Newspaper Page Text
fi I Hl-y Ml IMLUliAHMH U
I ► ► I Him ►
T1TE \TT. A NT A OEOROIAN AND NEWS. WEDNESDAY. APRIL If, 1013.
FOUR HURT IN STRIKE RIOTS
AT MILFORD, MASS., PLANT
n .
Wit Aid I
latlflies
tyifyfiD. MASS.. April 16.-—Four
Jing (wo policemen, were
n.iured to-day in a pitched
ween the authorities and
the 6ft0 striking Industrial Workers
pi the World at the Dapworth & Sons
artaMF weh fartory.
h* The strikers fought with stones
PTifJ cltibs. The trouble originated
over the attempt of a mob of 500
to break up a crowd of 25 girls who
were going to work.
The Sunday American. YOUR ad
vertisement in the next issue will sell
goods Try it!
DEMOCRATS WILI GO SLOW
ON CURRENCY LEGISLATION
WASHINGTON. April 16.—Demo-
eratlc rncmbern of the Senate Com
mittee on Banking and Currency have
derided to go slow on currency leg
islation.
The committee will ntud> the testi
mony taken by the Pujo “money
trust and the (Hass committees be
fore framing a bill. The prospects
are now that there will be no action
at this extra session.
Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads
The Sunday American. YOUR ad
vertisement in tie next issue will sell
goods. Try it!
IIip
" p
r
«
K I M H A L, L S T O It K
114 .V. Pryor St.
Choose Your Piano House
As You Would Select
Your Bank
nr
our piano investment will then he
od dividends.
safe and will pay
r- You do not look about for unknown lianks and bankers;
why consider unknown makes and unknown makers?
Open a piano account with W. W. Kimball Co. Deposit
L a small amount each month and pay for a Kimball Up*
ijigTit or Grand or a wonderful Kimball Player-Piano.
the association with this tine old piano house, from one
to three years, while making monthly payments, is ap
preciated by all as being particularly advantageous.
,^Otjr location is most central, and this too, is still another
intage all those calling monthly appreciate,
the old piano slogan of Atlanta,
“You can find the piano
you want at Kimball’s/*
great house can best, supply your needs, no matter
you want or how much von want to pay, when it
cof$es to pianos, uprights, grands, player-pianos or fine
chjdfch and residence pipe-organs.
Ma n u facturers of
Kimball Quality
W. W. Kimball Co.
ESTABLISHED 1857.
ATLANTA BRANCH, 94 NORTH PRYOR ST.
H. R. CALIF. Mgr.
ras run in
ICE PRESIDENT THOM
AS R. MARSHALL, who
believes popular opinion
favors reversion of large es
tates to government.
Bank’s Plan Makes -
Christmas Painless
Traveler* Initltutee Weekly Deposit
Scheme to Prtjvlde Fund
for Qifte.
Scheme of Fortunes Reverting to
State Would Carry 2 to 1 Is
Marshall’s Belief.
WASHINGTON, April 16.—Men of
Judgment have expressed the belt* f
that a proposition to make all estate* |
ov* r $100,000 revert to the State upon
the* death of the owner, would he car
ried by a vote of two to one. declare*
Vice President Marshall in a state
ment i«fued here elaborating his
f speech made In New York last Satur-
> <iny night. His leading points follow:
“Men are asking whether there Is
any difference between the manufac
turer who comes to the Government
asking for help in his business and
j the poor man who goes to the work-
I house to ask for help,
j “The question is being asked why
j the Government should be expected to
| guarantee profits to the manufacturer
j when It does not guarantee the dlfTer-
j cnee in the cost of food at home and
j tbroad to the consumer with an extra
dollar for a rainy day.
i “There was a time in England when
! children were born not as British cit
izens, but as cogs in a machine, fed,
| as it were, to the mills and factories.
I It was a somewhat similar condition
that produced Roueseau in France and
it was Rousseau's writings that
brought about the revolution.
“I would go down Into the ditch to
shake the hand of a poor man, but I
would also be glad to shake the hand
of a rich man. We are all brothers.”
