Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 01, 1913, Image 4

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t I 1 M ARY GARDEN, prima donna, who found a man under her couch on a liner as she sailed for European tour. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TIM my rrrFpTq rip i3,ooo to Attend Bi s u!l! Li rtu IG Dlb I Sunday School Rail) Department Store Clerks in Buf falo Walk Out for Higher Wage and Shorter Hours. BUFFALO. May 1.—Flv department store clerk* i struck to-day. with hundre ty Kiris acting a> pickets. five local stores ute involved In the wage and hours of service dispute. The workers ask for an $X a we*-;, minimum wage for girls and women $15 minimum wage for men. $8 mini mum wage for boys, $18 a week for drives and chauffeurs, an eight-hour day and that the stores be elqck every evening. Contest for Membership Between Baptists and Christians Ends Sunday in the Auditorium, i Centrifugal Pattern Is Bought for $7,000 Against $60,000 for Old Type. i" The spirit of friendly rivali> and oil fellowship fostered by tin con- -\ between the First I'hristim and, cond Baptist, clundtuy schools is ex ited to result in the large icath- Ma> or Wood ward's signing of the ntract with the Georgia Railway and ower Company for electric current to operate a n*■ v\ 10,000,000-gallon ca pacity water pump at the river sta tion probably marks a new epoch in the history of Atlanta's waterworks department, according to W. Z. Smith, general manager. A steam pump of the type in use by the city would haw cost more than $6o,000. but the closed j t 5 o_clqck every evening They also demand Saturday huil- holldays In June, July, August ar»l September. 2,500 Miners on Strike. ST. CLAIRSVIDLE. OHIO. May I. - Two thousand five hundred miners of the Lorain Dock Company, in Bel-; mont County, struck < to-day because, of the refusal of the company to pay ] the men extra for cutting soapsto; - and slate out of the mines. Violence is feared, 1,300 Telegraphers Plan Walkout. CLEVELAND, OHIO, May 1. V. J. ! Moser, division superintendent of the Erie Railway, left here thl« morning j on a special train to make a trip I over the division to interview each • telegraph operator and personally j w plead with them not to g<> out mi \ strike, as they have planned to do \ Thirtr V oted to quit t h< Ir )<>b* at one< ui 1< fihey are given an increase in wugo of 12 per cent. Great Parade in New York. NJEW YORK. May I -Organized la bor of the East Side turned out strong to-day for the annual May Day pa rade. Two parades marched through the city, one uptown and the other downtown, and met at Union Square, where resolutions advocating a uni versal eight-hour day were adopted and speeches on Socialism were de livered in several languages. In the downtown parade were tin 4.000 members of the >*trlk1ng Ko.-her Bakers' Union. Ah effort was made by the Indus trial Workers of the World to partici pate in the parades, but the commit- tec of arrangements at a recent meet ing voted strongly against allowing .-.them to do so. ' \ There was an absence of red tlags. f although many of the paraders wore red sashes. contract for the centrifugal pump to I be operated by electricity I lor an expenditure of I more than $7,000. The objection of officials of the wa- t>i department/ heretofore to elec- ! iideally driven centrifugal pumps has (been the cost of operation. The cen- i trlfugal pumps are cheaper and con- I \ enieni to house and maintain, but j until the bid of the electric company. I based on the new water power rates. 1 whs submitted the officials did not believe the new plan would be 'economic. The rate is f» 1-2 mills per j l< How at hour. Work on the new pump will be rushed. General Manager Smith said the y rippled condition of two of the pnnfps at (he river station demanded that the new one be established as quickly as possible. ei ing of Sunday school pupils in the history of Atlanta Sunday morning at the Auditorium. Each school has a membership of more than l,00u. I h» joint meeting is expected to bring out not less than 3,000 persons. Teachers of the contesting Sunday schools got together at the First Christian last night, and. aft* > a din ner, discussed plans for the big gath ering on Sunday. Addresses were made by I)r. John E. White, of the Second Baptist Church; Dr. L. <> Brleker. of the First Christian, and John S. Spalding and O. V. LeCraw. superintendents of the two Sunday schools. iniy Tm." Girl Lives Year With Needle in Her Heart X-Ray Photographs Show Cause of Little New York Patient’s Ill ness and Death. NEW YORK. May 1 dot. a 2-year-old girl. Street, is dead in the Ray Zuckei- of 292 Second Prefebyteria t. needle through her Pantaloons on U. S. Eagle Anger Banker Hospital with heart. She had been ill for a year, but the cause was only recently learned, when X-ray photographs allowed -that the needle was penetrating the wall of her right ventricle. The parents. