Newspaper Page Text
CUPP IMlffl
PMEIM
Democrats, Angered at Chair
man's Biil in Congress, Will
Frame Own Legislation.
WASHINGTON, Dee. 13.—A split be
.., :Democratic and Republican
. rs of the Clapp campaign inves
: t committee is threatened be
: the action of Chairman Clapp
■ /inducing a bill restricting the
.. . ng of contributions for presiden
■ maries or congressmen from one
.. . into another.
embers of the committee agree
■me legislation is needed. The
rats, however, protest that
,• ..an Clapp should not have intro
lils measure until all of the
■. me had ended. They declare that
■ >nly partially remedies the sit
uation.
v •'■ . ■ ■inclusion of these hearings.
. .. lift ed, the Democrats will pro
their own legislation independ
,■ ■ cf t'hairman Clapp and will seek
t-. g. ■ a party indorsement of their
SETTLES SDUR, UPSET STOMACH IN
FIOINIffES-PAPES DIAPEPSIN
As soon as it reaches the stomach all that distressing
gas, Sourness, Heartburn and Indigestion vanishes.
L .■ :ii In live,minutes all stomach
ci.-t gone. No indigestion, heart
bun sourness or belching of gas, acid
. - ,■nictations of undigested food, no
zzui'-ss, bloating, foul breath or
Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its
spt ■■■! in egulating upset stomachs. It
t . surest, quickest stomach doctor
in tie whole world and besides it is
are ass and delightful.
Millions of men and women now eat
tli-Jr favorite foods without fear—they
kro'.v it is needless to have a bad stom
ach.
WOOD BROS.
CASH NO DELIVERY
OPENING SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14
Would a saving of 50 per cent on the high cost of living in
terest you? If so, note the prices below and get on the Band
Wagon and ride to 165 Peachtree street, where you will find the
very highest grades of Fresh Meat. Smoked Meat, Poultry. Game
and Oysters. Bell Phone. Ivy 26.
Port.mouse Stdak 221-2ctb I Raw Ham, sliced 25c tb
Itouiiil Steak 15c tb ' Raw Ham. whole 18c tb
'•"ii Steak 17 1-2ctb Spare Ribs 15c 1b
w nl Steak 20c tb ! Brains, set 10c
''■ul ('hops 15c tb j Liver, pound 10c
Lainb Chops 20c tb i Breakfast Bacon, strips, 190, 20c, 23c
chops 15c tb Breakfast Bacon, sliced .. . .25ctb
i'K "i Lamb 15c tb Dried Beef, sliced 35c lb
■'''<>f Latnb 12 1-2ctb Wiener Sausage 12 1-2 c lb.
b Stew 10c tb ' Bologna Sausage 12 1-2 c lb.
'■•‘i f Stew 7c tb Boneless Ham . 15c tb
' ' ‘ Roast 15c tb Corn Beef 10c to 15c tb
> i..i11... ■ Veal 121-2ctb Pig Feet, pickled s 8c
i'. i< Ftoast 15c tb Fresh Big Feet, dozen 45c
Sausage 15c tb Dressed Hens 18c tb
i"1 Sausag, 121-2ctb Dressed Turkeys 221-2ctb
‘ ihurger steak 15c tb Dressed Fryers 25c tb
'V.Hed Ham, sliced 38 ctb Stew Oysters . ~3scqt
IHarn, whole 24c tb Select Oj sters 45c qt.
WOOD BROTHERS
165 Peachtree Street
FURS n AUCTION!
Atlanta people know what the name “Kalin Bros.' - stands for in the fur business.
This firm, well known to Atlanta buyers, offers its entire magnificent stock, representing
a small fortune, in the very finest of Genuine Russian Furs, at public auction.
Sales Daily 10:00 A. M., 2:30 and 7:30 P. M.
.\ot a special “auction stock.” but their regular elegant line—-the finest collection
ever offered at auction. The stock, which is very large, has been moving 100 slowly, and
nor wishing to take chances in carrying it over the season, everything will be closed out
at once to the highest bidder. If you are alreadv supplied, attend this sale for the purpose
of an
Xmas Gift De Luxe
The stock consists of:
FUR SETS in genuine Eastern Mink, Sable, Persian Lamb, Russian Lynx, Fox, etc.
COATS in all furs and different styles.