BILL GIVES RAILWAY
MEN 1 DAY REST IN 7
WASHINGTON, April 16.—A bill
making '.t compulsory for railroads to
grant tin ir employees 24 consecutive
hours off duty out of every period
of 168 hours has boon Introduced by
Senator Kenyon, of Iowa. The
hill Is designate] to amend the law
of March 4, 19 17, limiting the hours
of employees of railroads.
New In Atlapta • is the f'br.lstip i*
Savings Club, which the Traveler*
Hank and Tfust Company start*
Monday. Christmas isabujrbesy. w,lt4»
the average cltibert, who Usually gets
an advance pm his December salary
about ' Dechnlber 2ft, boys his gift*
and either Is "broke" or badly "bent"
for a month or two ‘afterward.'
To make Christmas "painless," th*
Travelers' begins Monday to receive
deposits either of I cent or B cetft*.
Each week the initial deposit is add
ed to the amount due. For instance,
with a 5-cent membership,, deposits
run r>, 10. 15 cents, and so An up to
11.65, the amount to be depoelted
the week of December 1.
The club dtshands December GO,
when the Travelers' will urn' 1 checks
to all member's. Those who have
started at B Cents and increased their
deposit by that amount each week
will get $28.05: those who began with
1 ernt will draw $5.61. ; f , ;
Those who wish to can work the
plan the other way around, and p»V
the maximum next Monday, decreas
ing it each week until on/December
1 they will deposit eitliep ,1 cent or
5 cents, as the c^se may (j'e.
Over-Zealous Suitor
Fined for Love Scene
SOOTHES AND HEALS
Hyomei Medicates the Air You \
Breathe and Gives Quick Re-
! lief in Catarrhal Troubles.
Be wise In time and use Hyomei at
the first warning of catarrhal trou
bles.
Do not let the disease extend along
the delicate mucous membrane, grad
ually going from the nose to the
throat, thence into the bronchial
tubes, and then downward until the
lungs are reached anti you are in dan
ger of consumption.
Hyomei will relieve all curable
forms and stages of catarrh. It is so
uniformly successful in this common
yet dangerous disease that it is al
ways sold on money back if not ben-
j \ efited plan.
There is no other treatment for ca
tarrh that is like Hyomei or just as
good- None can take Its place, none,
give such quick and sure relief and
at so little cost. Its medication is
breathed through a pocket inhaler
that conies with every outfit, thus
reaching the most remote cells of the
air passages, killing the catarrhal
germs and soothing and healing the
irritated mucous membrane.
Begin the use of Hyomei to-day and
you will soon find that the offensive
breath, the droppings into the throat,
the discharge from the nose, snif
fling and all other symptoms of ca
tarrh are overcome. The complete
outfit costs but $L Extra bottles of
liquid, if later needed. SO cents at
druggists everywhere.
i f
Girl Pleads She Is
Medium, Not Insane
Talks to Dead Sweetheart and Rela-
tives Think Her Crazy—Ad
judged of Unsound Mind.
Pretty Aliene Foster, of 400 Pied
mont Avenue, who was adjudged in
sane In the Ordinary’s Court to-day,
told the jury that her lapses were
due to journeys into the w’orld of
spiritualism with a dead boy sweet
heart, the son of a San Francisco
woman.
“I am not insane,” she said to her
trialmen. “J am a medium, I sup
pose. Sometimes I feel peculiar, and
I talk with people from the other
world.
“Most of the time when I am in
the spiritualistic world I see and talk
with the son of a lady whose home is
in San Francisco. He is my sweet
heart. When I am in what you call
a ‘trance' my relatives think 1 am
crazy, T suppose, but really I am
not."
She told a pathetic story of her
confinement in sanitariums for ner
vously affected people because, she
said, of a spiritualistic power over
which she. had no control.
Demonstration Over Boarding House
Companion Takes Student Into
Police Court.
When O. A. Reaves, an Amarillo,
Texas, student, was arraigned to-day
before Recorder Broyles for creating
a scene yesterday in the dining room
at his boarding house, 1JM1 Courtland
Street, witnesses declared l>e had
made too big x demonstration oyer
one of the girl boarders.
