Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 19, 1912, HOME, Page 2, Image 2

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2 FICWING CEASES FOR DHL Os MR DEAD Armistice of Eight Hours Taken by the Opposing Forces at Constantinople. Continued From Page Ore. the fighting ninth ..f ' . 'alj.t to Lak- Derkos eorsisted unit of an artillery battle. without infantry or ■ .valry being engaged <>n M"n<lay 1 >■ fight ing again continued >’ I'liatalja and the Lake of Biyuk Chekmeji along the Turkish left Ming A regino nt of "o<> Bulgarian avalrynu n. I<l by a Turk ish guide, entered the village of Biyuk Chekmeji. nt the southern end of the lake, and almost within the Turkish lines, anil secured food from a Greek priest. Two Bulgarian spies entered the Turkish lines and tried to blow up the railway station at San Stefano, but Mere dete -ted and shot. The scenes at Hadmekui, the heart of the Turkish camp, where choleia. ty phus and smallpox are ravaging the army, are appalling beyond description. Countless corpses dot the fields, ami at lioints the dead bodies liavi been tilled ■in heaps awaiting burial. The faces of the dead are black from the disease and their features are contorted in the final agonies of death. Servians Clamor To Fight Austria BELGRADE. Nov. 19. Ant i- A ust i ian demonstrations, including the celebra- ( tion of the Servians victory at Mon-I astir, took place here last night and | today. The Servian government took j no steps to che< k them. Servians cat t ying flag- pa tided the | streets shouting: "Turkey has been defeated. VV< will tight Austria najtt." Many Hungarian residents have left the city, crossing the frontier to Hun garian territory. Shops owned by Hungarians ,we:e stoned. Premier Pasitch today refused to comment upon Austria's threat to make an Immediate military demonstration ' upon the Servian frontier, but it is learned from a reliable source that, de spite the general plan of the allies to use Servian troops in the western end of the Balkan peninsula, nt least thrc.«- quarters of the Servian army at .Mon astir will be held near at home to pre vent any invasion of Servian territory by Austrian troops. The Servian government had prom ised to send 50,01X1 soldiers to join the Bulgarians in the attack upon Con stantinople. but these troops will likely be held in Setvia or mar the Servian frontier Austria Becoming Deeper Involved VIENNA, Nov. 19.—Unless S.ivia Immediately makes a frank statement of her intention n garding tile Adriatic seaports. Austria will make an impos ing military demonstration upon the Servian frontier. Tin government com pleted its plans for a combined land and sea movement today. At the saint time an ultimatum lias been drawn demanding an explanation of the attack upon the Austrian consul. Mr. Procltaska, by Servian soldiers at Prlsrend. Complications are also threatened with Montenegro, us Gen eral Martinovitih. the Montenegrin Mar minister, has ordered the seizure of all Austrian mail bound for Scutari. Because the councils allowed friend ly demonstrations in favor of the Balk ans. the Austrian government today dissolved the municipal councils of the Dalmatian towns of Spalato and Ze beiuco. 20,000 Killed in Siege of Monastir HENNA Nov 111 A telegram from Lskub states that 20,iii>o soldiers Mere killed on both side < during the fighting which resulted in the capture of Mon astir The Servians captured $10,000,- ”00 worth of booty when the city fell. YOU'RE “ALL TO THE GOOD” when the appetite is keen and your digestion perfect; BUT WHAT A DIFFERENCE when the stomach “goes back" on you. when the liver becomes lazy and the bowels clogged. In sinh cases von need HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS right away. It really doos the work. All Druggists. Admits Sen s Weakness; Fights Again fcr Babies TILLMAN FORGETS PRIDE 4 Benjamin R. Tillman. Jr., and his former wife. Half-Blind Senator Desperate,; Fearing Grandchildren May Leave State. < OI.t'MRIA, S. <■.. Noy. I'.l Half blind, broken in -body and spirit, and with but a fetv more years to live. Sen ator Tillman has at last admitted that his son has been a drunkard, thus sac rificing his pride that he may again see his two beautiful grandchildren, Douschka and Sarah. For more than three years, since the separation of Benjamin B Tillman, Jr., and ins wife, the old senator lias fought for the children, whom he loves beyond anything In the world. Leaving