GENTS' FUR-LINED COATS, Automobile Robes, also a complete line of Animal
Rugs, of various pelts, such as Polar Bears, Tigers, Russian Silver-Tip Bears, Leopards and
Wolves.
Nothing Reserved-Anything Put Up On Request
A cordial invitation extended to the Atlanta public, especially to the ladies, to attend
this sale. Undoubtedly the finest lot of furs ever offered at Auction in the South. Sales
now going on daily, and will continue until entire stock is sold.
122 Peachtree Street
B. Bernard, Auctioneer
TYRUS COBB TO INVITE
WOODROW WILSON TO
SOJOURN IN AUGUSTA
AUGUSTA, QA., Dec. 13.—Augusta’s
delegation to invite President-elect
oodrow Wilson to spend some time
in this city during January or Feb
ruary of 1913 will leave Sunday after
noon for New York, and will greet
the future head of the nation soon after
his arrival from Bermuda.
Governor Wilson lived in Augusta
for ten years as a boy when his father
was pastor of the First Presbyterian
church.
The Augusta delegation is composed
of Tyrus R. Cobb, Tracy I. Hickfnan,
Daniel G. Fogarty and Charles P. Press,
ly, of the Chamber of Commerce, and
J. Frank Carswell, James S. Farr, Wil
liam P. Flythe and Thomas J. Hamil
ton, representing official Augusta. Pres
ident Joseph S. Reynolds named the
Chamber of Commerce delegates and
Mayor Thomas Barrett, Jr, named the
delegates from the city.
Congressman Thomas W. Hardwick
will join th® party in Washington city.
Ty Cobb left yesterday afternoon for
Royston for a short visit. He will join
the partylin Washington.
NURSE DIES OF TYPHOID
CAUGHT FROM A PATIENT
GADSDEN, ALA., Dec. 13.—Lillian
I ayne, a pretty professional nurse, 24
years old, who came here a year ago
with a patient from San Antonio, Texas,
died yesterday afternoon from typhoid
fever, contracted while she was waiting
on a patient suffering with that malady.
Get a large 50-cent case of Pape’s
Diapepsin from any drug store and pm
your stomach right. Stop being mis
erable—life is too short —you are not
here long, so make your stay agreeable
Eat what you like ant' digest it; enjo;
it, without fear of rebellion in the
stomach.
Diapepsin belongs in your home.
Should one of the family eat‘something
which doesn’t agree with them or in
case of an attack of indigestion, dys
pepsia, gastritis or stomach derange
ment. it is there to give the quickest,
surest relief known. (Advt.)
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.FRIDAY. DECEMBER 13, 1912
ELEVEN POSITIONS
IN CIVIL SERVICE
OPEN NEXT MONTH
* _____
Eleven new positions, paying from
$760 to $4,000, will be filled by the civil
service commission during the month of
January, 1913.
On January 8 examinations for the fol
lowing offices will be held:
Eaboratory assistant in physics, $1,200;
laboratory helper, candy making, $900;
junior alloy chemist, $1,800: engineer and
plumber, $720: assistant agriculturist in
farm economi s, $1,800; entomological as
sistant. SI,BOO, and scientific assistant in
plant physiology, $1,400.
Examinations for farm architect at $2,-
000 a year and chief of field service in
rural education at $4,000 a year will be
held on January 13. On January 22. ex
aminations will be held for blue printer,
at SI,OOO, and tariff clerk, at $1,200 a year.
p v r’”_> ’ ° H
MORSE PREPARING TO
FIGHT SHIP MONOPOLY
BOSTON, Dec. 13.—Charles W. Morse
is enlisting Boston capital in his fight
against Charles S. Mellen to regain
control of the Metropolitan Steamship
line and bring back the steamers Har
vard and Yale from the Pacific coast.
He is due in America from Europe Jan
uary 1, and is prepared to make a light
to wrest the water transportation busi
ness between Boston and New York
away from the New Haven monopoly.
Meanwhile a committee of stockholders
in the old Metropolitan line has been
formed to regain control by .having the
sale of the line declared in violation of
the Sherman anti-trust law.
DENOUNCES ORGY IN
WASHINGTON MARCH 4
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Denounc
ing scenes he witnessed four years ago
on the eve of the Inauguration of Taft
as a “carnival of vice,” William F.
Crafts, of tire National Reform league,
urged a senate committee to pass a
abolishing the “red light” district of
the national capital before the inaugu>
ration of Wilson. “Det not the inaugu
ration of Woodrow Wilson and the
coming of his three charming daugh
ters and his Christian home be marred
by these horrible conditions,” he
pleaded.
