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THE ATLANTA UEUKU1AN AND NEWS.
7
Milton H.
Smith, the
veteran
president of the
L. and N.
Railroad, who
is in Atlanta.
■ ■ ■■■::
tie Atli
'ompaj
se thi
Milton H. Smith Here for Famous Rate Battle
yiv *J< • »J* *!*•*!*
Shuns Reporters, but Photographer ‘Gets Him’ MEM SUPPLlf
Cattle Tick Must Be Extermi
nated First, However, Says
Department of Agriculture.
BY HUGH S. MILLER.
WASHINGTON, D. C.. June 4 — It
Is to the South that the nation must
look for restoration of its meat sup
ply, according to the department of
agriculture.
“The South has groat possibilities
for the future as a cattle raising coun
try. "says a bulletin issued by the
department.
"Development of the cattle raising
industry in the South, however, must
await the extermination of the cat
tle tick. Fortunately this is being
rapidly accomplished by the joint ef
forts of the Government and the
States. The time has come when we
must conserve our meat supply and
take steps to increase it, and at the
present remunerative prices for food
antoials it is probable that this will
be gradually accomplished.
“The shortage in the supply of
meat producing animals In the Un
ited States Is steadily becoming more
pronounced, and it is evident that
the country is facing an era of short
production of meat. In Uie last six
years there has been a decline of over
thirty per cent, in the number ot
beef cattle in the country, while the
population and the consequent de
mand for meat has Increased.
"The beef cattle in the country on
Close Adviser of
Pope Pius Deranged
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
ROME, June 4.—Cardinal Vlvcs y
Tutu, one of the three intimate ad
visers of Pope Plus X, is seriously ill.
It became known to-day the Cardi
nal’s mind has become affected and
that he Is suffering; from a form of
religious mania.
He has been taken to a monastery,
where he is under the constant care
j of a physician.
American Students
Lose Prize to Jap
CHICAGO, June 4.—Jlu-jl George
Kasai, a Japanese "member of the
senior class of the University of Chi
cago, to-day received $100, a prize
offered by Julius Rosenwald for the
best orator in the class.
Kasai won over four American con
testants for the prize. His subject
was "The Mastery of the Pacific,” He
said there was no danger of war be
tween the United States and Japan.
Augusta to Unveil
Shaft to Walsh
AUGUSTA, GA., June 4.—The mon
ument to Patrick Walsh, late Mayor
of Augusta and Cnited States Senator
from Georgia and a well-known edi
tor and publisher of the South, will
be unveiled on June 20. Addresses
will be made at the unveiling by
Pleasant A. Stovall, of Savannah,
and Clark Howell, of Atlanta.
The monument will stand on Bar
rett Plaza, immediately in front of th^
Union Depot.
DECATUR HAS IIS
Home-Coming Celebration Draws
Hundreds to See Cornerstone
Laying and Ceremonies.
Decatur Wednesday is recovering
from the biggest celebration in its his
tory. Tuesday was "Homecoming
Day” and the anniversary of the birth
of Jefferson Davis. Both were ob
served with ceremonies. The city pre
sented a gala attire and one round
of entertainment followed another. I
Many civic and patriotic orgnnlza- j
tions took part In a parade which fol
lowed the crowning feature of the !
day, the laying of the cornerstone of |
a new $25,000 school building. George !
W. Napier, past grand master or the |
Georgia Masons, presided. Orators |
were J. Howell Green. John A. Mont-
gomerv and Hooper Alexander.
Children of the Decatur public
schools and Boy Scouts took an ac
tive part in the celebration. The Con
federate monument on the South
Court Square was the rallying place
for the Pythagoras Masons and tho
Board of Trade.
Dr. A. M. Soule, of the State Agri
cultural College, opened, the day’s
program at o’clock, when he ad
dressed a large crowd at the court
house.
A patriotic address by C. M. Chan
dler on the life and work of Jef
ferson Davis struck a responsive
chord.
Representative-elect R. M. Smith j
urged the Fifth District Agricultural I
School for DeKalb County.
A smoker at the courthouse at 6:30
o’clock gave Atlantans an opportunity
to speak. Wilmer L. Moore. C. j.
Haden, Walter G. Cooper. Forrest
Adair. Alonzo M. Field, R. F. Gil
liam. R. \V. Parker and Mayor John
A. Montgomery were the speakers.
Railroad Men Guests
At the White House
WASHINGTON, June 4—Fifteen
hundred members of the Brotherhood
of Locomotive Firemen and Engi
neers, in convention here, to-day were
received by the President and Mrs.
Wilson at the White House.
The President made a short address
and the vIHt was brought to an end
by a concert by the Marine tiand.
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
best advertising medium.
Case Against Cox by
State Nearing Close
CINCINNATI. June 4.—It is expect
ed that the State to-day will finish
Its side of the case against George
B. Cox and four other former direct
ors of the Cincinnati Trust Conv-
pany, accused of violation of the
State banking laws.
More evidence to support the charge
that Cox and his associates canceled
a note for $352,000 given by them
to the bank before it was In fact paid
was produced to-day.
SLAYS HUSBAND AS THIEF.
