Newspaper Page Text
8
mon chiefs or
[II. S. MEET HEBE
Convention to Educate Leaders
I
in Organization Work to
Open December 9.
Noted labor chiefs of the whole
United States wili come to Atlanta for
the southeastern labor mass meeting
here December 9, 10. 11. .according to
advices received by S I:. Marks, cliair
iman of the invitation committee.
1 Eugene J. Brain, secretary of the
Journeymen Tailors union, will repre
sent that body. The Typographical
union will be represented by Albert E.
Hill, of Nashville Its international or
ganizer. Chief Organizer J. C. Shaugh
nessy. of the barbers; President George
U Berry, of the pressmen; Vice Chair
'imn Colli Lov-Joy, of the hoot and
Hhoe workers; Clarence E. Smith, of the
painters and decorators; Organizer A.
jM. Copeland, of the carpenters; Gen
ieral President Martin Ryan, of th<
• railroad carmen, and others of equal
’prominence have signified their inten
sion of being present.
i The meeting is for the purpose of ed
iUcatlng the leaders In the work of or
! ganlzation.
ONE SEISE MAKES
INDISESTION GO
All Stomach Distrass Quick-'
’ ly Ended With “Pape’s
DiapSpsin.”
* You don’t want a Cow remedy when
jyour stomach is bad -or an uncertain
one—or n harmful one yo<iir stomach
‘is too valuable; you mustn’t injure it
twith drastic drugs.
| Pape’s Diape) du i noteu for Its
Espeed in giving relief; it harmless-
Bness; its certain unfailing action in
Erexulatlng sick, sour, gassy stomachs.
&dlllons of cures In indiei-stion, dys
a, gastritis and other stomach
'itronble has made it famous the work;
(over.
■ Keep this perfee stomach doctor in
'your home—keep it handy get a large
ISO -cent case from any drug store an I
{then if any one should eat something
which doesn’t agree with them; If what
.they eat lies like lead, ferments and
‘stmts and forms gas; causes headache,
Btalniui and nausea: eructations of
tacid and undigested food —rumember as
;soon ns Pape’s Diapepsln comes In
(contact with the stotaaeh all such dis
stress vanishes. Its promptness, cer-
Jtalnty and ease in overcoming the
jworsc stomach disorders Is a revela
tion to those who try It. (Ailvt.)
IHARRY
\ _ J
, n u
I Bohemian Restaurant
k ii , ii
I Gentlemen’s Grill Room Delicatessen Shop J
n ii '
And Cabaret
II II
Will Open Today, Nov. 25
With every conceivable modern convenience for prompt, polite and efficient service, this establish
r,l nt is read} for business today, Monday, November 25.
THE FOOD- Well, expt rienced chefs and stewards have searched the four corners of the earth for
th< best products that the world's market affords. You’ll find assembled here, delicacies from this
country and abroad, such as have never before been served in Atlanta and you’ll find the equipment, the
service and tin surroundings trulv metropolitan. DON’T FORGET THE LOCATION CORNER
HOUSTON AND NORTH PRYOR STREETS, DAKOTA HOTEL.
z s > - s
Complete Meal 25c The Delicatessen Shop
11:30 to 2:30 P. M.
During these regular lunch hours we will Everything cooked-——ready to
serve a meal for 25c that will he complete in 11
i i r eat - Oent to your home ready
every detail a convenient, restful place for J
ladies and gentlemen. to serve on your own table.
| , n , t
Cabaret From 9 to 12 P. M.
Nightly from 9 to 12. beginning today, we will operate a Cabaret with Polite Vaudeville amid
refined, harmonious surroundings—a delightful surprise for your after-theater partv. Conducted
in a manner that will make it a genuine pleasure to bring your wife, daughter or sweetheart.