Washington two years ago. lie hurried to his home In South Caro lina. and personally drew and took into a court a petition asking that lie lie given the custody of his grandchildren. "We love them,” he wrote in the midst of the formal legal paper. "We love them, and will care for them ten derly.” But tile young Mi s. Tillman, who was formerly Lucy Dugas a granddaughter es former Governor Pickens, stubbornly fought for her babies, denying the old statesman's contention that she was not doing well by them. Mother Wins Children. She set up In her answer that he divorced husband was a drunka d. that he could not support the children, and that they would be b with her than with him or his kin And. despite Senator Tillman's great intltynee. the court denied his petition and permitted his daughter-in-law, who had been restored to Iter maiden name of Dugas. to keep her little ones. Then came die paralytic stroke that nearly cost the senator his life, and from which lie was slow to recover, even sufficiently to resume his duties at Washington. Thtough the days of his partial con valescence lie mourned for the children, repeatedly calling for them when he was not himself, and begging that they be brought to his side when he could receive any visitors at all. He was at a loss to understand at first what had become of them. The babies- w ho had been his joy and pride whom he loved with a tender devo tion that he bestowed on few human beings, could not come to him it yvas puzzling. Why was It? Witli further recovery came realiza tion. and from that blow it was thought In would not recover. Gradually of late he has been gaining strength. Deeply humiliated by his son's weakness, lie refused to admit it. or to speak of it till it became neces sary. in order that he might have a bet ter claim on the children. Habit Cured, He Contends. Now, with a> much strength as will ever be his. he has brought himself tn admit that his son has been a drunkard, but at tile same time he contends that the boy lias been cured of his weakness and that once more he is a tit person to take charge of his own children The determination to take this hu miliating eoui.se was brought about by the fact that Mis. Dugas Contemplates leaving tin state. \s so -n as the sena te heard of this intention be forthwith gathered hints* if together anti drew th.- new petition, in which, owning that ills son has bit n addicted to drink. In quvti.s affidavits to the effect that tile li.iM A < -LUKUIAA AXVTtfh S. I I UXDAI . .MM ILAIIST.IT IM. IMII. HUNTING SEfiSUN IS ON TOMORROW Atlanta Sportsmen Prepare for Big Season Birds Said To Be Plentiful. Atlanta huntsmen are oiling their favorite guns today, digging their kha ki clot lies out of tile moth bags and laying in fresh stores of ammunition. Pointers and setters have been brought in from their country boarding farms and titled with new collars and leashes. Sporting goods houses are yvorking messengers overtime in delivering load ed shells, hunting bags and other para pho, nail i of the field. For the hunting season opens wide tomorrow, and lov ers of the field are getting ready for it. "it promises to be tin? biggest season I for partridges in years," said one gun dealer in Peachtree street, as he ac cepte i a check for a hundred rounds of shell- and a few odds and ends. “They say the south Georgia fields are full of them. I know at least a dozen hunting parties which will leave Atlan ta tonight, to l.i in the field by dawn tomorrow." .1 J. Ilroyvn, assistant commissioner of agriculture, is one of the capitol officials wiio Himis it hard to stay in the office after the first frost ripens the pt unions tnd sends the coveys of birds into the open He yvas debating today wlii ii on- of several invitations to hunt lie would accept. Probably’ he w ill accept th. in all before the fall season clo-cs "A friend of mine lias written mo to come up and shoot a wild turkey or so for Thanksgiving,” he said. “lie says there ar. three big droves in tile moun. tains near his home. They're right up between but I'm not going to let you put that in the paper. They wouldn't lie there by the time I arrived. "South Georgia friends of mine tell me then are more birds out this sea son than in a coon's age. They say the tields are just full of them.” Tiie creation of the office of game ward n and the increased attention paid to enfor incut of the game laws evidently has had its effect in increas ing the supply if birds. Os course, ip. Georgia parlance, "birds" means par tridges. or. as tlie “ignorant" folks up North ,-ay. "quail." Gam Commissi mer Mercer ruled to day that tlie open season begins to morrow. Tin re has been some confu sion in the minds cd' the sportsmen, tlie s.atute saying "between November 20 ..nd March 1.” .’dr. Mercer rules that Novembet 20 is included in the “be twi-.ii, - - hunter.