widen.. brough' forth befo e
the jury in the M- m . > <as He ac
ceded to this, but a later letti to.d that
Paschal had been Lls.-liarge I foi an
other cause. There was no thought or
mention of the pei...lng case nov be
fore the board except fm the at;. . Just
referred to."
Majo <u. • ic .... o- ~.>n e
leading . • i tii. ett." w’.ie i tne
unions sprang yesterday, having been
request'd to so by Judge < 'iiamnets.
Conductor Cleary on Stand.
Taking a position radically dllfer-nt
from that of previous conductor wit-,
nesses. Conductor W. <’. Cleary de
clared that l’" didn't consider 21 min
utes time enough to run a freight train
fo'Ji ml.is between Harlem and Herz’—l
lia, and then put hi: .lain away on tile '
sidetrack. Several other witnesses had |
testified i.,at the fr« ight trains of tit
rtad proceeded at tin- rat. of 25 miles'
an hour, which would be ten minutes j
between the j oints named. Cleary i
thought it would require sixteen min- I
utes to make the run and over live
minutes to j.ut up his train, so ho ■
stopped at his home. Hark i, for an '
eight-hour rest. Inst.-.d of proceedingi
to Berzella
Cleary's testimony brough' M Bur- ■
gess and Mr. Murdock, on the one 1 and, ,
and Mr. Braud ami M.. Wickersham, on ,
the other, into a sharp . lash as prose- ;
cutors and defenders, r< spectively.
"Do you hold Mr. Brand's notes for a
considerable amount or money?''
queried M . Murdock shat ply.
“No, sir,” said the wltner .
"Isn't he Indebted to you'.'"
"No, sir.”
-Mr. Brand brought out the same an
swers.
Here Mr. Burgess g. illed the wilue.- s
by asking:
“What method did yon use to dete.-l
mine that It would take you sixteen ,
minutes to run four miles al the rate
of 25 miles an hour?”
An unsatisfactory un.-we'. caus.-.l ‘
Judge Chambers to declare: "Now. Mr.'
Cleary, it looks to us like you tly
ing to avoid replying to question-.”
"No,” interposed Arbiter Wicker
sham. "I think the wittier: ha.s been I
confused by the flgme
Cleary Once Suspended.
"Are you pre pa rd to say on oath,"
asked Mr. Murdock, of the road's wit
ness, "that you didn't have it under
stood with the crew of your train ilia;
if eight hours of rest was to |>c talo n
on that trip it would be taken at H.'r. I
lem ?"
"No. sb - ." answe ed C.-n.im to Cleu.y.l
“there was no such understanding."
The union leavers continued to a-sail ;
the road on its tactics, ,\1 . Murdock
declaring that it was a part of th?
'system' for M Brand to take down
Statements of employees at th time of
accidents and later present the state
ments in court In garbled form.
Cleary ha I been -impended for a
head-on collision, but was later taken
ba.-k when he acknowledge,] that he
had made a mistake in re mlng orders
This point ; - brought out to show
that tne road would have taken Con
ductor Paschal back had he made like
acknowledgement of his alleged error.
A.. B. & A. WILL MOVE
OFFICES TO MARIETTA
STREET JANUARY IST
The Atlama, Eirminglam and ttlundc'
Railroad Company will move from Its
present offices In the Atlanta, Birming
ham and Atlantic building, Fairlie and I
Walton streets, to «3-8 t Marietta, street.
January 1..
It is underatcxxl that :.r so ■ ul’e. Xi I
lltnta. Birmingham and ttlantic build
ing. which is owned by tl e Georgia Kall- |
way and Electric Company. will be used
as the offices of the Georgia F wel . C ' uln . ,
party. Thl» i. live stories in height and 1
the other building three. Th. railroad !
will use the second and third doors.
The leading officials of the road who.
will move are H. M. Atkinson, receiver;
K. T. Lamb, general manager: B. L. Bugg,
ussltant general manager, H. W. Colson,
general claim agent: M T Kollar, as-’
sistant genera! claim agent. H M Milam,
treasurer; J Edwards, traffic manager
f B Kealhofer, general freight agent:
W H. Leahy, general passenger agent. C.
