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The Kind You Ihve Always Bought has borne the signa
ture of Chas. If. Fletch -r. and has been made under his
persona) supervision » r over if’. jenrs. Allow no one
to deceive you in tins. Counit ;•<’< ;Is. Imitations and
•» 3 ;:<t --good ■’ Experiments, and endanger th©
health of t hit .: •■■• —Experience against Ex perinieni.
What is CASTOR IA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops ami Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor oilier Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. St cures Diarrhu ; and Wind
Coiie. It reliives Teething Troubles, ciir< Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CCNTAUR COMPANY, 7t MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
4
Modern Expert Dentistry at Reasonable Prices
CK YA Crown and
Bridge Work «P*r
Sot oi CtC
Tooth
JTv Jg \ M All other dental work at prices
A T V I Ar that wlll please. Plates made and
—Jfr* I > u-* delivered same day.
Dr. E. G. Griffin's Gate City Dental Rooms
24'/ 2 WHITEHALL STREET.
Bell Phone 1708. Hours: 8 a. m. to 7 P- m. Sundays, 9 a. m. to 1 p. m.
OIL WOCILErs SANITARIUM
Op urn and Whisky
■MHkrh IHiVwSI ’ years experience shows
JaßawTlwi>Sß|PYHj these <Us<are curable Patients also treated at their
■Sa •ffljKSM jsl homes. UcliHiiltatlon confidential A book on the sub
gaMmWWPW*'■ f " r I>K B ,! wool li;y & son., no. z-a vi*.
«t or Sanitarium. Atlanta. Ga.
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stops the wheel'll'3a I ddW
but this stops the IM
Your brakes merely serve notice on l|l|J 7kM/i/l/%
your tires that you want to stop. If iHlj /
the tires do not respond you go on. \ \ \ /g U
To insure a stop when you want one, V /fil
the treads on your tires must co-operate W// n
with your brakes. Al
“All the ‘brakes’ are with you” if your car is
equipped with
Goodrich
SAFETY ®jpg tf2t
TREAD | If
“Best in the Short Stop”
The Safety Tread does team-work straight bar to clean the street
with the brakes. It makes quick and stop the skid.
work of cleaning up a bad situation, This new Safety Tread tire is a
by removing the cause of the skid. Goodrich Tire thru and thru. It has
The first bar to touch the street, Goodrich Quality, Goodrich Unit
rubs a spot clean, under the tire, Construction and Goodrich Tough
for the other bars to grip and hold. Tread. And it delivers mileage in
Any way you move there is a Goodrich heaping measure.
100 branches and service stationsand innumerable dealers, everywhere, can
now supply you with this new Safety Tread in any size and to fit any rim.
The B. F. Goodrich Company, Akron, O. Largest in the World
/ i.LA.M/1 baAhUh, 20 AxOUSTON STREET.
•"■•■■■•■■■■••■■■••.'■'•■‘•“•'••■WW’*-. - w »»u, VMTWKM—U.W. Ml
EVERY fANT An HAS A MEANING
GEORGIAN ™MR I MflJ ALL iTS OWN
BOTH TELEPHONES 8000
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AM) NEWS.TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19. 19a ;
SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS
ON GEORGIA POLITICS
By JAMES B. NEVPT.
Now that the national presidential
election figures are well in hand, the
result in Georgia, in so far as the light
ness of ftie popu-
F
l
|9rt.
JAMILS & FOPVOT
lar vote was con
cerned, seems to
have held good
pretty well
throughout the
nation.
R e 1 a t i v e 1 y
speaking, it ap
pears that the
vote of 1912 was
not up, by any
means, to the vote
of 1908, when
Taft was pitted
for the presidency
against Bryan.
In fact, the only
candidate whose
party vote shows
heavier in 1912
than it did in 1908 is Eugene V/Debs.
the Socialist. In a number of states
his vote jumped 25 to 35 per cent, and
in Georgia is practically doubled.
Notwithstanding the fact th:\t Wil
son was awarded a tremendous popu
lar majority in Georgia, the total vote
cast was several thousands less than
the vote in 1908. This sort of thing,
saving the majority phase of it, held
good in other sections, moreover.
It looks as if Mr. Wilson’s vote will
be less than Mr. Bryan's was last
time.
It is estimated that Wilson received
ibout 45 per cent of the total vote cast
n the Union.
Os course, many presidents have been
fleeted by a popular minority calling
for an electoral majority, and in that
3 ATE OF onto. CITY OF TOLEDO
LUCAS, COUNTY, ss.
Frank J. 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 stun of ONE HUN
DRED DOLLARS for each and every case
of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the
use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
ERANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my 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
eons surfaces of the system. Send tor
testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O.
Sold by al) Druggists, 75c.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation
respect Mr. Wilson’s victory figures out
most satisfactorily.
The curious thing, however, is that.'
with approximately 1,500,000 more vot-1
ers in the nation now than there were
four years ago, the total vote cast
should foot up Jess than the vote cast
for Bryan and Taft in 1908,
What has become of the vote?
here did the 1,500,000 new votes go?