CHICAGO, June 4.—Mrs. Louise
Van Keuren to-day shot and killed
her husband. John B. Van Keuren,
mistaking him for a burglar.
Her Doctor
Recommended
NEWBRO’S
HERP1CIDE
While there are no thrills In the
narration of Mrs. P. T. Nichols. 623
Broad Street. Beloit, Wis., her story
is nevertheless one of amazing inter
est. "Stricken with neuralgia and
erysipelas. 1 lost all my hair. My doc
tor recommended Newbro’s Herpicide.
1 used six or eight bottles and now
have a fine head of slightly curly
brown hair. Not a gray hair in my
head. This is the more remarkable
as I am middle-aged."
While the results which follow the
use of Newbro’s Herpicide are always
more or less astonishing, they are al
ways natural. Herpicide destroys the
dandruff, stimulates the flow of blood
to the hair follicles and keeps the scalp
perfectly healthy. It makes possi
ble a natural and luxuriant growth of
hair, except In cases of chronic bald
ness
While remedies said to be "every bit
as good" as Newbro’s Herpicide are
frequently offered, one should insist
upon having 'the original germ de
stroyer." Herpicide. This is genuine.
It stops Itching of the scalp almost
instantly.
Newbro’s Herpicide in 50c and $1
sizes is sold by all dealers, who guar
antee it to do all that is claimed. If
you are not satisfied your money will
be refunded.
Applications may be obtained at
good barber shops. Send 10c in post
age for sample to The Herpicide Co.,
Dept. R., Detroit, Mich.
Jacobs’ Pharmacy, Special Agents.
! >
Veteran Head of L. & N. Bitterly
Opposes State Interference
in Railroad Affairs.
Milton H. Smith, the veteran presi
dent of the Louisville and Nashville
Railroad, is in Atlanta taking a lead
ing part in the Alabama 214-cent pas
senger rate fight in the Federal Court
here.
While Mr. Smith is known to be
[bitterly epposed to State interference
with the operation of railroads, he
refused to make comment upon his
own case.
Also, he showed his usual very de
cided antipathy for newspaper re
porters and photographers. A picture
was snapped of him in the lobby of
the Piedmont Hotel. It is the first
one. published in many years.
"It generally costs money to get in
the newspapers just what I want to
say," said Mr. Smith, declining to be
interviewed.
“Once in a while I tend a statement
to a paper, which, as a rule, is the an
swer to statements made by a pub
lic official. But mine generally come
hack with a nice little letter saying
they will be glad to publish it at
regular advertising rates. I can't see
the fairness in it. but suppose it is
because the other fellow happens to
be a public official."
Mr. Smith merely smiled about the
probable outcome of the injunction
suit; he thought the country was in
good condition; he smiled over what
be thought of State Legislatures and
Railroad Commissions generally; he
smiled over the question of his opin
ion of Atlanta. . .
No more interesting figure in rail
road circles can be found than Mil-
ton H Smith. As head of the Louis
ville and Nashville Railroad he has
developed it into one of the strongest
systems in the United States.
This is the first
picture of the
noted railway
head published
in many years.
King of Italy Hurls
Bombs From Airship
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
ROME, June 4.—King Victor Em
manuel of Italy made a 45-minute
flight to-day in- a military dirigible
balloon. During the flight tiomb-
throwing tests were made and the
King insisted on hurling a number of
dummy bombs at" targets on the earth
below.
Upon alighting, he said it Was one
of the most exhilirating experiences
he ever had.
Piano Makers Fight
Advertising Frauds
Jan. 1, 1907, nu-bered 51,566,000; at
the beginning of , e present year the
number was onl 36,030,000. High
prices were paid , st year. For in-'
stance native steer: brought $7.95 in
Chicago, as agains $6.-,n Uie veaP
before. We no long! have cattle for
export and for the t^t time in our
history th« United hates imported
more in 1/12 than it ^ported."
Atlanta & Caiolina
Rai Plans Revised
the
A, GA., June 4.—A petition
with the City Council of
its meeting last sight by
and Carolina Railway
asking for a frafltlise to
of this city. '
> pad project!® will
use
The pad project® will be \ built
CLEVELAND. June 4.—Members of j from .fanta vla Athens to thi\ city
and nf be operated by .electrVity.
Powerkenerated at Stevens C\eek,
abovefugusta, and at Tallulah Will
be usl. English money is backing
the e*‘rprise.
the National Piano
i
Manufacturers
Association, holding a convention
here, plan to place in every city of
the United States an advertising ref
eree.
The referee will pass on the merits
of advertising offered to publica
tions so that reputable piano deal
ers and the public will be protected
from fraud.
LAIN BY POLICEMAN.
HI/TSVILLE, ALA., June 4.—Will
cotton mill operative, who
by Policeman Mitchell Mon
day fhile resisting arrest, died last
Gibsj.
was
day
ODDITIES
—in the—
DAY’S NEWS
STUBBORNNESS COSTS HIM $10.-
000— Bather than retract his vow not
to pay a cow tax of $75. an Ashe
ville, N. C.. dairyman sold his $25,000
farm for $15,000.