E. Renfroe, superintendent of buildings;
E B. Rock. Jr., superintendent of trans
portation; J. L. Harnar, auditor, and W.
A Hummel, purchasing agent.
ATHENS FIRMS CAUGHT.
ATHE S GA.. Nov. H Several!
Athens firms are vitally affected by th. |
failure of the I'arr. Boy d Co., of Mavs- I
ville. ..f which concern petition for In
voluntary bankrupt, y Im* been filed In
r '.-r:,', comt. Among •' •• Athens fl ,:
>•..■■<4 are Ha.d-man & lldul.-.y J
M ■!' A' 'o.t Ariiohi <.' -ry <
. ' T dii udg. th v >- to.er , aim E.n-i
! JOY AND GLOOM |
Copyright, 1912. Ly International News Service.
WiU. You SUREd ? ( You BET I
HONAE FOR DINNER. * DEAR, HOME NDYhu GET InTo'ML' CYLINDER CAR IN FRONT OF
DINNER. MaT7SHARP\ JIUIOU Ati in |QM, )( ThE CL(j% cosAE and
/ X — z — z / TAf.E'AuOOK AT T
I ' ■ 111
• 5T7 V \ V; j
qREA, SCCTT ,ys 10, ; ( AH. 1 QET UP 50ME UEY ILL Ql\lt You AV. To TAKE Me)
' abound the to /ay
S - |S Os S
I p 1 ' 'W/ .n > T :
□2- v..;Wfc F L- "
NO ONE SEEHS ] ~ g—> ' HERE'S THE KiJ *
FAIMTEO W 1 MA CALLED
r- 1 XHETHEaVe ’
A -XZn CYfWir - ? J 0 " - WITHTHEA\
Z 4 ' 1 /X - ®a/«
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rx. <T Jit ■ i (t o
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I
i i i
BAPTIST WOMEN!'
SWROKS
MGUSTV GA., Nov, 14. Tin rc -| 1
port of dfiirlct superintendent:- from 1
all pa-is . f Georgia on the of i
missionary v. ork, and an able address ,
lby Revrt 11. <'. Buchholz, missionary
' evangelist of the Woman’s Baptist Mi -
I skin ary Union of Georgal, constituted
- the features of the morning session to
‘ day. Tlie reports from the superintend-
ents developed the fqct that much
greater progress is being made through ,
out Georgia in the mission work than '
ever before.
The best methods of getting women
interested in the w.c k were discussed.
Mr. Buchholz sties.-' d four points us*
essential for success in missionary
work - information, organization, co
■ operation and present; tlom" Mr. Buch- ,
hoiz was listened to with the closest ■
attention throughout. ,
At 1:15 o'clock tin convention ad
journed until 3:3m o’clock, t'tticers will ,
| be. chosen at the meeting tomorrow.
Ministerial Relief Report.
kt the session y. sterday afternoon |
' devotional exercises wen led by Mrs. ■ 1
T. Z. 1 'aniel, After ce.iain rccommgu- ■
datiotis had beer, made by the txe u
tive board in regard to the work tor .
the -m ulng year, a report was read by
Mrs. G. A. Turner on "Uur Benevo-I
’.-me- Ministers' Relief ami < nphans’
. Home." This report showed that ntore : |
nutiey had been expended during the |
past year for minister.-’ relief and or
phans’ home than had ever been before
Mrs. Erank Scarboro then read a re- ,
port on "S. B. C. Institutional Work
<
and Training School.’
Georgia .Scholarships in Training
School" was reported on by Mrs. H. A. t
Etheridge, and "Mission Study Classes" ,
by Mrs. L. ,1. Simpson. <
At tile night session the devotional 1
service was led by Revfl R. E. 1.. Har
ris The feature of this service was an 1
address with stereopticon Illustrations
on "Home Missions." by Dr. John F
Vines, of Anderson. S. (.’. He -bowed i
the gr. it need of home missions being
en mraged by picturing communities
In which there was no attention paid tv
I this work. I
GAS TANK EXPLODES IN
HOTEL INJURING SEVEN
T< ‘WEB I TTY. III'. Nov '4 Sev. ; ;
• mils \\i <► HijUi** I fO’Liy l>\ t* <\ !<
| !• «»r’un u! u tank hi n hv’.c
TIT!': ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEY’S. THURSDAY. NOYEMBER 14, 1912.