The state Democratic executive com
mittee ought to send a certificate of
merit, or a hero medal, or something,
to Henry T. Russ, of the Hamilton dis
trict, in Colquitt county.
Out of a total of 80 votes cast in
that benighted neighborhood in the late
presidential election, his was the only
one east for Wilson and Marshall. The
remaining 79 went for the Bull Moose.
The Bull Moose majority made a
mighty effort to win over Mr. Russ on
election day, that the Roosevelt vic
tory might be made unanimous in the
Hamilton district, but Russ stood pat on
the Democratic nominees, and voted ac
cordingly.
He went down insisting that he loved
his neighbors and admired their pluck,
but that his opinion of their judgment
was exactly zero!
If there is any sort of Federal office
flopping around loose in the Hamilton
district, Colquitt county, Russ should
have It, on a silver waiter, and without
asking.
Ihe question of whether a woman
can legally be elected to a seat on a
county board <»f education in Georgia
has been raised in Chatham county, and
likely wilt be tested in the courts.
Many lawyers in Georgia hold that,
as the various statutes now read, wom
en are eligible to membership on county
education boards; but inasmuch as
there is some doubt about it, the mat
te: never has been forced to a conclu
sion. If Chatham county finds out ex
actly what the law does permit in that
respect, it will furnish light whereby
many counties in Georgia doubtless
would be only too glad to be guided.
I here is a widespread sentiment in
this state favorable to women as mem
bers of these bodies—indeed, there are
more than a few people who contend
that women on county boards of edu
cation would be, as a rule, far more
valuable than men.
And if, as the laws stand today, wom
en are not jligible, some Georgia leg
islator might win a measure of fame
and enviable reputation by introducing
in the next house, and pushing to en
actment. a law providing for the same.
There was an atmosphere of deep
and genuine gloom about the grim old
state capitol yesterday.
By order of the governor, all the de
partments were closed at 11 a. m„ as a
mark of respect to the former governor
just passed away. Besides the shut
doors, however, all the shades were
drawn and the flag was lowered io half
mast: and through the long corridors
no step was heard in the afternoon
save those of the watchman and one or
two caretakers.
Governor Terrell was personally, per
haps, the most popular of all the gov
ernors of late years. His official fam
ily was devoted to him; and many of
those still in harness, who worked with
him during the five years he was gov
ernor, spoke most tenderly and affec
tionately of him yesterday.
The capitol Is a stately and dignified
edifice, and in silence yesterday it bore
mute but eloquent testimony to the
universal sorrow that Governor Ter
-1 ell s untimely death brought to al!
Georgia.
Perhaps the sweetest and at the same
time the most authoritative, tribute to
the late governor and senator came
t’lom the pen of his boyhood friend and
associate, Mr. Justice Warner Hill, of
the state supreme court.
No man could have been more inti
mately acquainted with Senator Ter
rell than was this man, and here, in
part, is what he says:
His friends followed "Joe” Ter
rell wherever he led, because they
loved him and had an abiding faith
in him. It was easy for a man of
his type to be a leader. Though gen
tle and kind as a woman, one not
knowing him must not get the idea
that lie was lacking in firmness or
courage. He possessed both ' of*
these qualities to a large degree.
But his whole life refutes the idea
that in order to be firm one must
be harsh or cruel His very nature
was gentleness, kindness, firmness
and manly courage. He was most
optimistic and hopeful and always
lived in the light. The shadows
and darkness had no place for him.
Only the bright side of things were
visible. Even In the valley of the
shadow this characteristic did not
desert him.
This is a Just and truthful tribute—
particularly impressive because it
conies from a man of whom very much
the same things may be said.
The characters of Joseph Meriwether
Terrell and Hiram Warner Hill meas
ure very much by the same yardstick.
Among the honorary escort for Sen
ator Terrell’s funeral, the name of for
mer Supreme Court Justice Spencei* R.
Atkinson, of Atlanta, should have ap
peared. It was inadvertently omitted
from the lists furnished the Atlanta
newspapers for publication yesterday,
MACON AND RETURN
$3 40
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
On Sale November 17 to 27. Return
limit. November 29.
EXQUISITE WEDDING BOUQUETS
AND DECORATIONS. |
ATLANTA FLORAL CO.,
Call Main 1130.
• Advertisement.)
Sold Our Lease—Forced To Give Possession at Once
147 Satisfied Customers
■
S~Ti S FJ? b)
\ CUS TO« ERy
W* 1 $ / / XvA •- GE
I' I \
till • / JKtSn / &r I B
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Have Purchased Pianos and Player
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AS LONG AS THEY LAST
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ano remember, this may be your last chance to
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EASY PAYMENTS
OUT-OF-TOWN CUSTOMERS WRITE US
W. H. Howard Ho lt
“50 PIANO BOXES FOR SALE”
72 N. Broad St. PHONES: f ,v y 31 61 ii
( Atlanta 2352