Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 23, 1913, Image 4

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The Kind You Have Always Bou^nt nas Dome me sgrisj- ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and lias been made unde his persona) supervision for over BO years. Allow at on* to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-gwod ” are but Experiments, and endangei the health of Children—Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Chstoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, I'M#- goric, Drops and Soothing 1 Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worn* and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhiea and 'Who. Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipatbn and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving heaithy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Me Always Bought . Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCNTAUN COMMNf, TT MURRAY «THerT. NEW YORK CITY. Use For Results Georgian Want Ads TITE ATLANTA GEORGIAN ANT) NEWS. Davison-Paxon-Stokes Co. A Whole, Great Stock of Women's Shoes With Lowered Prices $3 50 Shoes at $2 $4°° Shoes at $3 15 Every Pair in Stock Is Included—None Reserved Women realizing this unusual opportunity will not be slow to take advantage of it. Tt means a good deal to practical people, who appreciate the value of things, to go to a stock like this and select unreservedly, just the Shoes most wanted at present, and pay the prices we have put on these for Wednesday. There are absolutely no restrictions as to leathers, fabrics, styles, sizes or widths—it is a full stock, replete with the sea son’s best and most correct Shoe styles, to which we invite you, and a saving is offered that cannot be ignored. You may choose from the latest and most popular styles in Pumps, Ties, Button Oxfords and English Walking Shoes. All leathers and satins, black and tans. $4.00 Tan (low) Walking Shoes, with rubber heels, at $3.15. $4.00 White Canvas and Buckskin Low Shoes at $3.15. Remember that on Wednesday every pair of Women’s Shoes here marked regularly— $3.50 will be $2.65 $4.00 will be $3.15 In the Lower-Priced Shoe Store—Second Floor Will also be a very unusual sale of Shoes for women, boys and children. New and desirable shoes have been added to depleted stocks there and the lots for this sale include all sizes, and such values as will be highly welcome at the Clearance price for Wednesday. Women s Low Shoes at 75c, $1.25, $1.95 Boys' Oxfords, $1.65 •Children's Shoes, 75c Js* V-* 3 Goes for Five Beers: Quarter Gets Barrel LOBBY LETTERS A BONANZA FOR FDESIT.R. ‘Make-Up’ Stone Is Editor's Monument; Bears Epitaph Poem JEFFER80N, OHIO, July 22 — One of the most remarkable gravestone* on record was placed In the cemetery here to-day It stands at the head of the grave of J. 4. Howells, veteran editor of ST. LOUIS, July 22.—William Tip- ton, a laborer employed in the exca vation work for a new city Jail, found a quarter while digging in the rear of the Municipal Courts Building yes terday. He Immediately Invited his nearest fellow worker to step across the street and help consume the live “big beers” the coin would buy. It bore the date 1805. “Will you take enough to buy a bar rel of beer for that quarter?" the by stander asked. •Sure thing,” was Tipton’s reply. The stranger handed him $6.50 and pocketed the quarter. Church Is Freed of Mulhall Quiz Takes on New Political Importance, as Colo nel Is Involved Deeper. WASHINGTON. July 22.—With the statement of Senator Nelson, of Min nesota. that he drafted a drastic report In 1909 against an amendment of the snertnan anti-trust act for the secret purpose of upsetting President Roosevelt’s whispered plan to so amend the law that railroads would be immune, the Overman Lobby In quiry Committee took on new politi cal importance to-day. There are frequent references to Roosevelt in the Mulhall letters. In practically every Instance these ref erence* are unfavorable. As long as Roosevelt is a political figure the Mulhall letters will be a mine from which the opponents may dig up sin ister Information. The commlftee to-day continued tending letters in which Mulhall re lated to Secretary Schwedtman’s can vass of members with respect to a tariff commission convention to be held in 1909 in Indianapolis. Mulhall saw practically every member of Con gress. From many of them he could obtain no expression of their attitude toward a tariff commission, and very few of them had time or inclination to attend the Indianapolis convention, which was being engineered by the National Association of Manufac turers Suggesting that the lobby investi gation is drifting away from its orig inal purpose and has assumed a po litical cast, Colonel Mulhall asked permission to employ counsel. The committee acceded, although later Senator Reed protested. One of the Mulhall letters to-day threw light on the fight made in the winter of 1909 to make Senator Phil ander C. Knox eligible to be Secre tary of State. James E. Watson was to have gone to Indianapolis to at tend the tariff commission sitting, but he was unable to go because Speaker Cannon and Vice President Sherman demanded that he remain here until the Knox hill was passed. Knox’s