Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 03, 1912, HOME, Page 9, Image 9

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ZSL I W>- _WB^^m '* W 1 " ’ '* ! ’<^‘“"^ t • 6 7Tk ir l You Have Always Bought has borne the signa lhe ,r( has. 11. Fletcher, and has been made under his supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one ve von in this. Counterfeits, imitations and s-go'od” are but Experiments, and endanger the f Children— Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare lic Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It р, > iH iins neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic ■nhstaiice. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms nn i tll tvs Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind с. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Fl ttulencv. It assimilates the Food, regulates tlio aL.in u'h and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The C hildren’s Panacea-The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY. KEELY'S KEELY'S HMHHHHHI HHHHBBI mnnrwwirami >i> O ■ r v l 'V ; uiilll fid . Dolls — $ -f .50 At J- Each ---800 DOLLS will be placed on sale Wednesday at one price. -THESE will come at the right mo ment for gift purposes. --ON large table, near elevator, we shall display and sell 800 German Dollies $ i .50 At 1 Each I HE order, for these, was placed io months ago. They arrived by last week’s steamer. They go on sale tomorrow. —1 HIS is an undressed bisque doll ---24-inch size fully. —NATURAL flesh finish, curly hair, moving eyes, natural eyelashes, rosy cheeks, full jointed. --Will FE, pink or Blue shoes and stockings. -1 HESE would be cheap at $2, but westart the holiday sales with a rush at $1.25. ’“EXAMPLES of these dolls in 3 les can be seen in the display of a ndow full of them at KEELY'S want ads bring results. IHE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEW&TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1912. SEARCHING SIDELIGHTS ON GEORGIA POLITICS By JAMES B. NEVIN. William Charles Adamson, of the Fourth Georgia congressional district, will stand prominent in Democratic 'n councils under President Woocl row Wilson. As chairman of the powerful house committee on in terstate and for eign commerce, he inevitably is a member of great influence and au thority, as the congress is organ ized today; and under a compact Democratic ad ministration, all the way through from president to the house of rep resentatives, he is i destined, of course, to become an even more important factor tn national leg islation in Washington. Mr. Adamson on March 4 will begin , his ninth term in congress, and he shares, therefore, with Congressman ■ Bartlett the honor of being the oldest i member, in point of service, on the Georgia delegation. Mr. Adamson’s committee on inter state and foreign commerce is inti mately associated with the construction and prospective regulation of the Pan ama canal, and, next to the president and the secretary of war, he will figure most prominently in the opening of the canal. Under the leadership of Judge Adam son, the interstate and foreign com merce committee’s most Important bill was passed by congress last year, ac tually as written by the Adamson com mittee, over the protest of the senate committe on Isthmian canals. The bill was designed to break up and avoid in the future the practice of railroads owning and operating ships on waters whereon ships ought to compete with them. Its object, of course, was to foster competition in freight rates and I to prevent monopoly in canal com ; merce. Judge Adamson’s committee also put through, within two weeks after it was demanded by the Democratic national convention in Baltimore, a strong pub lic health bill, which gives the Federal government wide authority in the mat ter of sanitary control throughout the nation. The next important piece of legisla tion that the Georgia member expects to put through the house Is a bill pro viding for the physical valuation of the properties of all common carriers— a measure that has been demanded by the Intertsate commerce commission continuously for twenty years, but which never before has reached any thing like its present stage of advance ment. Judge Adamson is entirely unostenta tious. He is known as a working con gressman —a hard-working congress man at that —and he delivers the goods! It would require a search warrant from a source of very high authority to find in Georgia a greater friend of the common people than is Thomas G. Hudson, late commissioner of agricul ture. And then, in all probability, the searcher wouldn’t find him. Tom Hudson holds the common peo ple right jam up close to his heart of hearts —he never forgets that he is hold ing them right there. He sits up nights thinking how much he loves them, al ways has loved them, and always will love them! Hudson visited the agricultural de partment today, and had a look in on “Shop Early” and Easily Over an Atlanta Phone Christmas shopping days are here, and from now on the big stores will be crowd ed with happy buyers. Unfortunately, the weath er is not always as pleasant as are the holiday shoppers. When it rains, is cold, or you are tired and want to escape the big crowds, why not “Shop by Wire?” Thousands of others are doing this, and our home phone, at 8 1-3 cents per day, places it within reach of all. Atlanta Telephone and Telegraph Co. IA. B. CONKLIN, Gen. Mgr. his former field of activity. He viewed J. J. Brown’s manly form, and sighed. He peeped in on Commis sioner Conner, and sighed some more. And then he said: "It makes me sadder than I can say to see you fel lows here, playing politics, while I am out