SLATON WILLTsPEAK AT
FRATERNAL UNION DINNER
Governor-elect John M. Slaton will be
the chief speaker at a banquet of local
members of the Fraternal Union of
America, to be held at the Knights of
Pythias hall tonight. The entertain
ment will be given in honor of V. A.
Young, of Denver, supreme president of
the organization.
Among the other Atlantans scheduled
to address the assembly are Shepard
Bryan, James L. Mayson, W. P. An
drews, Reuben R. Arnold, John Y
Smith and H. H. Cabaniss.
100.000 MEN IDLE IN
BRITISH RAIL STRIKE
NEWCASTLE, ENGLAND, Dec. 13.
: Tlie Northeastern railroad refused to
reinstate the strikers whose walkout
i has made more than 100,000 idle and
Itied up business in northern England.
The union now threatens to extend the
strike to other systems.
Beauty Bares Secrets of New York Social Circle
"WIVES SHUN HUSBANDS"
. MHi
MMIfI
1 ■ HI xil'
pip
Miss Isabel Valle, of St. Louis, whom Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt,
Jr., terms the “best looking girl in America.’’
“Best Looking Girl” Tells of
“Turkey Trot” While the
Butler Played.
ST. LOUIS, Dec. 13.—“ You go to vis
it an ultra-fashionable woman in New
York and you will never know that her
husband lives with her.
"They may dwell under the same
roof, but they have separate establish
ments; they are as far apart as the
poles.'
So declared the lovely Miss Isabel
Valle, who has returned from a long
visit to Newport and New York. Her
beauty and vivacity created a sensa
tion, the most fashionable people wel
comed her to their villas and city
homes.
"She is the best-looking girl in Amer
ica,” vowed Mrs. William K. Vander
bilt, Jr., carried away by admiration.
Their Husbands Not There.
"You go to a dinner in New York and
the husbands of the married women
who are guests are not there,” contin
ued Miss Valle, who, descended from
an old French family, was a debutante
of last year, when she was nineteen
"Nor are the wives present if it is the
married men whom the hostess has bid
den. So everybody is happy and Jolly.
In that is the most striking contrast be
tween St Louis society and society in
the East. Here the married people are
the strict observers of the conventions
and the younger people are unrestrain
ed and independent. There getting
married seems to be a signal for cut
ting loose from conventions, while the
members of the younger set are the
ones who are stiff and straight-laced
and ceremonious.
"A party of 31 of us ran over from
Newport to New York,” Miss Valle con
tinued. “We were all tired out by the
gaieties of the Newport season. Our
host and hostess con -eived the idea of
going to New York for a week’s rest,
and asked us to go along. Nearly every,
body in the party was married; oh,
there was no lack of chaperons. Ar
rived in New York, we found the house
closed; a butler was the only servant
in It.
All the Guests Cook.
“Well, we all just turned in and did
for ourselves; we cooked steaks for
luncheon and coffee and eggs and toast
for breakfast—of course, we dined out.
“The butler played the piano well, so
we kept him busy playing while we
turkey-trotted. It was great fun, but it
could not have happened in St. Louis.
It was all too informal.”
“What do the fashionables in New
port think of the published descrip
tions of their ‘monkey dinners’ and
other ’original’ antics?” the reporter
asked.
"Oh they don’t mind it; they don’t
bother," Miss Valle laughed. "You see.
they just don’t take themselves serious
ly. They have the English idea about
seeing their names and pictures in the
newspapers.
Thinks Family Conservative.
"You know in England the photo
graphs of all the great beauties are sold
in the shops. Here, my family and
friends think it perfectly dreadful the
way my picture has been printed all
over the country. They say 1 am far too
modern, and I think they are ridicu
lously conservative and serious.
“But I should like you to know that
when I was East I met quite a num
ber of people whom even you would
call worthy,” Miss Valle continued.
"There was Inez Milholland. She is
very handsome and very intellectual
and awfully distinctive—always mak
ing suffrage speeches and getting up
things for suffrage. And Preston Gib
bons. the playwright. I met him every
where. And many other people who
are really doing worth-while things,
some more quietly than others."
TO VISIT SAVANNAH LODGES.
SAVANNAH, GA., Dec. 13.—W. S.
