Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 19, 1912, HOME, Page 8, Image 8

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8 CORONER STILL PROBES KILLING Mystery of John King's Death' in Clayton County Is Not Yet Solved. JONESIU »R' *. GA Nov 19. For the thi r< i day i coroner's ju aft- rnoc tery <fif the death of John King er. 63 j was found early Sunday morning in the smoldering embers of :■ Immi": out house near the school building at Orrs Station, in < ayton county, three miles south of Jonesborc The sessions of the coroner's jury- Sunday and yester day afternoon were behind ■ osed ooors, as will be the one this afternoon. Thus far only four arrests have been made, those being the voting men taken into custody on Sunday. Other ar rests, however, are expected after the inquest is concluded. The Jury probing this mystery, under the direction of Coroner P. H. Camp, is composed of PT. J. Brown, foreman; E. T. Harper. A. A. Huie. W. L. Carnes, E. W. Tanner and A. S. Martin. Sheriff Dixon. Marshal Lawrence and Bailiff John Archer have discovered a moonshine still close to the scene of the King crime. There was no one at the place, but the outfit was complete and a large stock of liquor was confiscated. Ths revenue officers have been sent for. The coroner’s Inquest will be resumed at 2 o’clock and evidence will be given the solicitor of superior court. SUNDAY SCHOOL WORKERS OF NORTH GEORGIA MEET Sunday school workers of north Georgia will meet in their annual divi sion convention Thursday and Friday In the First Methodist church, when expert teachers will instruct the dele grates on all phases of Sunday school endeavor. The principal lectures will be deliv ered by D W. Sims, general secretary of the Georgia Sunday School associa tion. and Leon C. Palmer, of Mont gomery. Ala., general secretary of the Alabama association. A. B. Caldwell, president of the Pul ton County association, and George B. Hinman, president of the north Georgia division, will alternate as presiding of ficers Get Rid of Piles at Home Try This Home Treatment—Ab solutely Free. No matter how long you’ve been suf fering or how had you think your case i«, send at once for a free trial of the wonderful Fyranjtd Pile Remedy. Thou eanda afflicted aa badly or worse than you trace their quick recovery to the day they began using this marvelously •uooeseful remedy. Pyramid Pile Remedy gives Instant, bleeeed relief. Pain disappears, in flammation and swelling subeldp, and you are able to work again ns com fortably aa though you had never been afflicted at all. It may save the ex pense and danger of a surgical opera tion. Jhiat eend in the coupon below with your name and address on a slip of pa >er, to the Pyramid Drug Co.. 420 Pyra mid Bldg.. Marshall, Mich., and a sam ple will be sent you FREE. It will ifliow you conclusively what Pyramid Pile Remedy will do. Then you can get the regular package for 60 cents at any j drug store. Don't suffer another need les* minute. Write now. (Advt.) I Free Pile Remedy Thia coupon, when mailed with I K ill name and addre»», will entitle ■ I YOU to a FREE SAMPLE of the great H I yramid Pile Remedy. Sent by mail, prepaid, and in a .plain wrapper. •Vend This Coupon Now for fjuick Relief from Piles M ... _ 1* i w ’ GOLu UnOnNS . . 53.00 BRIDGE WORK . S 4 00 PAINLE'S EXTRACTING 50c Teeth made while you wait SS.CO j NEW YORK & AMERICAN DENTAL PARLORS and 32■ Peachtree St. I Joys Capture State Insurance Department "GHOST” WALKS AT LAST Th. ~ v..is ven gieat ami exceeding ,i"\ in the insurance department of For the fli-t time since the depart- I ment was .• atod and put in operation sima Soptembe 1, to be exact —the I ghost walked therein today, and the I-ala . v i.'ei t e-rs attached thereto. of i whom there are three, wore pleasant miles a a ordingly. The warrants calling for the pay ment ot ilh- officials in the insurance d> |.artiii<-nt hml been held up since the '■arli part of October, awaiting an opinion from th< aitonmy general as to the constitutionality of the law cre ating the same, which had been ques tioned. Ihe opinion came in yester day. The .Of.inion being favorable to the department’s legal existence. Governor B:own today approved the long delayed warrants and the money Went imme diately where it belonged. Insurance <’ommi.