POOR PICKINGS FOR LAWYERS i
Penn Van. N. Y„ is no town for a
lawyer. There is not a single civil
or criminal case in Yale County an- |
disposed of- and there will be no cases j
'be‘ tried before the semi-annual
term of the County Court this month.
Yale County has a population of 1 8,
700.
LONG LAUGH MAY COST MIND I
Julius Jeswein, of Milwaukee, who
had a 16-hour spell of laughing at a
stage joke, may lose his mind for life
His doctors say that lie imagines he
is a magician and humorist.
WINDOW SCREEN .SAVES A
CHILD—A window screen served as
a parachute when Harry Burges, aged
" fell against it and tumbled from
the third story of his Home in Passaic,
N. J. He was uninjured.
BABY KILLS INFANT SISTER —
Tomaso Pezzano, 20 month: old. of
New York, is accused of killing his 2-
dav-old sister. Doctors declare he
beat the infant to death in a tit of
Jealousy when she was placed in tne
bed besile him.
Wife and I
Are Friends
of Instant
POSTUM
“There’s a Reason’
“I used to drink coffee—was nervous and irri
table. Wife said so.
“So when the new food-drink, Instant Postum,
came along she said to herself: ‘Here’s where I
break Jack of the coffee habit.’
“Instant Postum is good stuff. I sleep better,
smile mere, and miss my indigestion.”
A level teaspoonful of Instant Postum in an ordinaryip of hot water dissolves in
stantly and makes it right for most persons. | __
* I
A big dtp requires more and some people who like things put in a heaping
spoonful and temper it with a large supply of cream.
Experiment until you know the amount that pleases yolpalate and have it served that
way in the future.
Postum comes in two forms.
Regular Postum (must be boiled).
Instant Postum doesn ~t require boiling, hut is
teaspoonful in a cup of hot water.
CHAM BE RUN=J0HNS0N=Du BOSE CO.
Atlanta
New York
Paris
Oriental Wares and Art Objects in a Sale
Baskets, Lamps, Jardinieres, Vases and
Other Novelties at Next=to=Nothing Prices
At next-to-nothing prices, such as these—$2.50 table covers
are 50c, $5.00 Japanese curtains are $1.00, a $22.50 Japanese
vase is $5.00, a $6.50 enameled jardiniere is $1.50! And the list of
like reductions could be carried to even greater length than it is
below.
Such a sale as this out-bazaars the bazaars of the far Orient,
in the scope and magnitude of the stocks, in the prices. It
amounts to a very positive command to the housekeeper who
has a little nook or corner or a whole room that would be brighter
for some one or a few Oriental pieces that are now so rigorously
reduced.
9
To miss such a sale would be to disregard an opportunity
that one could hardly expect again.
Read the list below; the articles are all good-taste articles,
serviceable and artistic—indeed it is a windfall of good fortune!
The sale gets under way with the opening of the store.
75c
$2.50 Japanese table cov
ers 50c
$1.25 Japanese prints,
bolt 25c
$5.00 Japanese curtain. . $1.00
$2.25 Hand-embroidered
silk slippers 50c
$1.50 Footwarmers ... 25c
$8.50 Enameled jardi
niere $2.50
$6.50 Enameled jardi
niere $1.50
$22.50 Japanese bronze
vase $5.00
$2.50 Pottery basket.... 50c
$2.50 Hanging vases.... 50c
$2.50 Green fem dish... 50c
$1.50 Pottery vase 25c
$4.50 Matt green vase. . $1.50
$4.00 Matt green vase.. . $1.50
$1.00 Green pottery card
trays 25c
$17.50 Japanese bronze
vase $4.50
$2.75 Green fern dish. ..
$3.50 Large pottery jar
diniere $1.00
$2.50 Fruit basket 50c
$2.50 Wall baskets .... 50c
$1.25 Hanging vase 25c
$1.40 Flower baskets... 25c
$3.00 Flower baskets... $1.00
$2.50 Bamboo jardiniere. 50c
$4.00 Flower basket.... $1.50
75c Oriental beads 25c
25c Small candlesticks.. 5c
$6.50 Umbrella stand. .. $1.00
$9.00 Large bamboo
hamper $2.50
$4.00 Waste basket $1.50
$3.00 Fruit basket 50c
$19.50 Large gong $3.00
$44.50 Oriental brass
lamp for oil $22.50
$57.50 0 dental brass
eleetri) lamp, large
“Napoleon” shade . .$28.50
$39.50 Japanese electric
lamp, shade of gen
uine old prints $15.00
Tea Pots
English earthenware tea
pots, in brown and black, both
plain and decorated; a large
assortment of sizes, variously
decorated.
75c Extra large tea pots. .35c
60c Large tea pots 25c
50c Large tea pots 20c
35c Medium size tea pots.. 16c
$1.25 Decorated tea pots. .45c
95c and $1.00 Decorated
tea pots 35c
75c Decorated tea pots .. ,25c
Lamp Shades
A special lot of new Jap
anese bamboo shades, lined
with silk, in yellow, green or
red,
$1.50 Shades, at 50c
Chamberlin=Johnson=BuBose Co.