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Zuckerdot, believe that the child swallowed the needle while being wheeled about by a little girl neigh bor. 44 Mary Garden Finds 'Suitor' Under Sofa Few Strikes in Chicago. CHICAGO, May 1. -Few strikes, in volving but a small number of men. began to-day, the day when (’hlcago labor "union agreements became ef- -Yectiv** Half of the stone cutters w ho struck several weeks ago went back to work this morning. Asbestos work ers. nhmbering 150. walked out for » slight increase In wages About loo machinery movers and teamsters quit work when the negotiations for more pay failed. All the building trades were at work under the agreement signed Ma\ 1, 1912. Herbert Kaufman Writer, Divorced Beautiful Wife Is Granted Decree and Private Agreement Fixes Her Alimpny. ‘Throw Him to Sharks.' She Orders, Learning He Invaded State room by Mistake. Tennessee Man Would Tar and Feather Artist, He Writes Sena tor Martine. Youth Stays Longer, | Say New Optimists; NEW YORK. May I. Miss Mary Garden, radiant and slimmer thac ever, has sailed for the Highlands of Scotland and the boulevards of Paris. It was close to sailing time when she boarded the steamer Kaiser Wilhelm II, and went to her ateroom, just two cabins away from that occupied by Enrico Caruso pen W ASHINGTON. May 1. I should lik< to see tarred and feathered the artist who engraved our recent bank notes and put pantaloons on the American eagle." Thus wrote a prominent banker of Tonnes .e to Senator Martine. pro- i * sting against continuance of the "Treasury laundry." wherein bank j notes are washed and returned to cir culation. The burden of the protest was that I washing notes destroys the dlstine- j tiveness of the engraving and made the issue a "counterfeiter’s delight." French Club President Asserts 40 or | 50, Not 30. Is Regarded Now as Middle Age. d ' The stew quota of Amorii many admirers v most dead from llarly strong c iii. I ere lying : he smoke < gar. Miss >r. Bo s fro mind a a pec Gardi Stiff-Kneed Pastors Couldn't Touch Floor id exclaimed: sniffed, stepped back "Why all this smoke"" A shoe poking out from under the couch offered an explanation, and then the steward -hoiried that a man was hiding. Perhaps a stowaway. Per haps an admirer of the prima donna. The daring fellow," said Miss Gar den. sweet I’- "Maybe he - tried icf see me for years. How he must have loved me to run such a risk " The owner of the shoe was a portly man very sleepy and unable to ac count or apologize for hi.- presence. He did not kneel down and worship Mary Garden, and he was not hand some. Whereupon she exclaimed: "Throw him to the shark-. Over-1 board with him I'm sure he never tame to see me." The watchman on the pier said that the man was in the party that escort-| ed Caruso to the steamer at c a.‘m..l and probably mistook Miss Garden's! -tattroom for his friend <’anise's. PITTSBURG, May 1. Urged to eat little meat and plenty of peas, beans and eggs. «io local ministers to-day took off their coats’ and tried to touch fingers to the Moor without bending the knees. Few succeeded. • A lecturer from Berkerley. Cal,, ad vised the ministers about health. "Every minister ought to eat at least two apples a day and plenty of cabbage," it was stated. "You nuts' onions, too." U Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. PARIS. May I The Optimists, a society of well-known French artists and writers organized to combat the prevailing pessimistic ideas of the Old World, held it annual banquet last evening. "There is the lazy and puerile op timism which wishes to believe that all Is best in the best possible world," said Jean Finot, leading editor, who presided. "There is also another that contents itself with believing \vt* can make thc^ earth the best possible of