- need fear no trouble tomorrow. •ung is on< e mot ■ the master of himself • 1. 1' Justice G a y lias set November -’»> 1- r the hearing. The children's fa ther as tiled with the court copies of letters sent by him to his foimer wife, together with her answers, as trans mitted by her attorneys, showing his >v< for her and the children, his efforts m-ii rit ion, ' t o manm rin which hi has been rvpuln.d WOODWARD MEN DECLARE FIGHT IS WON Declare They Have Sufficient Votes Already Pledged to Save Old Crematory. Friends of James G. Woodv. a. d, may oralty nominee, declared today that they had a good chance to Min the crematory fight at the meeting of the aldermanic board Thursday and pre vent the destruction of the old crema tory. There were three votes favorable to Mr Woodward's policy at the last meeting of the board when Aiderman Van Dyke held up the matter until Thursday by giving notice that, he Mould make a motion to reconsider the a tion. There are ten members of the ■ board, and if Mr. Woodward can gain three more, a majority, he will be able to delay indefinitely the destruction of the old plant. Tiie razing of the old plant, accord ing to Mr. Woodward, would confront the city with serious disease peril next summer. To Throw Dispute Into Council Again. The members who voted for Mr. Woodward's plan were Aidermen Van- Dyke. McClelland and Everett. It is said that Aldermen Johnson, Warren and Maddox tire now inclined to pre serve the old plant. Council has approved the resolution authorizing the destruction of the old plant. If the aldermanic board con curs. it will be torn down immediately, for Acting Mayor Candler has let it be know n that he will approve such ac - tion. if the aldermanic board does not concur, the whole matter would be thrown back in council. But a ma jority of both branches of council, vot ing separately, must approve the con tract. Woodward Makes Personal Appeals. Mr. Woodward is now confining his fight to an effort to save the old cre matory. He has held a number of con ferences with members of the alder m inic board, and will ask permission i to present his arguments in person at i the meeting Thursday. The board of health expects to suc ceed in having the old plant torn down 'to make room for the new $276,000 | plant. Excavation work around the old plant is already in progress, so confi dent are the members of the board of health that the aldermanic board will finally approve the contract to tear down the old plant. ROOSEVELT SHOT" WITH DRIED PEA, ASSERTS EDITOR ISHPEMING, MICH.. Nov. 19.—Geo. A. Newell, editor of The Iron Ore, who was sued for libel by Theodore Roose velt for asserting that the former pres ident was addicted to the use of liquor, today renewed his attack on the colo nel. Today's article gives credence to a repoit that Roosevelt was shot by a cartridge loaded with a dried pea and that the attack in Milwaukee had pre viously been arranged. The Ishpeming hospital. The Iron Ore says, "is fitted with an -V-ray ma chine suitable to examine any ex-presi dent who may happen near and get shot in the right side with a dried pea.” The 1.0 , Ore says that Schrank, by Connie an e with the Milwaukee offi cials, was to be found insane; and held tor a year in sbme asylum. MICROBE OF BALDNESS AND CURE ARE FOUND PALO ALTO, CAL., Nov. 19.—The offices of Professor Frederick Migge, assistant in the anatomy department of Stanford university, have become more popular to the baldheaded mem bers of the college community than the front rows at a musical comedy. It is all because of his reputed discovery of a method for killing the microbes which 'prey upon human hair roots and mak ing two hairs grow where none grew before. His method is to make a chemical analysis of a live member—pulled out by the roots —decide what partieula: species of microbe is at work on the cranium, and then treat the scalp ac cordingly. Stomach Feels Fine After Meals A Couple of Mi-o-na Tablets Drives Out Gas and Misery It'p such a simple matter to get rid of J stomach distr< ss that its great preva lence can only be accounted for by carelessness. Keep a few Ml-O-NA Stomach Tab lets with you all the time and take one with or after meals. They will surely prevent fermentation, heaviness, sour ness or any stomach distress. No matter how long or how severely you have suffered from Indigestion. <l. -Iritis. Catarrh of the Stomach oi 1 Dyspepsia, MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets.' if taken regularly, will end your mis- ' • ry ami put your stomach in first-class : shape, or money back. Large box for 50 cents at druggists .vi ;-y ■.