OldGrads to .Flock to Georgia-Auburn Game'
PLAN REUNION
Eugene Black and Harrison Jones,
ilumnl of th • University of Geor
gia, have been notified that they
I have been chosen to deliver
I speeches Thursday night at Athens at
; banquet which the University Ath
letic association will give to Georgia
and Auburn men following the Geor
gia-Auburn fotball san c.
Other entertainment will consist of
a reception and dance- to alumni .of
both institutions. Tom Mell, of Ath
ens, will be toastmaster at the banquet.
Extensive preparations are being
made for handling tin- crowds which
are expected to ;;tti jd the game. A
special train will be run on the Sea
bo.Jld from Atlanta, tickets to be sold
at st.so each and good until 11 o’clock
at night. The train will probably leave
Atlanta at 9 a. rn. and 1,000 supporters
of the two teams are expected to go
along. The dancers will buy straight
tickets home Friday morning.
Os interest to Georgia and Auburn
men will be the announcement that. nr.
HURRIED MARRIAGE
THWARTS PLANS FOR
ELABORATE WEDDING
i T ie prospect of a Thanksgiving wed
ding. with a nuptial supper, and a for
midable list, of friends invited to the
oniony and the feast proved too
I much for Miss Ruth Selker, of 155 West
’ -,!< iltts avenue, and he:- fiance, Seth
Hayes. Now tla i- will be no wedding
I feast, The invitations hail as well nev
, :■ been engrave*!—and the marriage—
■..••ll. today Miss Selker Is Mrs. Hayes.
Th< parents and friends of the young
•|_l;.-iir had prepared for high revel on the
'(•nuptial occasion. This perturbed the
prospective participants. Eond parents
and enthusiastic friends are too prone
to throwing rice and old shoes, ringing
cowbells, tacking white ribbons on
trunks, sticking "We’re married" signs
on backs and other Jokes that are as
i traditional with a wedding ceremony as
i Hie bridegroom’s forgetting the ring.
1 So yesterday Miss Selker and Mr.
Hayes held counsel. They decided to
, forego the festivities, even if their
friends had to be disappointed. So
1 they quietly walked around the block to
a minister's house and were married.
! DREAMING OF FIRE, SHE
FALLS 9 FLOORS: LIVES
I NEW YORK, Nov. 25.—While dream
• ing that the building was on fire, Mrs.
I Ida Radt, wife of a banker, walked
. through an open window on the ninth
f floor of the Hotel Orleans, in her sleep
j early today, and crashed down upon
1 a skylight in an interior court.
Mrs. Radt was taken to the Poly
? clinic hospital, where it was said she
■ was nbt seriously hurt, although her
body was covered with cuts and bruises.
CHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1912.
effort will be made by university men
to have all football games between
Georgia and Auburn in the next four
years played in Athens. The present
agreement calls for three same/in
Athens and two in Auburn. Since the
latter place is .smaller and draws slim
mer crowds, the alumni of the state
institution believe much more, money
could he made under their plan. Dr.
Ross, physical direct'. »' Auburn, has
been specially invited to Athens and
will be heard on the subject
“We expect to show Auburn that we
can get the crowds ov. ■ to Athens by
special train from al' parts of Ha
state," declared Harrison Joins today
“We ale going to h: ,■■ the ol 1 boys '
coming back like the grads at Michl- >
gan, Princeton. Yale, Harvard and Fenn
—not in Hie same number, but in the
same proportion. Georgia gatherings
hereafter will be of mor. interest to
alumni, and Auburn will t< that it is
to her advantage to play regularly In
Athens."
LINCOLN SHAFT AT
GAINESVILLE TO BE
DEDICATED NOV. 30
Veterans of the gray and old soldiers
of the blue will Join in the dedication
■ of the Lincoln memorial fountain No
i vember 30, to be erected in front of the
liostotlicc at Gainesvilb .
i The memorial fountain is due to the
; work of Mrs. Helen D. Longstreet. v.jd
. ow of the famous Confederate general.