worlds." M. Finot pointed out that the rela tions between parents and children were better than ever before and also that everyone stays Young long er. Two generations ago people were thought middle-aged at 30, but now it is 40 or even 50. "Progress," he concluded, "is accom plished like the Japanese workman produces a marvelous lacquer. He spreads a little resin on a piece of wood, then takes it off. doing and un doing his work twenty or a hundred times, finally leaving a tine coat of lacquer.” MRS. WILSON PROPOSES MEMORIAL FOR BROTHER N K W Y O R K. M ay 1. H er be r* Kaufman, whose genius as a writer has won him distinction, was -li en Herzberg Kaufman. A private agreement was made concerning the alimony she is to receiv Kaufman is a graduate of Johns Hopksins University, where In* woo the Lee medal for oratory. While ia college he wooed and won Miss Her berg, ia noted Baltimore beauty A r ter leaving college he became an «•,: Itoriaj writer, novelist and magazt.i editor It was while Mrs. Kaufman was . Europe last fall that her author-hus band,; it was alleged, became-friend \ ■with a young woman. ROME, GA . May 1 Mrs. Woodrow' Wilson has written Miss Martha Ber ry, founder of tin* Berry School for Boys, that she desires to establish the Edward Axson scholarship, in mem ory of her brother, who died in Rome. The money for tin* first scholarship was obtained by Mrs. Wilson through the sale of one of her paintings to .lames L Smith, of Ashtabula. Ohio. Church Pageant Ads Posted in Barrooms Chicago Methodists Protest Against Notices m Saloons of a Mis sionary Spectacle. CHICAGO. May church enterprise n lustrated posters j> has caused a stir I odist clergymen "The World In < ’1 ary pageant and sj he ’JffpVIQE fk /Jr jZetv/s BjAcr The questions answered below are; general in character, the symptoms • or J diseases are given and the answers will ; apply to any case of similar nature. Those wishing further advice, free, may address Dr. Lewis Baker. College] Bldg.. Oollege-Kllwood Sis.. Dayton, O enclosing self-addressed stamped en-« velope for reply. Full name and ad dress must be given but only initials] or fictitious name will be used in my answers. The prescriptions cab be filled at any well-stocked drug store. Any druggist can order of wholesaler. Agnes X." writes: "I'm so dull and life less mosi or i he time ih«t I can scarcely pccoinpllsl) inv duties. 1 am colorless and have tittle appetite, suffer with headache and am far below normal weigh). At one time l win quite plump and then 1 felt good all the lime, so U you can prescribe something to increase ni\ weight I think I shall soon be myself again " Answer: Take the tonic prescribed and you will be strong in a few weeks. You will gain flesh and your nerves will be restored to their natural strength Get syrup of bypophosphltea coaip. 5 or*.. tincture cadomene comp. 1 oz. (not cardamon). Mix ami shake well before taking Take a teaspoonful before each ineal R. asks m't you think it is reduce my weight ? too much." Cleans Like lilug I car thorough anyone in your condition there i give lira' would be so effective course of three gralu Hypo N'uclane tablets. This little tablet supplies elements which Increase the red blood supply and aid to extract the nutrition from food, im prove the appetite, overcome nervousness, and plumpues- with healthy color and strength re Joint wise to take medicine t< I w igh about 35 pound Answer: 1 do think so, and a very con flesh reducer 1s sold In tubes with full directions for home use. called 5-grain arholene tablets, anti any well- <*joked pharmacy enieni Twelve Ponies Like This One with a pony cart and harness for each, will he given away to boys and girls. .’. Y J) are sate Valeria" am getting ellable stomach and suffering with icy ; rouble-. I What shall I L'lfl duced* next Churcrhcs, was advei bara and saloon wind' "I would print post and display them in could got a crowd ft R~. <’hai’os Bayard meeting of protest. bs Cni el v CD FH1N(i can equal Absorene for quick, easy and thorough cleaning. It acts like magic. Dull, dark, grimy wall paper is made to look like new -fresh and inviting. The soiled-darkened window shades that you are about to throw away can he cleaned and used for a long time t o come. turn. They an full directions. packed sealed boxes with "Farmhand escrlpUon Answei For die tioii neat remedy to purity t the livei and kidneys. 