William Evans, the boarding-house
proprietor, said he interfered and
that Reaves attacked him. The stu
dent was also said to have acted dis
orderly at the dining table in the
presence of other guests.
Judge Broyles fined him $25.76.
LA GRANGE COLLEGE BOARD
FAVORS WESLEYAN MERGER
County's-Institute for Incorrigi-
bles May Combine With Har
riet Hawkes Refuge.
DOUGLAS. ARIZ., April 16—Five
hundrel fifty-five Mexican rebels
and Federal- hav. been killed in tn -
campaign around Fapanea and Naco.
General Ojeda, the Federal Com-
miider. whb tv.tl, his 'staff, fled to
.United -Slat's soil when he saw de-
feat at the hands of the rebels In-
evltabby has been paroled with hjs
staff, by the
authorities.
piled .States military
Hev. Cameron Johnson, of Rtcy-J
mond. Va., who has spent most of hi|
life an a foreign missionary at hisowf
expense, will deliver an illustrate!
lecture on Japan at the Westmlnstel
Presbyterian Church at 8 o'clock tol
night At the same hour and pi ac J
to-morrow night Mr. Johnson ail
give an Illustrated lecture on ChlnJ
and Friday evening on Korea.
A* a result of a proposal submit
ted by John J: Eagan and R. A.
Hemphill, trustees of the Harriet
Hawkes Home, Fulton County Com
missioners will consider the advis
ability of locating the county's pro
posed home for incorrigible girls on
the Hawkee site in Stewart Avenue,
nehr Hapevllle, and co-ordinating the
work of the two institutions.
The proposal was made to the Com-
rrdadton in the form of a letter to
TtiH C. Waters, chairman of the
county's committee on alms and ju
veniles. It is a theory of the Hawkes
trustees that the work of both in
stitutions can be conserved better un
der one management.
If the plan is adopted both homes
will be locatad on the 60-acre tract
deeded the trustees by A. K. Hawkee,
but the Haitkes endowment doubtless
will be used for the Ha-wkes home.
Commissioner Waters said that he
•will lay the matter before the full
Commission for decision and will ad
vocate the plan, providing the coun
ty is glv&n a deed to the land and
absolute control.
"The county propoees to erect a
home tpr Incorrigible girls." said John
J. Eagan to-day, "and for this reason
It Is etsy to see that the work of the
Hawkes home would be more effi
cient If co-ordinated with the coun
ty's undertaking."
LAGRANGE, GA.. April 16—The
general 'plan for the consolidation of
LaGrange Female College with Wes
leyan , Female College at Macon was
approved yesterday at a meeting of
the board of trustees of the local
school and a committee appointed, to
meet a committee from Wesleyan to
go into the plan In detail.
Tills action does not mean'that the
consolidation of the two Institutions
is an assured fact, but that it is be
ing seriously considered by both in
tltutions and will likely be consuin
mated if an agreement can be
reached. The committees have a great
deal of detail work to do before the
matter can finally be acted upon.
Mayor and Council
Battle Over Pump
Woodward Objects to $7,000 Appro
priation on Ground it Practically
Anticipates Revenue.
1
Established 186 y
EISEMAN BROS., Inc.
Incorporated lyiJ
* A
m
.4»
3
i
'm
'M
jm
I
eagi
t t r
(>lt/<
Mb-
y'O
1892 :
are you a
“Blue Serge-ite”
Are you the “partial-to-Blue-Clothes” party, who comes
to look at all the styles and all the fabrics and colors -
and LIKES ’em all—-but BLUE, BEST?—and—BUYS
BLUE—too—yes, EVERY TIME; because the “BLUE
CLOTHES” habit becomes a strongly favored one when
once cultivated. And the fad is not restricted to retiring
men of reserved tastes either. Young men are the chic
devotees of the BLUE SUIT—there’s a dapper
iness” in their appearance, that gives a man th
the strictly “well groomed”—
To narrow the subject right down to busi
ness, we are showing the largest and most rep
resentative lines of the popular BLUE SUITS
from SEVEN OF AMERICA’S MOST NO
TABLE MAKERS.