CONG. ABERCROMBIE '
OF ALABAMA IS HERE;
CALLS ON GOVERNOR
John W. Abercrombie, newly elected I
congressman at large for Alabama and
candidat* so. the United States senate I
to succeed Joseph N. Johnston, the
present jmiio: senator, ca, ■ d at the
capitol today to pay his respects to
Governor Brown and to spend an hour
o so witii a forme schoolmate. State
Superintendent of Education Merritt.
The contest for Senator Johnston’s
tiiga is going to be highly interesting,
because, while the senator himself has
no thought of giving it up unless he
has to, Representative Richmond Pear
son Hobson is and has been for many
months a candidate for the job. Mr.
Abercrombie's entrance into tile tight
decidedly complicates matters, as he is
one of Alabama's most popular men. 1
' While 1 have not yet been sworn as j
a member of tile house,” said Mr. Aber- ;
crombie. ’"I have been keeping pretty
close tab on tile d.-v. loping situation. It
looks to m<- as if j lans vil’ be sliaj ed
u,p by tin Demo'-ruts during the re
mainder of the present congress for
quick work In the next. Mr. T’nder
woo<; 1 as the tariff question well in
band and knows exactly what the party
!■ pledged to, and how those pledges
may be carried out most surely and 1
with promptness.
It ooks as if we sha" have an extra !
session of congress pretty soon after i
Ma-ch 4 ”
PHYSICIAN MARRIES NURSE
HE FIRST MET IN HOSPITAL
SAVANNAH, GA.. Nov 14. Full.,wing '
the arrival in Savannah of Dr. J. J. With- '
ers. of Davidson, N. C., and Miss Lottie -
E. Feimster. of Waycross, a rAmantic I
marriage was consummate.! late yester
day. Miss Feimster is a trained nurse in
the Atlant.. Coast Line hospital at Way
cross. She met Dr. Withers there when
he came from his home in North Carolina
to appear before the state medical board
for a license to practice his profession In
Georgia They left Waycross yesterday,
accompanied by Dr. Z K. Justice. Their
friends anticipated that they were off to
be married.
OUT FOR U. S. ATTORNEY.
GADSDEN ALA. Nov. 14 John
Inzer, a prominent lawyer of this city
mid a lifelong Ihmiocrat. is being .spok
en of as a possible candidate for United
State-- cist: • att.. ney of the Xorthein
dlfct.at of Alaban. y The place is now!
by <» D s " ■ I;. an
Gunte sv ~ M-. tux,. . 1,-,-n inti)- I
v'.ubm , num!.. ~<■ ■<« )• ic . r«t >■* I
FARM EXPERTS
More than 150 representatives of the
administrative departments of state ag
ricultural colleges and experiment .sta
tions are holding u jubilee in Atlanta
today Tile celebration is commemo
rative of tile establishment of the Fed
eral department of agriculture and the
pas-age of the Morrill land grunt acts
of 1862. which virtually made every
state agricultural school in the United
States.
It was just fifty years ago that scien
tific agricultural development in Amer
ica received its greatest impetus,.when
. the Federal government offered the
, states liberal appropriations for the es
tablishment of state schools. Twenty
five years later congress passed the
Hatch ict, which made possible the es
tablishment of the stat, experiment
stations.
It is- flic anniversary of the two—
the fiftieth anniversary vt one and the
tw uty-tlfili anniversary of the other —
that the members of the Association of
American Agricultural Colleges and
Experiment Stations gathered f > cele
brate at the Piedmont hotel at 9 o'clock
th', me. ning. Sixty-seven representa-
I fives of static and dependency* colleges
j and 50 representatives of experiment
I -Rations are in attendance at a two days
| convention.
Today 's program was featured by Dr
| A. l'. l rue. Federal head of tile state
i experiment stations; W. < >. Thompson, I
i pieslden: of the < liiio State university,
; representing the i.'hio Agricultural col
! lege, and Dr. H. C. White, of Geor
; Kia.