1* tablets. I not sulphur tab vour druggiRt In sealed Ilona. These act pleasan gradual! Grand Jury to Clear Jail Force in Report AiiSMci lieu Is m> favorite prtscripUon for rheumatism. Iodide of iKitassluni. - drams, sodium salicylate. 4 drams; wine of inlehlcmti, oiie-hatf ounce: comp essence ■ an'.lol. I comp, fluid haitnwori. 1 or. xml syrup of -araupartlla comp. 5 n*s. lake a tvaspoonful at meat time and a' bedUnte irifyii the appeal If irtopcpl are dysj lies you mention, the ie blood and net on Three grain sulphert) eisi Get these from tuts* wi h full three ly and If taken regu- effect a cure. By htllou*nro will dls eptlc you should take the the following Tincture cuben 2 drams: conn "1 have old anti havi help me. to mre them 1 diain; tine fluid balmwt water one I: should be given • >f lied wetting ore rhua aromatic rt I or Give 10 before meals. old It L weakening Wall Paper Cleaner Foreman Declares Presentments Wi Only Recommend Orderly Man agement of Affairs. mended in the presentme ton Grand Jury when ii by the Superior Court 1 o Foreman hange or ci ohn S. ticism i ill be is no easily used -simply wipe the wall or shade once with Absorene and the dirt and grime is absorbed. Absorene is ready to use—no mixing or fussing—and it leaves no dirt or litter behind it. There is no hard work—no drudgery—no rubbing. And Absorene is absolutely harmless—it can not harm either the hands or most delicate fabrics. A large can costs but 15c. I or Sale By filAKriACY ci t *(■ the following Hint your cold ugh nil) vanish and urn will soon he again Get a 2 12 he hoi lie of con d essence menlho-laxene and lake every two. This can be taken pure or made full pint of home made syrup. Full, ns us to use will lie found on liottle . a mild laxative and will drive the oiu do system. ileal I in no to,ado or: I aliouid ia* very gr-tieful for a for catarrh I have » iff. red a great nr the past yea- with iad breath, pain head and throa’ Please tell me what would you ad- take I suffer with Indigestion gas on my stomach and I 1 am afraid of appendicitis.' my append!, i Answer 1 have found antiseptic Vilane powder to be the beet remedy for catarrh of the head and throat Many letters are re eeived from people who are thankful to In* cured of this dreadful disease. Go to any well stocked drug store and purchase a two ounce original package of antiseptic Vilane powder. Cleanse the nosirils thoroughly by snuffing from the palm of the hand a wash made by mixing one-half teaspoonful of the powder to a pint of wan - l se this two or three times a day In addition to tills use the following halm in the nostrils daily: one teaspoonful of Vilane powder and one ounce of lard or vaseline l se this treatment at intervals to prevent a return. JACOli^ fiiAi\;flAC\ CO ID Stores. Absorene Mfp.C.o. •i . and arc packed tn sea lest cartons with fnb directions for taking The tali lets are pink, white and blue. The pink tablets should lie i a ken after breakfast, the white after dinner a id '.In blue after supper. I think a great man. • •*•' appendicitis could lie cured b> using \tixiouN Mabel' writes M> hair is tab s out so rapidly that 1 aui very much afraid that 1 shall soon be bald. 1 have aiso a great deal of dandruff which causes nty scalp to itch." I Louis. Mo. ;l \nswer You . an .stop vour hair from fading, cure dandruff and make vour hair soft and fluffy if you will purchase a 4 os. ar of plait, yellow mtnvol and use according It will promoie a healthy wth i a ura J- f^Every Pony a sound, healthy, serviceable pet. Every one broken to drive. All of them gentle, and safe for a child to drive FIRST VOTE COUPONS TO-DAY Ask your friends to save the Pony Contest Vote Coupons for you. A Vote Coupon will appear every day in The Georgian, and in every issue of HearsCs Sunday American. Hearst’s Sunday American and Atlanta Georgian PONY CONTEST VOTE COUPON, THURSDAY, MAY 1st GOOD FOR 5 VOTES Voted for. Address. . . Voted by SCHOOL BOYS’ AND GIRLS' BALLOT Hearst’s Sunday American and Atianla Georgian PONY CONTEST VOTE COUPON, THURSDAY, MAY 1st GOOD FOR 5 VOTES Voted for. Address. . , Voted by CARRIERS’ AND AGENTS' BALLOT Subscription blanks and printed instructions tor the use of contestants will be ready within a few days. PRIZE DISTRIBUTION Eight pony outfits will he given away to white boys and girls In Atlanta and suburbs. The