mingling with the common people, and just loving them—that's all—just loving them!” “The—the underworld —that's accord ing to the new Bible —you say,” was all Brown would reply. And Conner wouldn't say anything at all! He “jes’ laffed.” Those misguided ones who labor un- ■ der the impression that the Bull Mose party is defunct in Georgia, or that it has ceased its activity, are mightily mistaken. There Is a big Bull Moose movement on In the Adairsville district of Bartow county, and the prize contended for is a justice of the peaceship. The fight is a three-cornered go. and the Bull Mooser is running on* his own party showing, while the other two candidates are splitting the Democratic vote. In these circumstances, the betting is that the Bull Mooser is to win the plum. Governor Joseph M. Brown is in Richmond attending his third national convention of governors. The Georgia executive believes that the "house of governors,” instituted by President Roosevelt, may be —and has been, in many instances—made a power for good in these United States, and he never has missed a conference called during either of his administrations. The governor finds it a greater satis faction to deal with an executive of an other state, known to him personally and associated with him in one of these annual conferences, than to deal with one a perfect stranger. Moreover, the Georgia governor thinks that the meet ing of the “house of governors" tends to keep alive the doctrine of state's rights, in which he, like his distinguished father before him, ardently believes. In accepting the original invitation from Governor Mann, of Virginia, who will be the host of the visiting gov ernors, Governor Brown said that he “might” bring his daughter, Miss Cora Brown, along with Mrs. Brown and himself, this year. Promptly by return mail he received a "command" from Governor Mann to do that very thing! On Saturday the governor, with all the visiting governors and members of their families accompanying them, will be the guest of President and Mrs. Taft at the white house in Washington. It was entirely characteristic of the late Joseph M. Terrell, twice governor of Georgia and some time United States senator, that in arranging for the dis tribution of hie modest fortune after death, he should so have fixed things that three of the more prominent edu cational institutions within the state of Georgia should come in for a generous share of It. The dominant note of his two admin istrations as governor was education of the masses—the proudest achieve ment of his five years in the governor ship was the institution of the eleven district agricultural schools in Georgia. Governor Terrell's will provides for eventual legacies of $5,000 each to Mer cer, the Tech and the Normal and In dustrial school at Milledgeville. Joseph M. Terrell began life as a farmer lad. He came from between the plow bandies to the governorship. He knew the people of Georgia, and he grieved that national statistics for a time put Georgia so high in its per centage of illiteracy, as compared with other states. He set about lifting that pall of Illiteracy in such wise as he might—and into the great beyond he carried this compelling and noble ideal. It takes eight long hours to affix the great seal of the state of Georgia to certain documents. That Is one entire working day—and what- real good purpose the great seal serves that might not be served without it, nobody knows. It gives a state document a more or less impressive appearance, perhaps, but beyond that—why the great seal of state, anyway? STU DSfiu7wHTo JUIM PED BOARD BILL, SHOT DEAD NASHVILLE, GA.. Dec. 3.—John Studstill was shot to death at Robin son's still seven miles south of Nash ville. by Bailiff William 8. Knight, while resisting arrest. Studstill was charged with jumping a board bill, and when Knight attempted to arrest him he tied Knight called for him to halt. Stud still refused to stop, and Knight fired. Knight claims he shot to frighten Knight, who was arrested soon after the killing, will be given a committal hearing tomorrow. Lester Knight has been arrested as accessory to the crime. He is charged with having told William Knight to shoot Studstill. He gave SI,OOO bond. Studstfll was about 22 years of age. “BART”~GLENN BUYS THE GAYETY THEATER AND WILL REMODEL IT F. B. Glenn, better known as Bart Glenn to thousands of theatergoers in Atlanta, has bought The Gayety Thea ter, located at OS Whitehall street. Under the new management. The Gayety will be remodeled and refur nished to such an extent as to make it one of the handsomest small theaters in the South. As a theater manager, there are few people in the business who have such a record of successes as Bart Glenn. Every house that has come under his management has sprung into almost instant popularity, and the large pat ronage of The Bonita, which was built and Is still operated under his direc tion, is a fair example of Jils ability and knowledge of what the (public de mands in the way of amusement. So keep your eye on The Gayety Probably the name will be changed soon, but, anvjxav. keep your eye on »8 Whitehall for there's going to be something in the amusement line when Bart gets things go-, tna (Acht.j WOMAN SHOOTS SELF: CLOTHES TAKE FIRE; BLOOD SUBDUES BLAZE PARIS, TENN., Dec. 3. —Miss Annie Conway, a beautiful young society woman, committed suicide while she lay in bed by shooting herself through the heart. Her gown was ignited by the flash of the pistol, bul the blood from her wound extinguished the flames. Edwin F. Conway, her brother, an employee of a bank in Mexico City, was recently found dead in bed from a bul let wound. THE FIRST GRAY HAIR SIGN OF AGE Easy Way