•liere. Free trial treatment from B. Ml-O-NA, Buffalo, N. Y. (Advt > COUNTY BOARD IS EXPECTED TO OPEN SALARY ACT FIGHT The court contest over the constitu tionality of the salary act of 1911 af fecting seven county officials, doubtless will be precipitated by the Fulton coun ty commission at a special meeting to be held tomorrow afternoon at 4 o’clock. The meeting is called to discuss the office expenses of the seven officials for the ensuing year. With the exception of Ordinary John R. Wilkinson, all of the officials have made known their attitude toward the salary act. Solicitor Dorsey. Clerk Ar nold Broyles. Solicitor Arnold, of tip criminal court, and Sheriff C. W. Man gum have filed with the commission their schedules of office expenses. Tax Collector Stewart and Tax R< ceive: Armistead have refused to file their schedules and have signified their in tention of fighting the operation of the act. EXPERTS TO DISCUSS INTERSTATE HIGHWAY AT GOOD ROADS MEET Plans for the building of interstate highways through Virginia. West Vir ginia. Kentucky, Tenne-see. the Caro linas. Georgia and Alabama will be discussed at the meeting of the South ern Appalachian Good Roads associa tion, which convenes in Atlanta tomor row. Good roads experts and leading pub lic men of all of these states w ill b • in Atlanta for the meeting. A bill for Federal aid in this work already has been introduced in congress, and the forces will be joined to insure its pas sage at the next session of the national lawmakers. The meeting’s will be held in the con vention hall of the Piedmont hotel. Joseph Hyde Pratt, of North Carolina, will preside. 40 BLACKFEET INDIANS WILL VISIT LAND SHOW BELTON, MONT., Nov. 19.—The Black feet Indians encamped on the Fort Peck reservation gave a farewell feast for twenty braves of the tribe who, accom panied by their squaws and bedecked in their most barbaric finery, left yesterday for the land show at Chicago. With na tive dances and weird rites the redskins invoked the blessings of the Great Mani tou on those who are to, set forth for paleface land. The delegation was headed by Chief Fred Big Top and was carried in a spe cial car from Belton. Betty anti I have repaired all the broken fences of our Promised Land. No, old man, we shall never blow up our ''till-death-us-do-part.” <• We have our show evenings just the same: our bridge venings just the.same; our gadding-about evenings, too, but they are ten times as good now BECAUSE WE HAVE SOME 1 HING ELSE BETWEEN and because that some thing else is the greatest thing in the world. Our home evenings are the real treat. Yes, that’s what I said, home —HOME. It may not be fashionable to have one, but it's what we want; and we have a home now— not merely a place to live. I get comfortable in the rich old Uncle Peter chairand glow al! over with a sense of completeness as my pipe begins to draw. Betty sits before the keys of the Pianola Piano, for all the world like a real hand .pianist, and then it starts: It's usually one of the White Light hits to begin with —and it's odd how exquisite they are on the Pianola. You don’t really get them when they are whistled or sung, you know. It’s the wonderful orchestration effect of the grouped chords of the ac companiment that supports the melody when Betty plays it at home —it’s the perfection of technique in all the treble ornamentation that makes a delicious thing out of the air itself —it's that clear, faultless articulation of precise, yet flow ing melody —it's all these things together that enables one to appreciate what exceptional things these popular song writ ers really do—or perhaps the Pianola arrangement improves on the original. Anyway, it's like the snap and brightness of a clear day in May, when it’s just warm enough, and the air has been washed clean and fit to swallow, by yesterday’s rain, and all the blossoms are