Dr. True's address, made at 9:30
o'clock, was ent’rely historical, and de
tailed the development of the s.-lentitie j
agricultural movement in the United
States, from the establishment of the
boar,! of agriculture in 1796 through the
creation of the department of agricul
ture in 1862, down to pres-ent-day de
velopments In agricultural education.
Dr. Thompson spoke on "The Influ
ence of tlie Morrill Act Upon Ameri
can Higher Education." declaring that
tlie educational development of Ameri
ca was due as much to the govern
ment's liberality tn agricultural educa
tion as any one tiling.
Dr. White spoke on the work of tlie
stat< oerlment stations, detailing th' :
results ..blamed by tlie G..- gla statfotM
Hid th- impetus it hud given scientific i
I. gileultural vdltcullon in Georgia I’l c
J S .mil, .»■ -:d.l. <> ,1 its .-Cent .via ul-
tural aw.ilv nlm, io tin '-<,rk of tip
I sin*, .oh-if' * 'Ud tie cxjerhii' Ut ata- 1
POTTING GATTS IN
PLAGE NOIN FOR
MOTOR SHOW
Taft Hall Is Ready for Opening
and Main Auditorium Will
■
Soon Be in Order.
The. ears are going in place fast for
the Atlanta Automobile show that opens
I r* turday. AH the decorations and
illumination fixtures are up in Taft hall
;nd the ears will all be in position by
night. Some of the cars will go in
place in the main auditorium today and
others will be installed tomorrow morn
ing. By Friday night every ear should
be In place in every exhibit.
A brief description of what will be
shown in each exhibit is here given:
About the Exhibits.
In the Overland section will be shown
a polished chassis of the Model 69. a
four-passenger torpedo, a two-passen
ger roadster and a five-passenger tour
ing ear, all on the Model 69 chassis.
The big car of tiie Overland line, the
No. 71, will be shown in four-passenger
and five-passenger bodies. In addition
to this will be also a seven-passenger
Garford.
The Overland company wi’. exhibit
also an assortment of forged parts used
In making the Overland car.
Another feature will be a series of
photographs of the Overland factory,
showing the various departments and
the processes of manufacture. These
photographs will be mounted and placed
on racks where they will be easy of
access.
The Cole Motor Company in its space
will show a C'oie limousine, a Cole
coupe and Cole four and seven-passen
ger touring cars. 1n... addition, it will
exhibit an Alco 3 1-2-ton truck and a
Federal one-ton truck.
Tiie space of the Atlanta Auto Sales
Company will be given over to a show
ing of National, Flanders, Colonial
Electric and Henderson cars. Tiie Na
tional shown will be a 40-horsepower,
five-passenger machine; tiie Flanders
is a 50-horsepower, seven-passenger
“Big Six.” The Henderson is a 44-
horsepower, five-passenger machine.
Will Show One Pope.
Tiie Pope-Hartford space will be
given over to one single car —a Model
si. This is the new, lower-priced ma
chine, a car that L. S. Crane, the local
agent, believes will be the sensation of
the show and the season. No other
cars of the many in the Pope-Hartford
line will be on exhibition, but a 1913
Pope motorcycle will be shown.
In the Firestone-Columbus Southern
Company's space will be shown three
models of the four-passenger Columbus
electric coupes, one electric roadster, a
Firestone-Columbus six-cylinder tour
ing ear, a four-cylinder touring car and
a 40-horsepower, four-cylinder, three
passenger roadster, equipped with the
much discussed wire wheels.
The big feature of the Premier show
ing will’be the Ocean-to-Ocean Prairie
schooner. This is the craft that carried
the baggage of the first trans-conti
nental tour of private owners in motor
history. In addition, there tvill be a
polished chassis, a Premier Little Six,
rive-passenger routing car. and a Big
Six, seven-passenger touring car. A
Baker Electric coupe will also be shown
in this space.
The Velie Motor Vehicle Company will
have a handsome display. The show
ing will consist of a 40-horsepower li
mousine, a five-passenger “10,” a three
ton truck, a Velie Dispatch and a Velie
No. 32.