ineligibility grew out of the fact that he voted while a member of the Senate to increase the salary of the Secretary of State. The Ashtabula Sentinel, who died here recently. It consists of the “make-up” stone used by Mr. Howels for fifty years, during his successive evolutions as printer’s devil, printer and editor It is inscribed with these lines, written by William Dean How ells, a brother of the editor: Stone, upon which with hands of boy and man, He framed the history of his time until. Week after week, the varying record ran, To its half oenturled tale of well and ill. Remember now how true through all those days He wus --friend, brother, husband, son— Fill the whole limit of your space with praise. There needs no room for blame—blame there was none. The boyhood of William Dean Howells was spent in the office of The Sentinel. The father of William Dean Howells and J. A. Howells was editor of the paper. Anniston Not Shocked By ‘September Morn’ ANNISTON, July 22.—There is no prudery on the part of the powers that be In Anniston They believe in real art, even without draperies, and Miss "September Morn’’ Is being allowed to take her dip undisturbed. Mayor Wikle says he will not order the picture removed. If a Husband’s Worth Having He’s Worth Keeping, She Says. TARIFF RILL AIDS Declares Free Importation of Meats and Cattle Will Throttle Competition. WASHINGTON, July 22—When the Senate met to-day the tariff de bate was resumed, and Senator Smoot, of Utah, completed the ad dress he began yesterday. He attack ed first the action of the Democrats in placing meats, cattle, hides, wool, etc., on the free list, declaring that such action is only playing into the hands of the “beef barons” and throt tling competition. The importation of meats and cat tle free of duty, he said, will give a tremendous advantage to Canada, Mexico and Argentina at the expense of the American farmer. Senator Smoot argued that the chief advocates of the low rates of tariff, both before the House and the Senate, have been the importers. Of 'Blind Tiger' Charge MILWAUKEE, July 22.—Attorneys for the 800 members of St. Joseph's Polish Catholic Church, charged with selling liquor at a picnic, pleaded nolle contendere in police court. The court dismissed the charges against the congregation and officers of the church upon payment of the costs by the defendants. * Guesswork Brings Liner Across Ocean Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. PLYMOUTH. ENGLAND, July 22. Tht captain of the steamship Kaiser Wilhelm Der Grosse, which arrived here from New York, reports that the vessel steamed the 3.000 miles by dead reckoning. Clouds and mist throughout the voyage prevented observations being taken. WHY CRIME DOES NOT PAY.— Sophie Lyons, most famous criminal of modern times, tells of thrilling events which crowded one short week of her life, in next Sunday's American. Are You Sick, Diseased, Nervous, Run Down? Hav« You Blood Poleon, Kidney, Blad der and Urinary Trouble*? IF SO, CONSULT (FRE1) Dr. Hughei, Atlanta's Long Estab lish'd. Most Reliable Specialist. I cure to stay cured NERVE, BLOOD and Skin Disease*. STRICTURE. Prostatic Troubles, varicoceIjb. HYDROCELE. Kidney, Blad der and Uri nary Disease s, . Piles and all ! Chronic and Private Diseases of Men and Women I give 60€. the celebrated German preparation, for Blood Poison, and Guarantee results. Everything abeo- lutely confidential. If you can’t call, write. Free Consultation and Advice te All. HOURS——9 sl. m. to 7 p. • to 1. m. Sundays, DR. J. D. HUGHES Oppose Third National Bank. W/. North Broad St., Atlanta, Oa. VATICAN GUARDS RIOT, MENACE POPE FIRS Mutinous Swiss Soldiers Threat en to Break Into Private Chamber of Pontiff Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian. ROME. July 22.—After 24 hours of wild rioting by the Pope’s Swiss guards, during w r hich the men were shorn of their military powers at the Vatican, order was restored to-day. The demands of the soldiers, which caused the mutiny, will not be grant ed. The soldiers had asked conces sions raising the embargo against them visiting wine shops and other stores along the Tiber; the right to choose their own commander; the in crease of the guards' quota, and a demand that no punishment be meted out to them for their mutinous con duct. The guards, incensed at the official order depriving them of their military status, stormed the Vatican, and for a time it was feared that the Italian troops quartered in the city would have to be called out to quell the dis turbance. Great alarm was felt among the Vatican officials for fear that the sol diers would force their way into the Pope’s private chambers. Drastic measures were taken to guard His Holiness from the angry soldiers, as grave fears were enter tained that the Pontiff, still weakened from the effects of his recent illness, would suffer a relapse should the soldiers force their w'ay Into his pres ence. BRIDE TELLS HOWTO MANAGE A HUSBAND Mrs. Frank Winecoff, who Gives Atlanta Wives Some Interesting Advice. “Alaways Keep Him Guessing Just a Little,” Advises Mrs. Frank Wyncoff. “I believe a woman should make a ftudy of her husband—always—if she expects to realize a happy and ideal ma rrlage.” That Is Mrs Frank Winecoff’s idea of how to be