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MELONS HANG HIGH IN CHICAGO
CHICAGO, May 23.—Twenty-five
dollars for fifty-four cantaloupes.
That's the rate Chicago paid to-day
for the first, of the season.
POOR BEWHISKERED GOTHAM.
New York. May 23.—No more
shaves on Sunday in New York. The
boss barbers to-day agreed with the
striklnf hgrbem t*» close the shops all
day on Sundays.
Here’s the Prize
List in Great
Story Contest
Appears in Play for Suffrage
+ 4*e4* 4*e*fr + • +
‘Woman’ Converts Many toCause
Growing Children
Meed Good Bowels
Prizes aggregating $250 are of
fered by The Atlanta Georgian for
the best solution of the great serial
novel, “The Triple Tie,” now run
ning in The Georgian, as follows;
First Prize - - $100
Second Prize - 50
Third Prize - - 25
Fourth Prize - - 15
12 other prizes, each. 5
“The Triple Tie" will be run in
generous daily installments until
June 29. when the final chapter will
be published. Synopsis of the last
installment is now in the hands of
Mr. T. J. Peeples, cashier of the
American National Bank.
It will be held by him in a sealed
envelope until a committee of three
Atlanta citizens not connected in
any way with The Georgian may
select the winners of the prizes.
Governor Brown and Governor'
Elect Slaton Will Attend Cere
monies at Macon.
Mrs. James B. Everett, Asking
$5,000 Alimony,Declares Hus
band’s Office Pays Him Well.
Chamber of Commerce Director
to Install Permanent Display to
Boost Local Factories.
Charging cruel and inhuman treat
ment. Mrs. (Mara E. Everett has filed
suit for divorce against her husband,
Alderman James R. Everett, and for
$.'*,000 temporary alimony. The peti
tioner states that she was forced to
leave her husband July 1. 1912, be
cause of his attitude toward her. Site
charges she is without means of sup
port and has been compelled to de
pend on relatives for a livelihood
since the separation.
Mrs. Everett declares; her husband
persuaded her to mortgage her home
at North ^Boulevard, wh$ch had
been given to her by her mother, and
that her husband appropriated this
money to his own use. The petition
states that Everett holds a position
as Alderman, “from which he derives
a large sum each year." In addition,
he is connected with the Theatrical
Club at a salary of $150 a month,
while he also owns a large amount of
.-ftock in the club, which pays him
good dividends, the wife states.
Judge John T. Pendleton has set
May 31 for the hearing of the suit for
temporary alimony. Attorneys Mad
dox & Sims represent Mrs. Everett.
The unveiling of the monument to
Allen D. Candler, Governor of Geor
gia from 1898 to 1904. purchased by
the members of his official household,
will lake place at Gainesville June 3,
the birthday of Jefferson Davis. J.
YV. Lindsey, Commissioner of Pen
sions. has been named chairman of
the committee in charge of the cere
mony.
A large party, including Governor
Joseph M. Brown and Governor-elect
John M. Slaton, will go from Atlanta
to attend the event. The City Coun
cil of Gainesville and the local camp
of Confederate Veterans and other or
ganizations will take prominent parts.
The monument selected is a tall
marble shaft. Only the State officials
who served during Governor Candler’s
two terms contributed to the memo
rial. They are;
Adams, Samuel R. Land. Max E.
Altmaver. Samuel Larsen W. W
Give a Mild Laxative Occa
sionally to Insure Regu
lar Bowel Action.
As a child grows older it re
quires more and more personal at
tention from the mother, and as the
functions of the bowels are of the
utmost importance to health, great
attention should be paid to them.
Diet is of great importance, and
the mother should watch the ef
fect of certain foods. A food will
constipate one and not another, and
so we have a healthy food liks eggs
causing biliousness to thousands,
and a wholesome fruit like bananas
constipating many. It is also to be
Considered that the child is growing,
and great changes are taking place
in the young man or young woman.
The system has not yet settled it
self to its later routine.
A very valuable remedy at this
stage, and one which every growing
hoy and girl should be given often
or occasionally, according to the
individual circumstances, is Dr.
Caldwell's Syruu Pepsin. This is a
laxative and tonic combined, so
mild that it is given to little babies,
and yet equally effective in the most
robust constitution. At the first
sign of a tendency to constipation
give a small dose of Syrup Pepsin
at night on retiring, and prompt ac
tion will follow in the morning. It
not only acts on the stomach and
bowels, but its tonic properties build
up and strengthen the system gen
erally. Mrs. Henry Rabler, Van
Dyne, YYis., writes that her little
son, Melvin Rabler, was constipated
With "Boost Atlanta Made Goods
as the slogan, the tv>ard of directors
of the Atlanta Chamber of Com
merce has decided to install in this
city a permanent exhibit of Atlanta
made goods.