The Oakland Motor Company will
make a particularly handsome showing.
On display will be a Model 42 chassis,
a 42 touring car. a coupe, a six-cylinder
and 60-horsepower touring car.
John E. Smith will show five cars—a
Pierce-Arrow limousine, 38 horsepower,
and a touring car, seven-passenger, 48
horsepower, and three Chalmers, a sev
en-passenger, slx-clyinder; a five-pas
senger, six-cylinder, and a four-passen
ger, four-cylinder, 36 horsepower.
Tiie Chalmers educational parts ex
hibit will be shown tn the Smith space.
This consists, in effect, of a (.'halmers
ear torn down. It shows tiie motor,
self-starter, and most of the prominent
parts of the ear.
Stearns Show Cut-Away Motor.
Three cars and a cut-away motor, to
demonstrate the Silent Knight engine,
will be shown in the Stearns Motor
Company booth, and two others may
be in place before the show closes. Tne
cars shown are a four-cylinder, seven
passenger touring ear; a four-cylinder,
five-passenger touring ear, and a four
cylinder, three-passenger roadster.
The Sigma Engineering Company
will show the only Southern made ear
in the lot —the Corbitt touring ear. In
addition, it will display the Standard
Electric coupe and two Haynes cars, a
limousine and a five-passenger touring
car.
The Fulton Auto Suplpy Company Is
showing four machines. In the Hudson
line the showing consists of a limou
sine, four-cylinder: a torpedo touring
car, six-cylinder, and a roadster, four
i cylinder. In tiie Marmon line the ear
shown will be a four-cylinder, five-pas
senger touring ear. The new Marmon
Six could not be secured in time for the
show.
The plans of the E-M-F Corporation
are a ttitle uncertain owing to the fact
that new ears may be shipped down for
this show. At the start the exhibit will
consist of a Hupp-Yeats coupe, u
H-C-H touring ear and a B-C-H road*
The Ford Company will show four!
! ma. bines of ha world famous T line •
I a touring car, a torpedo, a delivery
v :gon nd a moving .■basais,
'l' Mitchel! Con i .■tiy i„ in ,|,.-)b* :
■ '<. It., showing. Apj .:*■!,tiy It wn. |
n.A e f jl! .It, -fit- 1913 . . qot tl,.
4: -
Rich Woman Starves
To Death Fasting to
Cure Stomach Ills
Abstaining From Food 37 Days
Too Much for St. Louis
Invalid.
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 14.—After
1 fasting lor thirty-seven days in an
11 effort to cure chronic stomach trouble.
Mrs. Elsie Crewe, a wealthy- woman, is
dead here today of starvation.
She came to Long Beach with her
; two daughters from St., Louis some
j months ago. She decided to try the
fast. cure. Monday she became very
. weak and ate a light lunch. She was
taken ill shortly afterward.
KF.NTUCKY U. DxC.
MEMBERS PACIFIED;
ABE’S STATUE STAYS
WASHINGTON. Nov. 14.—After sev
eral executive sessions with the general
officers of the United Daughters of the
Confederaev. members of the Kentucky
(Legation have reached a compromise
on their proposition to remove the
statue of Abraham Lincoln from the
state capitol at Frankfort and replace
it with one of Jefferson Davis, presi
dent of the Confederacy. A member of
the delegation said today:
, “Os course, we would rather replace
the Lincoln statue, but there is nothing
to prevent us ordering a statue of Jeff
. Davis, which will be a few inches high
er than the Lincoln memorial.”
Mrs. Alex B. White, of Paris, Tenn.,
the present president general of the
United Daughters, is a candidate for
, re-election. But she is at the bedside
oi her dying husband and the cohorts
of Mrs. Livingston Schuyler, of New
, York, have taken advantage of Mrs.
White’s absence to press the candidacy
. of the New York woman.
RAILROADF.R. FIRED, SUES
SUPERIOR FOR DAMAGES
GADSDEN, ALA., Nov. 14—II. H.