to Preserve Natural Color of the Hair and Make It Grow. A harmless remedy, made from com mon garden sage, quickly restores gray hair to natural color. The care of the hair, to prevent it from losing its color and luster, is just as important as to care for teeth to keep them from dis coloring. Why spend money for cos metics and creams to improve the com plexion, and yet neglect your hair, when gray hair is even more conspicu ous and suggestive of age than wrinkles or a poor complexion? Os the two, it Is easier to preserve the natural color and beauty of the hair than it is to have a good complexion All that is necessary is the occasional use of Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, a preparation of common gar den Sage and Sulphur, combined with other valuable remedies for dry, harsh, faded hair, dandruff, itching scalp and falling hair. After a few applications of this simple, harmless remedy, your hair will gradually be restored to its natural color, in a short time the dan druff will be removed, and your hair will no longer come out, but will start to grow as Nature intended it should. Don't neglect your hair, for it goes further than anything else to make or mar your good-looks. You can buy this remedy at any drug store for fifty cents a bottle, and your druggist will give your money back if you are not satis fied after using. Purchase a bottle to day. You will never regret it when you realize the difference it will make in your appearance. Special agents, Elkin Drug Co. (Advt.) Special Sale of Christmas Handkerchiefs Already the great, roomy Handkerchief store has taken on the glow of the festive season, and the unusual stir and activity there for the past few days, which savors of the just before-the-holidays throng, bespeaks the wisdom and foresight of hundreds of early buyers, those who have learned from past experience what delayed shopping means. Wednesday, beautiful Gift Handkerchiefs are here for your choosing at special pricing. Conveniently arranged on tables, first floor; front. There Are Two Assortments 35c and 50c Handkerchiefs at 75c and 85c Handkerchiefs at vUC Fresh, crisp, snowy, immaculate, dainty, beautiful. They are for quick sale, and those wishing to share must choose early Wednesday. Here are the kinds for women. Samples: Scarcely two alike. Very dainty linen Handkerchiefs, hand-embroidered corner designs, hemstitched hems, various beautiful patterns to select from. Regular 35c and 50c Handkerchiefs, for Wednesday’s sale, at 25c each. Another assortment of sheer, exquisite, all-linen Handkerchiefs, hand embroidered; a hundred kinds to select from. Regular 75c and 85c Hand kerchiefs, priced for this sale at 50c each. These in Holiday Boxes---Of Special Interest Boxes containing four sheer, pretty, shamrock Handkerchiefs, with dainty initial each a different style; 75c box. Boxes containing six dainty, all-linen, initialed Handkerchiefs, three different pat terns; SI.OO box. Boxes containing six beautiful linen Handkerchiefs, with very dainty, hand-em- - broidered initial; assorted patterns; $1.50 box. Boxes cont'ining three hand-embroidered, linen, hemstitched Handkerchiefs SI.OO box. ‘ ; Mens Handkerchiefs Boxes containing six soft finish Handkerchiefs, 75c box. Boxes containing six all-linen Handkerchiefs, with initial, SI.OO box. Boxes containing six beautiful all-linen Handkerchiefs,, with hand-embroidered ini tial, $1.50 box. Gift Handkerchiefs for Little Tots Boxes containing three pretty little Handkerchiefs, with colored border and col ored initial, 15c box. Boxes containing three all-linen Handkerchiefs, with dainty initial, 25c box. Boxes containing three dainty Handkerchiefs, with colored border and colored ini tial, 25c box. , : Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co, PULL POSSUM OFF MAGNOLIA. ATHENS. GA., Dec. 3.—A big fat pos sum was caught on Dearing street, one of Athens' fashionable thoroughfares, by two young students, who were returning to their boarding place from a downtown fraternity house. It was pulled out of a magnolia tree. More som tnan al! otner prands com bined. SAUER'S PURE FLAVORING EXTRACTS. Because they flavo* BEST. Ask the housekeeper. (Advt.) FLOWERS and FLORAL DESIGNS. ATLANTA FLORAL CO., Both Phones Number 4. 41 Peachtree. < Advertisement» It is the duty of every Atlan tan to vote in tomorrow’s city election. See the Bakers Bake • Every day during the Gas Show the exhibitors of baking ovens will produce 1,000 loaves of bread. The Hour used will be contributed by the Capitola Flour Company and the L. \V. Rogers Company. The lard will be given by the Snowdrift Company. The yeast will be furnished free by the Fleischman Com pany. The gas will be delivered without charge by the Atlanta Gas Light Company. The bakers’ services will be gratis, and the L. W. Rogers Company will sell the bread over the counter in their 36 stores on behalf of the Free Kindergarten Association, to which worthy organization the entire proceeds realized from the sale of these loaves will be contributed. ♦ The ladies of the Free Kindergarten Association will maintain a booth in the Gas Show, where they also will contribute their services on behalf of the associa tion. Buy the bread and help the visitors help the chil dren. THE ATLANTA GAS LIGHT CO. It is the duty of every Atlan- , tan to vote in tomorrow's city r election. L . smsas I I EXPECTORANT I CURES IN A DAY Coughs, Colds, Consumption, ■ Whooping Cough, Croup, Trickling ■ * of the Nose, Watery Eyes, Drop- E pings in the Throat, Bronchitis, ■? and all Throat and Lung Trou- Ij bles. Cheney’s Exnectorant re- Hl lieves at once. Thoroughly tested H” for fifty years. • DRUGGISTS 25C AND SOC H L 9