-sionei Wright got t Deputy <'ifmmissionei Copeland got Miss Mart Nagle, chief clerk, goi .r_’;,o, . m| an other expenses were cared for. <’<>l» land had kept a list of the things PAT THE THEATERS , "THE COMMON LAW" AN INTERESTING STAGE STORY Some one has said thai no book has ever been successfully staged and this holos z od of "The Common Law " pre sented last tilglo to a small audience at the Atlanta. The east Is not fully up to the requirements of the tense scenes, and tire play lacks the one essential of a "big scene It veil nearly has one In the climax of the third act. but it lasts the brietest span of time and Is not led up to with the adroitness that Is necessary to make it fulfill Its mission. "The Common Law" is an interesting story all Chambers’ stories are -and for that alone it compels attention, and holds it to the very end, but it does not thrill, does not grip, does not absorb in short, if never gets away front the fact that It Is a great story in the telling and not In the acting The setting of the play Is faithful to the big scenes of the book, and the actors and actresses dress the parts with exactness. lite cast does Its best to properly In terpret the roles* but itt this instance the chambers characters can not be faithful ly portrayed because they lack the scenes. The book, whatever it may be as a book, is not a scries of stage pictures; however much the material may bo handled to that end. At the Atlanta tonight and Wednesday, with a Wednesday matinee. THRILLING HEADLINER IS FEATURE OF GRAND BILL "Detective Keen” Is a thrilling head liner at the Grand this week. The play let is interesting ami clever, with lines of wit and understanding, and a good situation, brought out tn a most amusing manner The. robbery of a valuable jewel furnishes the means of exciting adven tures on the part of all members of a very eaitable east, which features Arthur Hoops. Interest does not flag through out the progress of the act. and the cli max is reached and passed without a heartrending word or a slpgle sob—-all of which is much more than can lie said of the average playlet. Those who are afraid to mtefirl a vaudeville show on account of the average playlet can safely risk “Detective Keen.” He bears none of ttro tnothworn earmarks of the aver | age playlet. The number made a big hit i with last night's critical audience. Then Eddie Leonard coined along and brings on another pleasant experience. Eddie is a well known favorite here, and his name Is enough to draw a crowd. He is ablj assisted by Miss Mabie Russell in hfs fnn-makltig. For the rest of It the dancing ami the "Roly Holy” songs- Eddie requires no assistance. I he remainder of the bill this week is fully up to the Grand standard. Some Japs do wonderful stunts In the aero batic line; Harry Divine ami Belle Wil Hams raise man) hearty laughs with their impersonation of the traveling salesman and the female drummer; the Willis fam ily has a pleasing musical number; Joe 15 hit eh cad Is a most accommodating dancer, presenting "anything in the world the audience asks for" even the Turkey Trot If sufficiently urged -and J. C. Booth and company give a comedy sensational novelty which opens the bill. LARGE LYRIC AUDIENCE SEE "A KENTUCKY ROMANCE" Miss Beulah Poynter. In "A Kentucky Romance." opened last night at the Lyric for a week's engagement. Miss Poynter, who is an old favorite of Atlanta theater goers. received her usual enthusiastic wel come from a large audience at her open ing performance. "A Kentucky Romance” is a melo drama of an old Kentucky plantation, dealing principally with the struggles' of young l-ee Jameson between his love for pretty little Cynthia Hargreaves, the daughter of a tenant upon his mother's estate, and the efforts of his mother to wed him to the wealthy Miss Marcia Tal bot, to bolster up the family's future. Miss Poynter, as Cynthia. Is Just as admirable In the first two acts, as the little barefoot illiterate country girl as she is in the role of the brilliant, ma tured woman, vert much tn love with her husband, in the closing act. In Stanhope Wheatcroft as Lee .lame son. Mrs. Wheatcroft as Mrs. Hannibal Jameson. Mrs. Sadie Steelsmith as Sa mantha Tubbs, Ted V. Armond as Joshua Tubbs, llat rt Haj s as James Hargreaves, Edwin Dale as I Tide Mose, as well as the other members of the company. Miss Poynter has an usually strong support. The latter half of the week "Lena Riv- i ers'.' will be played. lemma bunting pleases AS THE YOUNG BLIND GIRL Playing one of the most exating parts she has essayed in her winter stick ell ■ gagement at the Forsyth, little Emma j I Hunting gate a most interesting ami | ’ taitltfu! portratal of the little blind or i plian in "The Two Orphans.” to a splen- i i did audience Inst night. The role is more than ordinarily exact ing because It Is that of youthful pathos, i and Miss Hunting gate a most stytnpa | jthetie vendition, and her suppi-rt was ex- I eellent in evert particular. , ; Popular George Whitaker Ims a role tins I : week which be b.undh-s with entire jus- , Die. In fact, every member of the cast I ris well olac,<|, giving