. Stewart, formerly a switchman on the
Louisville and Nashville railroad, has
i brought suit against E. L. Russell, local
yardmaster, asking SIO,OOO damage for
I libel. He claims that Russell addressed
a letter to higher officials making un
, true accusations against him; that he
I was discharged in consequence, and
■ that he has been unable to secure em
ployment since.
GEN. EVANS BACK TOMORROW.
CHATTANOOGA. TENN., Nov. 14.
Brigadier General Robert K. Evans has
! announced that he will be in Atlanta
tomorrow, leaving here tonight. This
; will prevent his being entertained here.
> as had been planned by the local civic
bodies. General Evans inspected tiie
Eleventh cavalry, mounted, this mom
-1 ing.
date of their arrival is largely- a matter
with the railroads. They have been
' shipped. This is a new line and an iji
' teresting one, for it departs far front
1 the conventional American design.
C. 11. Johnson will make a showing
of Stevens-Duryea cars and Chase
trucks in his space. In the Stevelis
i Duryea exhibit will be a seven-passen
ger touring car. a five-passenger tour
ing car and a stripped chassis. There
will also be an exhibit of finished parts.
‘ showing the materia! and construction.
In addition, a Chase light delivery wag
on and a one-ton truck of the same
L make will be shown.
The Michigan, a new car in Atlanta
■ shows, will be shown in four models.
All are touring cars, four-cylinder, 40
1 horsepower.
The Buick < 'ompany. owing to a
change in management, finds itself with
but little space. In this small space
it will show two ears, probably Mod
| els 30 and 40.
' The locomotive Company r.f Amer
ica will show a. Big Six. seven-passen
ger touring car, and a Little Six. five
' passenger model.
Send Cars by Express.
I George W. Hanson returned today
i from Detroit, where hg went to look
i over the new cars of tin- Studebaker
; line. He announces that his branch will
' show seven models. One, the new
Studebaker Six. is coming overland
from Detroit, and will not be here be
fore Monday ox* Tuesday*. Tiie other
new models were shipped yesterday by
express. The cars shown will be a "20”
roadster, a "20" touring car. a "25”
i touring car, a "30" touring car, a "35”
touring car. a "40” touring ear. and a
' delivery wagon.
SURELV SETTLE?
OPSET STOMACHS
I
“Pape’s Diapepsin” ends
Indigestion, Gas, Sourness
in five minutes,
“Really does" put bad stomachs tn
order—"really does" overcome indiges
tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sour
ness in five minutes—that—just that—
makes Rape's Diapepsin the largest
| selling stomach regulator In the world,
I ll’ w hat you eat ferments into stubborn
lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour,
undigested food and acid; head Is dizzy'
and aches; breath foul, tongue coated;
your insides tilled with bile and indi
gestible waste, remember the moment
Dlapep’ln comes in contact with the
stomach all such distress vanishes it's
truly astonishing almost marvelous,
and the joy is its harmlessness.
\ 60 ■ .■• t Pape iif ~
pepsin will ghe yo,i a hundred dollars'
worth of satisfaction or you druggist
I hands you y our money back.
' It's worth Ils weight in gobi to men I
.nd women who can’t get t .1 atom*
jn h» regulated It b< mg> In .r
J oine should a'uai- b- [o-pt handy h'l
of H ■!■ Hoti! Up*. : I. ‘..a i‘ d>| - |
' Ing th.* lay o ;it n’; ■ ii' r . qq'ei,.
'? tor lij (I • . I' 11 )
WDGINGTO
TELL ■ PLANS
Chief of Staff to Discuss Brig,
ade Post for Atlanta at
Banquet Next Month.
General Leonard Wood, chief of ,
_ of the United States army, will
the future plans of the army and d',
cuss the advisability of making Fort v
Pherson, near Atlanta, a brigade ..'Y
; at a banquet at the Capital City club G'
month. ex
Desiring to further the movemen* - r
secure a brigade of United States -eg,
lars for Atlanta, the Chamber of r-Y’
merce through a special committee ■
, day decided to Invite General w Oo j 7
i be present at a banquet to be held
the Capital City club on December 1$
General Wood, it is understood will ar
cept the invitation and explain the 'rea
sons why Atlanta should or should rm
have an additional 2,000 soldiers nia. o,
' at the fort. p J
Every member of the chamber will 1„
. invited to be present at the dinner a *
. will a number of other prominent L-ith
, zene. The leading army officers Y
tioned at or near Atlanta will also br
, present, as will Governor Joseph q
Brown.