A special train is to be chartered
by the Chamber of Commerce to take
^Atlanta manufacturers and merchant;
to Chattanooga. Tenn . to Inspect the
exhibit of Chattanooga manufac
turers. which has been operated for
more than a year and has proved of
great advantage in advertising goods
manufactured in that city.
Plan to Lease Building.
It is proposed to lease a large build
ing near the center of the city, fill it
with goods made here, keep it open
the year round and make it one of the
show places of the town so visitors
can see what Atlanta is doing. Busi
ness men will thereby be interested in
the products of Atlanta factories and
a great increase in trad© is ax pec ted.
Atlanta has 54S factories, which
produce over 1.000 different products,
and it is doubtful if any city in the
United States of its size could as
semble such a comprehensive display
of this nature. .
The industries of Atlanta are yet in
their infancy, but every article made
here is finding a ready market
throughout the country. This speaks
well for the manufacturers with pres
ent-day competition so keen.
Success Almost Certain.
The success of exhibits in Chatta
nooga and other cities much smaller
than Atlanta make it almost a cer
tainty that the undertaking will prove
not only a “four-time winner" here,
but an everlasting asset
- At the Chamber of Commerce
meeting the participation «>f that
body in the coming celebration of the
twenty-fifth anniversary of the
founding of the Georgia Tech was
considered and the matter referred to
a special committee, of which M R
Wilkinson was appointed chairman
A special committee was also ap
pointed to take up the matter of or
ganising a Junior order of the At
lanta Chamber of Commerce
MELVIN BABLER.
most of the time until she gave him
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Since
using this remedy he has never been
constipated.
The use of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup
Pepsin will teach you to avoid ca
thartics. salts and pills, as they are
too harsh for the majority and their
effect is ’ only temporary. Syrup
Pepsin brings permanent results,
and it can be conveniently obtained
of any nearby druggist at fifty cents
and one dollar a bottle. Results
are always guaranteed or money
will be refunded.
If no member of your family has
ever used Syrup Pepsin and you
would like to make a personal trial
of it before buying it in the regular
way of a druggist, send your ad
dress—a postal will do—to YV. B.
Caldwell. 417 Washington Street,
Monticello, III., and a free sample
bottle will be mailed you.
$30,000 Paid for Old
English Silver Plate
Robert Edeson Hurt
In Fall on Stage
LONDON. May 23.—The sale of the
collection of old English silver plate
belonging to the late E. H. Raldon
realized more than $30,000.
Crichton purchased a silver-gilt
cream boat, made by Paul Lamerie,
in 1744. for $682; a top of a George
I’tazza. dated 1714, for $141; a plain
bowl, dated 1715. for $175; a circular
bowl dated 1663. for $287; and an
Elizabethan tiger ware jug, dated
1575. for $1,000.
Bacon. A. O.
Burger. R. R.
Bush, Isaac A.
Brown, J. P°P e
Bower, B. B.. Ji
Brannen. J. F.
Brown. George
Crisp, C. F.
Covington, W.
Corker. F. G.
Castellow, B. T
Callaway, E. H
Carswell, G. H.
Dupree, E. P.
Deal. A. M.
Dyer, D. B
Dickson. Caper
Dickerson. R. <
DuPont. Angus
Dillon, J A.
Edwards. B. J.
Eve, William *
Foute, A. M.
Freeman. A. D.
Foster, F. C.
Fogarty. D. G.
Griffin, YV. H.
Green. R. E.
Grantland. S
Howell. (Mark.
Hughes, D. M.
Holtzclaw. R. J
Hitch, C M.
Hill, J. T.
Hansell. c. P.
Inman, F. M.
Johnson, F.
Holmes
King. A N
Kent, W. B.
Nicholson, D. B.
Odom, Benton.
Obear, W. G.
Quincey, J. YV.
Post. YV. G.
Power. VV R.
Reid. H M.
Reece J. H.
Russell, A. H.
Shepherd, \Y'. S.
Smith, R. L. J.
Sheddoti. R. F.
Sheffield. R. H.
Taliaferro. P. R.
Tipton, J H.
Toombs. YV. H.
Tribble, S J.
\ unbuven, J. R.
Y’arnedoe, S. M.
Watkins, E. YV.
Webb, C. S.
West, A. J#
VY'est, H. F.
YYMIllngham.
Wright
Wright. Boykin
Williams. John T.
Wilkes, Samuel
.OS ANGELES.
May 23.—Robert
Edeson. the actor, is under treatment
at a local hospital as the result of a
fall upon the stage during a per
formance of "Fine Feathers.”
The nature of his accident and its
seriousness . is being kept from his
wife, who is seriously ill in a hospital
at Southampton. X. Y.
New Society Order:
Get a “Dogstick
WASHINGTON, May 23.—The lat
est thing in Washington is the dog-
stick. It is carried as a walking
stick by society women. It is topped
by a replica of their favorite dog or
horse, done in ivory or silver.