All the favorite fabric finishes. Serges, basket weaves,
Cheviot finishes in the very deep toned blue, medium
deep blues, and in the very newest NEW Blue.
ENGLISH cuts, NORFOLKS, and their many versions.
$15, $18.50, $20, $25, $30 to $45
Hess Tan Oxfords Look Fine With Blue Suits
$5.00, $6.00, $7.00
i-.
;«
gaols
Another fight between Mayor
Wooward and the Council was begun
to-day when the Mayor found ob
jections to the appropriation of $7,-
000 for a water pump for the river
station. He held a long, heated con
ference with \V. G. Humphrey, chair
man of the Council Finance Commit
tee, and \V. Z. Smith, but when seen
by a Georgian reporter he would not
say whether or not he would veto
the resolution.
The appropriation was taken from
the expense account of the water de
partment. Mayor Woodward’s ob
jection was that this expense money
would have to be replaced in June
and that the act of Council prac
tically amounted to anticipating rev
enue. to which policy he is strongly
opposed.
BRYAN BILL WOULD PROTECT
CITRUS FRUIT FROM DISEASE
WASHINGTON, April 16.—Senator
Bryan, of Florida, to-day introduced
a bill prohibiting the admission Into
the United States of any citrus fruits
infected with the. red scale, white fly
or other parasitical enemies of the
citrus family.
best advertising medium.
The Sunday American goes every
where all over the South. If you have
anything to sell The Sunday Amer
ican is "The Market Place of the
South.” The Sunday American is the
DIRECTORS ONLY CONTEST
IN ATHLETIC CLUB VOTING
Only one contest is anticipated in
The Joy of
Coming Motherhood
A Wonderful Remedy That is a
Natural Aid and Relieves
the Tension.
Mother's Friend, a famous externa]
remedy, 1s the only one known that is
able to reach all the different parts in-
HUSBAND TRIED TO BURN
HER, SAYS DIVORCE SEEKER
SOUTH BEND, IND., April 16.—
Accusing her husband of setting Are
to their home in order that she might
be killed and then calmly going away
to leave her to her fate, Mrs. Agnes
Hertach to-day filed suit for divorce
against Emil Hertsch.
According to the allegation.
Hertsch poured coal oil about the
hdme, spread some over her clothing,
touched a match to the place and
then walked out. Mrs. Hertsch was
saved by firemen. She said to-day
she believed her husband Insane.
Have You Bought
Your Spring Footwear Yet? No!
Well, you should see the new
things we are showing in
Colonial Pumps
and
Low Heel Effects
that are stylish. We have
them in Patents, Tans,
Guns, Mat Kid, White
Canvas and Buck.
Real Beauties
$ 2 5# to *6 00
Shoes
and
Hosiery
27-29 Whitehall
volved. It is a penetrating application
after the formula of a noted, family doc
tor, and lubricates every muscle, nerve,
tissue or tendon affected. It goes direct
ly to the stralqed portions and gently
but surely relieves all tendency to sore
ness or strain.
By its daily use there will be no pain,
no distress, no nausea, no danger of
laceration or other accident, and the
period will be one of supreme comfQrt
and joyful anticipation. t
To all young' women Mother’s Friend
the annual election of the Atlanta is bfie of the greatest of all helpful in-
Athletic Club Tuesday night. That is Jtl of _» n A ta
for the directorship. Fourteen can- ~~
li
'L
Eiseman Bros.,
11-13-15-17 Whitehall
Entire Building
The largest and most complete Outfittcry for men in the South
didates have been nominated, of
whom five are to he chosen.
Those nominated are R. W. John
son. Frank H. Reynolds. Dowdell
Brown, Coke Davis. H. O. Heinz, Carl
ton Smith. Raul H. Narcross. Stanley
Norcross, C. J. Holditeh, A. X. Glide,
Jr., Howard Matthews, Jr., C. Me-
Michael, O. M. Rumspeck and W. G.