Geenral R. K. Evans, commander O s
■ the department of the gulf, has informed
■ the committee on arrangements that be
. will be glad to act with them. Others
on the committee are Clark Howell
chairman, Wilmer L. Moore, E e Pom-'
eroy, Forrest Adair, John E. Murphy F
• J. Faxon, Geenral C. L. Anderson. Geip
‘ eral W. G. Obear. Colonel W. L. Pee
■ and Robert F. Maddox.
20-YEAR BRIDGE WAR
IS BROUGHT To e ND
BLOOMINGTON, ILL.. Nov. U.-Agita
tion lasting twenty years among Iliim.i*
river captains demanding that the Bur
lington bridge in LaSalle county be
, equipped with a draw has at last been
1 successful. The road will immediate!)
make a change which will enable steam
ers to proceed as far north as Ottawa
• and Marseilles.
elevenlredrowned
AS VESSEL FLOUNDERS
OTTAWA, ONT., Nov. 14.—Elev,:
' persons were drowned Tuesday night
in Harris bay- when the stern wheeler
Mayflower foundered, according to i
report received here today.
SPECTACLES AID SIGHT
OF ARKANSAS SETTER
LEADHILL, ARK., Nov. 14. -"Min
, nesota Fanny,” an English setter, v < a *
spectacles which are held in place b
straps and look like goggles.
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR RALLY
The local union of Christian ij,
deavor will hold its ijtll rally wita t>
West End Christian church, corner *■:
Gordon and Dunn streets, torpor: u«
evening. This is the first meeting
the season and the union will ;.J.
' plans for fall and winter work
HOLD WEEK OF PRAYER.
The Woman's Missionary societ; ■
i Grace Methodist church will obs■ vi
“home mission week of prayer” N<
. tember 17-24. Services will b* h<
every day at 3 o’clock. On I’riday at
■ all-day meeting will be held.
LESS BOWEL TROUBLE
I
IN ATLANTA
- - L
Atlanta people have found out ti . '
SINGLE DOSE of simp. b;i<-
bark, glycerine, etc., as cotnpour.
Adler-i-ka, the German app. pi', :t
remedy, relieves constipation, sou.
stomach or gas on the stomac.: 'N
STANTLY. This simple mixture ..
■ septicizes the digestive organ* .
draws off the impurities ami it is •- i
I prising how QUICKLY it helps . A l',
I - -
If
THE ATLANTA
Tonight 8:15,
briday. Sat. Mat., Sat Night
KLAW & ERLANGER Preset.
the pink lady
Musical Comedy de Luxe
100 in Cast.
, N'gi.ts, 50c to $2; Mat. 50c to <
SEATS NOW SELLING
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
Wednesday Matinee
The Real Robt. W. Chambers
THE COMMON LAW
Night, 25c to $1.50: Mat. 25c to SI.OO
- Read the 800k —See the Play
RPANn KEITH Today at 2:30
unxnu VAUDEVILLE Tonight at_6
Introduclng-’for the First Time
HENRY E. DIXEY
In Hlb "Mono-Drama-Vaude-Olcu *
Rosalind Coghlan <& Co., Jungmai’n-
Family, Olive Briecoe, Donovan *
McDonald Stine, Hume <4 Thoma?
*Loughlin’s Comedy Dogs.
Next Week: “DETECTIVE KEEN_2_
FORSYTH--Little Emma Bunting
THIS WEEK | NEXT WEEK
Wishing Ring TheTwo Orphans
Ml,, Bunting a. tl’ f.irl
•LITTLE SALLY” B"™ G/fl
SEATS ARE NOW SELLING
Mate. Tuei., Thur*, and Saturd ’
The Merry Girly Show TH I
WINNING WIDOW
A Mue«cil Comedy Worth *
• . » | AM »’• -