distribution will be made as follows One pony outfit to the boy or giri receiving the greatest number of votes in each of the following districts: District No. 1—East of Marietta Street and West of Edgewood Av enue, from Georgia Railroad right-of-way to city limits. District No. 2 East of Piedmont Avenue and West of Edgew<*od Wenue. from Georgia Railroad right-of-way to city limits. In cludes Druid Wills*. Edgewood. Kirkwood and Decatur. District No. 3 South of Edgewood Avenue and East of South Boulevard lo city limits. East and South. Includes South Kirk wood and Ormewood. District No. 1 West of South Boulevard and East of South Pry or from Georgia Railroad right-of-way to city limits. Includes South Atlanta and Lakewood Heights. District No. 5 West of South Pryor lo Centra! of Georgia right- of-way. West of railroad to include Oakland City. Fort Mr- Kherson, East Point, College Park. Egan and Hapewell. District No. 6—West of Central of Georgia right-of-way to city limits, from West Hunter Street South to Oakland City. I*is:rii t No. 7- North ol West Hunter Street and West of Ma rietta Street to city limits, North and West. One pony outfit io the carrier or newsboy employed bv THE (1 BORGIA N ami HEARST’S St.'NO AY AMERICAN receiving the greatest number of votes cast for newsboys and carriers. Four prize pony outfits will be given to Out-of-town boys and girls. They will he distributed as follows: Two pony outfits will be given to the white boys or girls in the Siate of Georgia, outside of Atlanta and suburbs, who receive the greatest number of votes and next greatest number, respectively one outfit will be given to the white boy or girl receiving the greatest number of votes cast for contestants outside of the State of Georgia, anywhere that THE GEORGIAN and HEARST’S SI NDAY AMERICAN are sold. One outfit will he given to the out-of-town agent employed bv THE GEORGIAN and HE XRST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN who re ceives the greatest number of voles cast for agents. Contest Rules beginning Monday, nay. May 31st. urc - - . -5R April 2<fh. and concluding at midnight. Htt- Yoi ing coupons will appear dally In THE GEORGIAN and In every Issue of HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, btginntu* with the GEORGIAN’S iasu^ of Thursday. May 1st. and oonoJudlpa with THE GEORGIAN’S issue of Thursday. July Urn The rwh* test will close at midnight July 31st. TEE GEORGIAN’S Daily vote coupons will count for five votsa each, and THTO SUNDAY AMERICAN vote coupons for ^friier votes each In favor of the contestant whose names thsy bear Votes will he credited for paid-in-advance subscription* re ceived. according to the fmowJng table Subscription* Delivered by By Mail or Delivered Daily and Sunday. L year. Daily and Sunday. 6 months. Daily and Sunday 3 months Dally and Sunday, l month Daily only, l year Daily only, R months . . . Daily only, 3 months ... Daily only, l month Sunday only, 1 year . . . Sunday only, months Sunday only. 3 months Sunday only. 1 month . City Carrier Out -of-tow $6.20 $7,00 3.10 3.50 1.56 1.75 55 60 6.20 5.00 2.60 2.50 1.30 1.30 46 45 2.00 2.00 1.90 1.00 50 50 20 20 A pt. Vot**. 8.500 1.700 800 350 2,000 350 m lioo 66(i 300 100 The above vote credits will apply to old subscribers who pav subscription arrearages or for a term in advance as well as to new subscribers. Ni. vote credit will be insueii for subscriptions for Jess thin one month nor more than two years. in the event of a tie vote for any of the pony outfit prl*e». the contestants so tying will each receive a ponv outfit. Vote ‘oupoiia clipped from THE GEORGIAN and SUNDAY \MERICAN must he voted within fifteen days from dare Of coupons that are more than fifteen days old will no' be credited to any contestant. Except for the separate prizes offered to THE GEORGIAN and HEARST’S SI NDA1 AMERICAN carrier*, newsboys and out-of-town agents, no employee: of these newspape?‘s nor anv member «*f an employee’s family will he eligible as » cr.ntr«tant ‘ ! If you know some bright boy or girl who would like to own a handsome pony, cart and harness, send us his her name on this If or NOMINATION BLANK Only one Nomination Blank can be voted for any contest ant. , GOOD FOR 1,000 VOTES HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN AND THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN T 4