Brantley, Jr.
There will be no contest for presi- ,, _ ,, „ _ , -
firm and vice president. J. Henry |
1 orter received the nomination for
president and H. W. Davis was
named for vice president.
agonies and 'dangers, dispels all the
doubt and dread, ail sense of tear, and
ihus enables the mind and body to await
the greatest event in a woman's life with
untrammeled gladness.
Mother’s rriend is a most cherished
remedy in thousands of homes, and i»
of such i*eeullnr merit and value as to
make it essentially one to be reo'om
mended by all women.
You will find it on sale at all drug
stores at $1 a bottle, or the druggist win
gladly get it for you if you Insist upon
it. Mother’s Friend Is prepared only by
Bradfield Regulator Company, 137
Umar Building, Atlanta. Oa., who will
send you by mail, sealed, a very lnstrue
tlv© book to expectant mothers. Write
for It to-day.
Human System Poisons Itself
Otherwise Most of Us Would
Live To Be Methuselahs.
Scientists say that almost every mo
ment we are poisoning ourselves,
xutotoxemia, they term it. or Self-
Poisoning. Kliminate Autotoxemia
and we could live to be hundreds of
years old.
All foot! eaten leaves in the stomach
some waste, unused particles. This
waste ferments and generates uric
acid and when uric acid gets in the
blood it poisons the system—self-poi
soning. Constipation, indigestion, bil
iousness. dyspepsia, sick headache,
languidness and a weakened physical
condition all result from self-poison
ing.
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT flushes
stomach and intestines, dissolves the
uric acid which has accumulated and
expels it with the fermenting waste.
Take JACOBS’ LIVER SALT In the
morning before breakfast You will
do a better day’s work, and live
longer
JACOBS’ LIVER SALT is better
than calomel for constipation and bil
iousness. Acts quickly and more thor
oughly, requiring no cleansing after
dose of oil; causes no after-danger of
salivation; never gripea.or nauseate®
It effervesces agreeably. No other liv
er tonic has the same mild, natural
flushing action, though many imita
tions (in name) are offered. Insist
that your drui
JACOBS’
not. a full-sized jar will be mailed upon
receipt of price, 25c. poetagfc free.
Made and guaranteed by Jacobs’
Pharmacy Company, Atlanta.
druggist supply the genuine
LIVER SALT. If he can
Put in a Nickel Now
This is not a prize-giving contest nor an advertising
schepie. It is a simple plan to help you save your own
money. It is the Christmas Savings Club. It begins
next week.
You deposit five cents the 1st week, ten cents the
2nd week, fifteen cents the 3rd week, twenty cents the
4th week, and so on for 33 weeks. At the end of that
period, which will be Xmas time, when you need money
most, you will have $28.05 to your credit in this bank.
*; ; c . i •• * : • •' ’ . _
Draw Out $28.05 Xmas
Or, you can deposit two cents the first week, four cents the second
week, six cents the third week, and so on for 33 weeks, and have $11.22
at Christmas.
Or, one cent the first week, two cents the second week, three cents
the third week, etc., and have $5.61 at Christmas.
You can deposit in any or ail three of these classes.
Can you think of an easier way to provide money for Christmas
presents? Can you think of an easier way to cultivate a regular habit of
saving? You don’t have to draw the money out at Christmas unless you
want to. You can leave it in this strong and progressive bank, where it
will draw 4 per cent interest compounded twice yearly, and add to it by
continued savings.
We will begin receiving these special savings accounts next MON
DAY MORNING, APRIL 21st, at 9 O’CLOCK. We will continue to
receive them for ten days. The number of accounts of this kind we can
open are, however, of necessity limited, and all persons who desire to take
advantage of the arrangement are urged to call and make their first deposit
as early as possible.
This is a plain, straightforward banking proposition. If for any
reason you discontinue payments, you get back all that you paid in.
The Travelers Bank and Trust Co. is The Bank of Personal Service.
This is a special service we are performing to make it easy for you to
cultivate the saving habit.
Travelers Bank & Trust Co.
Peachtree at Walton
iti;