Coleman, of Cedartown, grand master of
the grand lodge of Odd Fellows of Geor
gia. is to be the guest of the Savannah
lodges on the evening pf January 14.
The Past Grand association, T. M.
Hoines, chairman, will have the enter
tainment of the visitor in charge.
Famed For Fashion
% Our Overcoats
Refined and Elegant Cloths
a Models Gracefully Designed
I '
» ii A man °f the hour who knows styles says
'li our variet y Fashionable Overcoats is “the
j greatest he’s ever seen.”
I > I Why shouldn’t it be, with not less than eight
i of the Best Overcoat Makers in America linking
their talent with ours in perfecting fashionable
1 garments for men of taste?
[ I
pji — Our Overcoats Range From
I sls to S6O
It may well be said that our variety of Fashionable Suits is no
less extensive.
Our late shipments for holiday buying just in—and the new
weaves, patterns and colors are more attractive than ever. See this
variety of Suits from sls to SSO.
IVe fill mail orders promptly and guarantee perfect satisfaction.
Eise man Bros. inc.
H.13-IS-1T Whitehall St., Atlanta
CLOTHING OF CHILD
IGNITED BY GRATE;
BURNSCAUSEDEATH
One. hour after little four-year-old
William Hogan, who was burned to
death Wednesday night, was buried
yesterday afternoon, Ralph Mullins, the
four-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. C.
H. Mullins, caught fire while playing
near an open grate and died a few min
utes later.
Just as in the case of William Hogan,
the mother had left the room. Another
woman heard the child's screams and
found him, wrapped In flames, trying
to break through a window. By the
time she smothered the flames Ralph
was so badly burned there was no hope
for recovery. The child had just come
into the house on Germania avenue, in
Decatur, and had taken off his shoes to
warm his feet. How his clothes be
came Ignited Is not known.
The funeral will be held at the resi
dence this afternoon at 2 o'clock. In
terment will be at Collins Springs.
vanderbilTheirTat 10,
REAL WEATHER PROPHET
NEWPORT, R. 1., Dec. 13.—Master
William H. Vanderbilt, ten-year-old son
of Mrs, Elsie French Vanderbilt, has
developed unusual talents in predicting
weather changes, and spends much time
studying and making copies of official
weather maps.
MODEL
You have known the name Regal
for twenty years.
But you don’t know what that name means unless
you have worn the shoe.
It means good fit, good wear, and good looks.
Wearing Regals puts you in the class with the
best-dressed half-million Americans.
Start by Wearing CRISPIN MODEL ~ __
A London style, dressy, I j
modish, but comfortable. / ZHMt) !
Flat sole, wide shank, broad / /
tread, low heel—the fashion / / *•
notes of this winter. Tan /
Gun Metal Button, Russia / VA
Calf Blucher; also same S
patterns in Black King yX / V\
Calf Price Z JA
s4 ‘ so
/*" R 7
S) REGAL SHOE STORE J
•WS I. J. WING, Pro-. 6 Whilehall SI. X|
ARMY ORDERS
WASHINGTON. Dec. 13.—Following are
army orders for today;
Captain Alvin C. Vorls, from signal
corps to Fourth infantry, at Fort Crook,
Ntbr.
First Lieutenant Allen W. Guillon,
Twentieth Infantry, detailed as professor
military science and tactics, state univer
sity. Lexington. Ky.
First Lieutenant Talbot Smith, Sixth
cavalry, detailed for general recruiting
service at Jefferson Barracks, Mo.
BOTTLE FLOATS AROUND
THE HORN IN 23 YEARS
SEATTLE, WASH., Dec. 13.—After a
23-year voyage on the Atlantic and the
Pacific, a bottle bearing a note written
aboard the liner Rugta was picked up
near the mouth of the Qullla Yute river,
30 miles south of Cape Flattery. In the
bottle a note, yellow with age and un
signed, stated that the flask was tossed
into the Atlantic October 16, 1889, while
the Rugia was bound from Hamburg to
New York.
PLAN TO PRESERVE VOICE
OF BERNHARDT 1000 YEARS
CHICAGO. Dec. 13.—Sarah Bernhardt’s
voice Is to live a thousand vears through
a plan originating with Charles E. Kohl,
secretary and treasurer of the Majestic
theater. He will have records made of
her plays to be sealed for 1,000 years.
The discs will be turned over to the Field
museum. He expects to spend $5,000 to
carry out his purpose.
11