out, and the country is just a great flower garden. It puts us in tune, Betty and me, and after we have had three or four of these sunlit’bits, we are ready for the real greatness of music—the big, world-wide, humanizing, soul-swelling things that we never knew before—and we are in tune. Betty and 1 are the mute, inglorious, Milton type. We don’t express ourselves well except perhaps, in slang. I can’t find in my mental works the poet s phrases to tell Betty how adorable she is and what she means to me. But we do i\ el it —we just can't say it because we lack the facility of expression, and you’ve GOT to say it, my boy, and she's got to say it, if you both hope to stay in the Promised Land. Grieg says it for us ( hopin says it for us Mozart sings it for us, with a divine fire that almost tears my heart out at times, and 1 crown my girl the princess of all the world with the great big tenderness that comes to me as 1 listen and watch her there at the keys, and know that even,- bar of the music tells her what I feel and carries every beat of her heart to me. Oh, the wonders the Masters have wrought! They have caught the soft glint of the moonlight on the water and painted it in the rhythmic waves and crystal clear ness of their melodies. They have let the surge and storm of the whole wide world, the knowledge of life and its fullness, love and its sublimities, its sorrows, its tri umphs, and its sacrifices, into the crashing chords, the wild, sweet, beauty-notes of the conception and expression of genius. They lift us poor mortals of Evervdav up to their own divine heights, when we will listen. Surely this is a magic instrument which gives us ihe very soul-triumph of a Master of all the Masters,at the finger touch of a simple girl. Betty can’t play a note—her strong, white fingers are for golf, tennis, rowing, bridle-reins—not for the wonder manipulation of piano keys. Still as she swa’ s the little pointer from side to side, interpreting the music as the Master created it in his soul, his own touch, his own conception, expression, rendition, and, best of all, his mastery, are there, and pour forth in those sound-waves. Glory! that’s it! It isn’t just a world anv more, when one of those stately anthems roll out in billowing waves ot harmony to enfold us in a land of dreams GETS MORE GDRN : ON BLASTED ROIL ) Governor Brown Pleased by Results From Dynamiting Land on His Farm. Governor Joseph M. Brown, who has been experimenting this year in corn 1 cultivated on dynamited soil, is enthu . siastic over the results obtained. • The governor la.-t spring literally "blew up" one acre of his Cherokee ; county farm, and had it planted in corn The particular acre thus pre pared produced the yea: before exactly 26 bushels of coin. This year it brought forth 106 bushels, and of a higher grade. The governor says there was no ma terial difference in the cultivation this year, othe: wise than in dynamiting the soil, and the expense of the two crops was relatively the same. It cost me $12.50 to dynamite the soil of that one acre-—and it can be done bn an extensive scale for much less," said the governor, discussing the matter today. "The expense easily may be reduced to $lO per acre, and the dy namiting has to be done only once ■ i THE ATLANTA TONIGHT 8:15 First Time Here Robert W. Chambers’ Drama “The Common Law” Also Wednesday—Matinee Wednesday Nights 25c to $1.50; Matinee 25c to sl. *■■■■■■• - ■ «»• -«MQUW. -—1 —I ■ THREE NIGHTS. BEGINNING THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 21, Matinee Saturday I CHARLES FROHMAN PRESENTS MAUDEADAMS IN J. M. BARRIE'S “PETER PAN” Seats now selling. Prices $2.00 to 50c. Extra! : Extra! I Owing to the Tremendous Demand for Seats. MiSS ADAMS HAS CONSENTED TO GIVE AN EXTRA MATINEE FRIDAY Seats for this Special PETER PAN Performance go on sale at 9 a. m, Wednesday—Get In Line! Since Music Came Our home evenings are the real treat" tVjZv- 7 Lii"" v * r \ ' Tglfea ‘‘Betty, come here ’ I every five years. That makes the cost approximately $2 per annum per acre Cheap enough, Isn't it? It surely h I when one considers the results ob tained. “Next year I shall try out not ] P <, than ten acres, for I ant satisfied that | the idea is a fine one—indeed, it mav L ' many ways revolutionize the method of cultivation, as applied to manycroi s in Georgia.” ' Governor Brown -ays the dynamiting so loosened up the soil of the one a. \- he operated on this year