a splendid luierpre- , tation of this ~i<| favorite plat Performances nightly nil week, and mat- I I inees today, Thursday and Saturday. THE SHEPHERD OF THE HILLS" IS THE NEXT LYRIC OFFERING "T " SI ep ~ he nil’s." Hal Id I I Bell \\ right's not,-!, iia-. been made Into •> jilaj bt \i Wright with the assistance of Elsburt W. Reynold. It will be seen , tor the first titm m this eitt at the Lytle next week It tells n beautiful stort that I I Holds the auditor m its thrills from the | beginning tn the end. BEULAH BUCK QUARTET IS NEXT ON LYCEUM COURSE 1 Ihe Beulah Buck Quartet company. I '” 1 11 h - tn the Baptist Tabernacle • n next Wednesday evening. November 20. i.is ti e fourth number on the Alkahest I l.' •um course. will give a concert of H i -ital merit Wl erever tbex have ap '•>' South this season they tave reams, much enthusiasm as the re su t of their ver> superior work Their | v,.lecs blend niost hurmonlotiHlv. and .Wl-I ther In solo, ,juet or ensemble num- I Pers. iM.-> are tdw.o- at their best Pa 'tr t’s -It •I o ly. oum and people of r. - I - al as.- • will a: . -c. It 'e tl.t: j Mrs G. F. Wessels. Mr- .'..-.tg. 11. ....... : r ~r th.- ritfj*- ! ‘ <•! ••' < n.i.a %. tn Atlanta. I mt g i THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUEtSDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 1912. he owed when his salary check reached hint. It read as follows: Board bill 2150.00 Laundry 9.10 Roommate 46.75 Banks 120.00 Home folks 65.00 Pafct due tips 13.25 Sunday school 80 Mißcelianeous 29.35 Total . . $434.25 "I have, a.fte. all things ate squared up. exactly $65.3,1 to the good." sab! ' 'opeland, discussing the long siege to day. "And besides, we are well along the road on another month's salary. "It's tough to he held up 65 days, and the butcher, the baker and the candle stick maker on your trail,all the time, but. when tip- ghost did wajk today, he carried a handsome package. I must sai a handsome package and a wel come ],a< kage. believe me!" HALF TON OF HAY TAKEN INTO BELFRY BY BIRDS tJT. Lol IS. Nov. 19. Half a ton of hay which sparrows had transported, st:aw by straw, to the belfry of the Maplewood Congregational church, was discovered there by workmen who were preparing to put a new roof on the edi fice. Search for the aperture through which the was brought revealed a small opening between two of the weather boards. The straw had been fashioned into many nests in which numerous generations of sparrows had been hatched. BOILER EXPLOSION WRECKS COLUMBUS JEWELRY STORE UOLVMBI’S, GA., Nov. 19.—The boiler in the basement of the jewelry store of V. J. Pekor exploded today, completely wrecking the store ami scattering jewelry all over the build ing. Windows were blown out. In tense excitement prevailed until people could get inside to see what had be come of those caught in the building. Tlgner F. Williams and Miss Mari. Smith, who were in the store at the time, escaped unharmed. Low water pressure caused the explosion. Atlanta Chapter of Daughters of the American Revolution Select Henry & S. G. Lindeman PIANO F ; . ' ' - " T. .. . ~ ' j* ' s ' q ’/ i . ‘ 1 | : 4 i g .. 1■ * T B Iw i lAt I - f ? ...Wm In the selection of a Piano by the Atlanta Chapter D. A. R. for their beautiful hall at Piedmont Park, the Cleveland- Manning Piano Co secures further laurels for the progressive spirit of their house, and adds further distinction to that great Piano, the Henry & S. G. Lindeman. Cleveland=Maiinirig Piano Co Sil NORTH PRYOR “STORE BEAUTIFUL” 80 NORTH PRYOR "The Most Progressive in Our Line" lira »ors l > Winter Aeroplane School Es- I < tablished in Georgia City for I Military Experiments. I I AI'GI'STA. GA.. Nov. 19. — With four commissioned officers. 23 enlisted men, four aeroplanes, two automobiles and much paraphernalia on board, the Unit ed States army aviation school arrived in Augusta today. The trip from Wash ington was made in nineteen hours, and the special ran, exclusive of stops, at the rate of 35 miles per lining for the , 537 miles traversed. In the party are Captain Charles De- i Forest Chandler, Lieutenant H. L. Graham. Lieutenant William Sherman and Dr. Charles J. Bohies. surgeon for the aviators. Lieutenants H. H. Ar nold. Roy <'. Kinland and Thomas t>e . Witt Milling are expected in a short time. I hi'ee \\ right bi-pLtnes ami a Bur- 1 gess-Wright machine were brought here, and two other machines, includ ing a Moisant monoplane, will arrive later. The men at once went to the Barnes farm and erected tents lor the ma chines. Trial Hights will be mad. prob ably tomorrow or Thursday. ' The Curtiss aviators for the army will winter at San IHego, <'al. ■ ; ARMY ORDERS • I WASHINGTON. Nov. 19. The following . ann; orders were issued: , Captain Charle- E. Tull, artillery corps, f'om staff commanding officer artillery , I trict of San Francisco to Sixty-fourth I company; Captain William Monroe, coast artillery corps, from Sixty-fourth com pany to staff dommanding officer artillery district of San Francisco; Captain F. H. 1 Gallup from Third field artillery to t'nited States Military academy. West Point. . N. t ; Captain .1. J. Ryan, quartermaster corps, relieve Lieutenant Colonel T. C. Goodman, quartermaster corns. Atlanta . office quartermaster ciirps, Atlanta. Ga.: l ieutenant Colonel Goodman proceed to New York city. COMMISSION FINDS MAN WHO SOUGHT TO SLAY T. R. INSANE MILWAUKEE, Nov. 19. John Schrank, the Bavarian who attempted to assassinate Theodore Roosevelt here, has been found insane by the commis sion of five alienists appointed to ex amine him. Their report will be made to Judge Backus tomorrow. The decision of the I commission is unanimous and recom mends that Schrank be sent to an asylum for the criminal insane. Sr gray hairs QUICKLY VANISH Harmless Remedy Made From Garden Sage Restores Natural Color. ■ - -... A feeling of sadness accompanies the discovery of the first gray hairs, which I unfortunately are looked upon as her alds of advancing age. Gray hair, how- I ever handsome it may be, makes a per- | son look old. We all know the advan tages of being young. Aside from the ; good impression a youthful appearance makes on others, simply knowing that you are 'looking fit” gives one courage to undertake and accomplish things. So why suffer the handicap of looking old on account of gray hairs, when a simple remedy will give your hair youthful color and beauty in a few days' time? Most people know that common gar | den sage acts as a color restorer and scalp tonic as well. Our grandmothers used t 'Sage Tea” for keeping their I hair ciark', soft and luxuriant. In Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Reme dy we have an Ideal preparation of Sage, combined with Sulphur and other aluable remedies for dandruff, itching scalp and thin, weak hair that is split at the ends or constantly coming out. A few applications of this valuable rem edy will bring back the color, and in a short time it will remove every trace of dandruff and greatly improve the growth and appearance of the hair. Get a fifty cent bottle from your druggist today, and notice the difference in your hair after a few days' treat ment. All druggists sell it, under guar antee that the money will be refunded if the remedy is not exactly as repre sented. Special agent, Elkin Drug Co. (Advt.) Where Where Quality hMm Prices vEmsevlSz A re Highest Lowest Wednesday and Thursday Specials at Rogers’ Another Lot of Lot of New Crop Yellow Yams Black Walnuts at 16c Peck at 3c Pound These Are Better Than Black Walnut Kernels, Any Yet. 40c Pound. Another Carload of Those Fine Poinciana Brand, Thin-Skin Florida Oranges Good Size, Jl M i Medium 4 I Large O A Per Dozen I ■rwiPer Dozen Iwv I Per Dozen CiArC Also a Solid Carload of Finest Florida Grape Fruit Small, each, 4c; Large, each, 6c Piedmont Hotel Tomatoes Piedmont Hotel Brand Tomatoes are the very finest quality—perfect, ripe tomatoes ,carefully selected and full packed in sanitary tins. Following special prices for .Wed nesday and Thursday: No. 3 size tins, regular No. 2 size tins, regular price 15c: price 10c. Per tin 9c Per tin ■■■ -- f °r 52c 6 for Per dozen SI.OO Per dozen .84c Per case $2.00 Per case r ..... j.. i .SI.BB (Not more than one case to (Not more than one case a buyer at this price.) to a buyer at this price.) Piedmont Hotel Corn Piedmont Hotel Brand Corn is the finest sugar corn grown, gathered while young and tender, and carefully packed under most sanitary conditions. Full pack No. 2 t cans at following prices: Per can 15c | 6 cans for ,75c 3 cans for 40c I 12 cans for .. Buy by the dozen cans, thus saving 60 cents on the dozen. Just Received New Crop Fine Glace Cherries Georgia Cane and Pineapple Syrup 50c Pound * fiallon Made in the Best Cane- Very Fine Quality. Growing Section. For Breakfast Cakes New Buckwheat and Pancake Flour Do \on like hot cakes for breakfast? Here are the lines! new crop buckwheat and pancake flour. i iedmont Hotel Brand Prepared Buckwheat (readv for use : SL ...10c 15c 25c Xew Plain Buckwheat, per bag 30c Piedmont Hotel Brand a Pancake Flour, per parkage 1 (JC A Special in Evaporated Fine Salmon Peadies==New Splemiid quality Pink Alas- \’ ( . w Crop California Evap ka fsalmon in No. 1 tall tins; orated Peaches; regular 12 •>c xalue: ]_2e grade; two days: tin 9c Per pound 8c 3 J or 25c 3 Pounds for 23c b , 50c 6 Pounds for 45c 12 for 95c 1 12 Pounds for 89c ROGERS’ 36 PURE FOOD STORES