The Misses Allen, daughters of
General Allen. l T . S. A., known as
the best horsewomen among the so
ciety girls of the capital, are respon
sible fob this fad.
What Ails You?
Yeomans. M. J.
Nagle, Mary M.
Henderson, Lil
lian T.
Lindsey, Annie F.
In all colors and fancy
mixtures, all up-to-date
and the latest styles in
summer wear. Just the
tiling in blue serges.
Saturday for
An invitation in extended bjr Doctor Pi ere •
to every aide and ailing man or woman to
consult the Faculty of the Invalids* Hotel
at Buffalo. N Y., bv letter. Write your
symptoms fully and frankly, and every
letter wiU be carefully considered, fully
answered and its statements bold as
strictly private and sacredly confidential
TRUCKLE. CAL., May 23.—A bear*
killed and partly devoured Miss Vin-
nie Colt, aged 18, who recently ran
away from her home here.
• Searchers found the body in tha
Sierra Mountains, 20 miles from here,
to-day.
makes for rich, pure blood and thus in
vigorates the system. For a torpid liver
and its attendant Indigestion, dyspepsia,
headache, perhaps disziness. foul breath,
nasty coated tongue with bitter taste,
loss of appetite with dritreea after eat
ing. nervousness and debikty, nothing is
as good.
We will offer special for
Saturday and Monday
white pique skirts at
75 cents. They are the
same you pay $1.98 for
elsewhere.
Needle Swallowed
30 Years Ago Found
COLUMBUS. GA.. May 23. A stee,
needle, swallowed by him more than
30 years ago, has just been removed
from the body of J 1. W e d. i Con
tra] of Georgia Railroad engineer re
siding nere.
Wood had almost forgotten about
the needle, when this week he- felt a
stinging sensation in his left side, that
led him to believe something was
wrong. He had a physician make an
examination and it was found that
the needle had* \vork< t • the surfac ■
in his side It was removed. Wood is
A map-folder that tells about
the outing joys of the California
coast —deep-sea fishing, surf-
bathing where the tent cities
are, and yachting.
Lovely Yosemite typifies the
High Sierras—a land of snowy
peafe, giant sequoias and Water-
Jliss Lucy lloki* Smith
Daughter of Senator Smith One
of the Charming Figures in
Mrs, Hemmick’s Drama.
Why is the soda cracker today
such a universal food?
Here is the opportunity or the
season. These dresses at $7.95
are positively the greatest values
we have ever offered. Think of
it! Beautiful Voile dresses em
broidered in pure .silk (Persian design), at
so low a price. Think of it! You can
take your choice of more than 1 00 dresses
at this price, and pay only $2 down, then
$1 a week. Have you ever heard of
Miss Lucy Hoke Smith, daughter of
Senator Hoke Smith, . is receiving
many congratulations from her Wash
ington friends for her ability as an
actress. Miss Smith took a promin
ent part in the. initial* production
of “Woman," a morality play written
by Mrs. Christian Hemmiek. million
airess and a recent suffrage convert at
the New National theater in the capi
tal Wednesday night.
A number of other prominent so-
fiety uiris took port in the play, and
it is claimed that many converts to
tin* cause have been made among the
\oung women by the production,
others who had parts were Misses
Mildred Bacon. Mabel Talliaferro,
Nellie Bly. Helen Buchanan, Desha
Mien. Roberta Aimes. Jeanette Al
len. Esther Denny and Mrs. David
People ate soda crackers in the
old days, it is true—but they
bought them from a barrel or
box and took them home in a
paper bag, their crispness and
flavor all gone.
Uneeda Biscuit—soda crackers
better than any ever made before
—made in the greatest bakeries
in the world—baked to perfection
—packed to perfection—kept to
perfection until you take them,
oven-fresh and crisp, from their
protecting package. Five cents.
Many consider the California
summer a more enjoyable sea
son than winter. ' „
Low rare Lxcurstons
every day all summer U’ill enable you to
travel economically. On the lvay stop off
and see the Colorado Rockies and the old
city of Santa Ft. I isit, too, that tvorld-
rvonder, the Crand Canyon of Arizona.
Whether you take the California Limited,
the Colorado Flyer or "go tourist," you
have Fred Harvey meal service.
J no. D. Carter Sou P*«. Agt.,
14 N. Prvor St.. Atlanta, Ga.
Phone, Main S42.
play is an allegory, de-
depict the troubles and
e woman of to-day.
French Soldiers Riot
Against Military Act
CREDIT
CLOTHING
COMPANY
Special Cab 1 * to The Atlanta Georgian.
PARIS, May 23— Hundreds ,
FTench soldiers engaged in rlotin
to-day at various points in prote:
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
en made.
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