. who is postmaster of Gainesville, and
has beer, made possible by donations
, from patriotic people of both North and
, South.
, A heroic figure of the Great Emanci
g pator and a symbolic figure, represent
( ing the South, radiant and hopeful, with
face set to the east, will surmount the
’ fountain.
The design includes two drinking
8 fountains —one side for white people,
8 the other for negroes. The four sides
8 of the memorial will bear appropriate
inscriptions.
It is expected that the fountain wi.l
1 be completed in tinie for unveiling .n
' the fall of January. 1913.
j SHOOTING FOLLOWS QUARREL,
HELENA, GA., Nov. 25.—John
Smith shot Mason Wilcox near the
Seaboard Air Line depot In Mcßae.
‘ Both parties are negroes. They quar
' reled when Smith drew his pistol and
fired three times, only one shot taking
effect. Wileox is expected to die. Smith
,' escaped.
i KILLED BY TRAIN IN MACON.
> MACON, GA., Nov. 25. —Adolph
) Lawman, a young man 22 years of age.
whose home was at Forsyth, was run
over and killed by a Southern railway
train within the city limits late yester-
■ day afternoon. His body was identified
late last night by his brother, Franz
. Lav. man, of Juliette.
M. F. Crtmsb-w.
M. i’. < 'r.-n-hav. a-- ntrsetor of I
I I ‘at nest i lie. <: ■'( -tie Sa 111- I
tar'.tm Suim i :i;i’in ->n. Thf :
' body was taken t<. < arttesvEh for fu- '
literal and interment.
-
<5. TAKE IT HOME BY THE BOX!
Improve Teeth, Breath, Appetite,
lW Digestion—Piece by Piece!
.’iSfc vti I ■'J
i It Millions of children’s teeth and digestions
'-J | are kept P erfect b y tbi® helpful habit.
Milons of smokers have their breath
W purified heartbum prevented —by the IBM
' refreshing mint juice. ISiL
Buy a box tonight. Chew it on your way W
home and after meals—put an edge on
dOr appetite and pass the time away,
''J i- ' " ' portable dainty }
i Wik costs fW<f ® by ‘b®
package, but less by I
the box—of any dealer. 1
Look for the spear
The flavor lasts
14
GOVERNOR GOES TO HIS FARM.
Governor Brown left Atlanta at noon
I for a short stay on his farm in Cherokee
: ounty. He will return to Atlanta on
' Monday morning.
1 Mrs. Humphry Ward’s j
f “The Mating of Lydia” I
I In beautiful Cumberland—that land of ballade and romance—Mrs. Ward has
iii created Lydia Penfold, the glorious heroine of her newest novel. The first
II chapters are now appearing in 0
B Good Housekeeping 1
W Magazine j»
V s ' ... . /iV*/
Vil Lydia lives in the mountains—among the beauties of nature—and grows into fefeffla,
young womanhood possessed of all the loveliness that has surrounded her.
Then Faversham enters—a fine, manly -ad a cnarming love story de
velops. It has all those fascinating, absorbing features that Mrs. Ward so
skilfully and capably employs. You will love Lydia and admire Faversham,
Christmas Suggestions
\ December number of Good Housekeeping Magazine
' there are also new ideas in gifts, games decorations, menut
U \ niany suggestions for having a happier Christmas day
w ustra profusely with exquisite pictures.
tt >, On Sale at All Newsstands or Send 15 Cents to
Good Housekeeping
I HKG Magazine
\ 381 Fourth Avenue, New York City.
WAYCROSS TO LET PAVING.
WAYCROSS. GA., Nov. 25.—The con
tra, t f -r laving Albany avenue with as
phalt blocks will he let Wednesday by
city council Bids will be opened on
that day. Approximately 6,000 square
yards will ba needed to pave the street.
ELKS THANKSGIVING DANCE.
Atlanta lodge of Elks will entertain
at an informal ball the night of
Thanksgiving day in the ball room of
their new home.