that the mui, s in plowing it sank to their knees f quently in the finely broken up ground G ' N D M yonL°ht a^ln: °~ St“r‘ C>l Eddie 15 H4KR WR BROS.. DEVIAHE& WlUi'imST—’ WILLIS FAMILY. JOE WHITEHEAD. Booill TR 0 ufrVr JULIET’ HTfK »***»•»*’ l • | MdHTYRE Q HEATH forsyth- Little Emma Bunting Players In Great Production of “THE TWO ORPHANS” Secure Seats Early‘s Next Week—“MERE ~LY~MARY~an\~ Thls Week IvniA Matin*-. BA’ai' 5 LYRIC beulah poynter' Mon., Tues., Wed., Matinee Tue“ "A KENTUCKY ROMANCE" ' Thurs., Fri., Sat. Mat. Thurs Sa‘ "LENA RIVERS” I THANKSGIVING ATTRACTION All Next Week “The Shepherd of the Hills" Dramatized From Harold Bell Wright’s Novel. TABERNACLE Wednesday. November 20, 8:30 P. M. Alkahest Lyceum System Presents BUCK QUARTET In Grand Concert. Fourth Number of Lyceum Course. Admission, 25c to sl. Monday Night, November 25. Marcella SEMBRICH and Assisting Artists. Tickets on sale now at Phillips & Crew. Cable Plano Company or at the Alkahest office—Prices, 50c to $2. Phone Main 1238. And Betty! W hen the last note ends as softly as a falling rose leaf, Betty sits there with her dear little head drooped, her face flushed and rosy, the most splendid dewy moisture in her eyes, and she just wants to put her head on my .shoulder, and I know it, and I'm King. I say it gently Betty, come here,’’ and without a word she comes She cuddles on my big awkward knees and her head slips into that place on my shoulder, and all I can say i? “Oh, my dear. My very, very dearest dear.” I hat moment is worth every dollar we have in ths v, orld and all I can earn for years to come. We're no longer two young people half spoiled by the modern wa> of living Im a man, and Betty, bless her! —is a woman a real one, and music has done it for us through the medium of that great instrument which is just rounding out the happiness of our lives. Bless the Pianola Piano, sa> W e make tne genuine PIANOLA, and we put it into but six pianos the best in the world at their respective prices pi ?vn'i°i e than twelve years we have been developing our PIANOLA. During this time we have spent more thousands of dollars simply experimenting than we like to \vc have made it so it will not sound mechanical, eve; unen Betty or some one else, who knows nothing c. music, plays it. ? r an ’ or any one can play the gcn:.:. e I lA.N( )JA Player-piano and get all the little subtle effe r that make real music. I his is why the great musicians like Paderewski. T<; k.-'d - trauss, and Josef Hofmann and Rosenthal,and Moszkov.-r-i p’j . \ <lV J' r . three hundred others, welcome the genuine * t i i • Flayer-piano as a serious musical instrument . .nd this is why you must be careful when you come to choo.-o a Player-piano to see that vou arc getting the genuine PIANOLA Player-piano, with its Mctrost’ e liiemoaist. and other exclusive and important features tha. 4x7 U >i\ oW to rea ' music like a real musician. , I Player-pianos are furnished in both Granc and I pnght styles, and are priced as low as sss°> ' e , r '. moderate monthly terms of payment. They are for s ..e in your city only at our store. Call and let us give y°- a ■ oncert such as Betty gives her Man —and as you can g ' i i your own home We are the sole representatives for the genuine Pianola Piano. | PHILLIPS & CREW CO. 82-84-86 North Pryor St. ESTABLISHED 1865. I, and bless the man who, ir creating it, has made a rca home for Betty and me, and for all the other thousands ol young people throughout this whole wide world oi ours. There are descriptions whicY ring so clearly with truth that we wonder if they are not drawr from personal experience. The Man and Betty, music and dreams —the episode is typical And, as their nearts are drawr closer and their lives morr tightly interwoven by the magic of music,therecomesthethopght of the pity, the sheer pity, of the homes that arc not homes— that have no such unifying element of common interest tc brighten and sweeten home life And then there is the othe: pity of the homes that havj made a mistake —that have just missed the pleasure that they might as well have had— for there is no purchase in the world in which a mistake car be more easily made than in choosing a player-piano. Player-pianos are diviclee] into two classes —those which contain the genuine PIANOLA and are called PIANOLA Play er-pianos, and those which con tain other player-actions and are, therefore, just Player-piano? with this or that piano name.