happy though married. Mrs. Winecoff, who was Miss Hess Wall before her recent marriage, le the wife of Frank Wyncoff, the well- known real estate operator. “A wife is supposed to be a help mate." continued Mrs. Winecoff, with a bewitching smile, "and what is a helpmate but a perwn to help solve and cope with difficulties? And how can a wife help her husband If she does not understand and feel In per fect sympathy with him? If husband and wife start out by being frank and confidential with each other, there Is little chance of their matrimonial craft being wrecked on tne shoals of divorce. "I believe a wife should be a com panion and a chum to her husband. And she should always try to be dif ferent. and not fall into a rut. Flirt with him—don’t let him think he knows you absolutely, and always keep him gueslng a little. But be a chum to him. and make him know that he is the only man in the world. "At meal time I think a wife should be bright and attractive, telling her husband cheerful, pleasant things. Avoid petty neighborhood gossip— no woman can be a good wife and a neighborhood gossip at the same time. And a man don’t want to hear gossip on coming home from his of fice “It requires art to manage a hus band. but if one is worth having, he In worth keeping So study him, and what will charm and attract him, and one's married life will be harmonious, and not a series of wrangles " reduced duties upon automobiles, Senator Smoot said: "Just why the European manufac turers should have any consideration in fixing this or any other duty is be yond the comprehension of any fair- minded American citizen. But they figure very extensively In this fixing of the rates on automobiles, occupy ing many pages of the hearings, and filing threats which, if made else where by Americans, would be con sidered insolent.” Gave More Than Asked. He added that the Italian Chamber of Commerce in New r York had ask ed merely for a reduction of 5 per cent on automobiles, but that the Democrats had conceded 15 per cent. In the cotton schedule. Senator Smoot Insisted that the Northern manufacturers had been discriminat ed against and the Southern produc ers had been favored. The Northern manufacturers make the finer grades of goods, he said. He declared that American mill workers must com pete with the cheap Asiatic labor of Japan in manufacturing cotton goods. Says Trusts Won't Suffer. American clock and watch manu facturers. manufacturers of window- glass. of pottery and of gloves, all are treated harshly by the proposed law. said Senator Smoot. The action of the Democrats, he said, meant the loss of work to thousands employed at present in these industries. “The first industries to suffer from this bill w’ill not be the great trusts, but the Independent manufacturers having small capital and making goods requiring the highest type of workmanship,” he said. T. R. Escapes Asking Hunting Permit by Killing Outlaw Game WASHINGTON, July 22.—Officials of the forestry division of the De partment of Agriculture to-day de clared that Theodore Roosevelt has not been granted a permit to hunt for protected game in the Grand Canyon forest reserve, nor has he requested one, but that he :s aiding Jim Owens to kill off predatory animals, such as mountain lions, coyotes and wild cats. Jim Owens is a civil service em ployee of the Government, and is paid $1,400 a year to kill predatory ani mals. He has his own pack of hounds, a string of horses and a pack outfit. Forestry officials have not been formally notified that Roosevelt i§ hunting in the Grand Canyon pre serves. BLUE LAWS TOO DRASTIC. GADSDEN, July 22.—People of At- talla have petitioned the Mayor and Council of that city to be more lenient in the enforcement of the blue laws. Recently all soft drink stands were closed on Sunday and people claim they suffered intensely, because of in ability to get cold drinks. A HEALING SALVE None Is More Reliable Than Resinol. The same soothing, healing, an tiseptic medication which makes Resinol Ointment so successful for eczema and other skin eruptions also makes it the ideal household remedy for a score of troubles that constantly arise in every home. It quickly heals burns. scalds and wounds; is an excellent dressing for ulcers, felons, boils and stub born sores; stops itching at once; gives prompt and permanent re lief from pilds, and is invaluable for many minor skin troubles such as cold-sores, sunburn, prickly heat, pimples and chafings. Resinol Ointment positively con tains nothing of a harsh or inju rious nature. It is absolutely pure and so gentle, yet effective, that it can be used freely on the most inflamed surface or the tenderest skin, even of a tiny baby. Doc tors have prescribed it for eight een years. Trial free; Dept. 10-P, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment. DROWNS WHILE SWIMMING. SAVANNAH.—While swimming In the Savannah River. M PeCosta. an engi neer on the Ocean Steamship Company's steamer City of Augusta, was drowned a short distance from the company's wharves. Two other seamen, swimming near DeCoeta, were unable to save hiiq. EXCURSION Atlanta, Carrollton, Forsyth and intermediate points to TYBEE and SAVANNAH TTTT V $6.00 ROUND TRIP. Special Train—Coaches and Sleeping Cars. Ask the Ticket Agent. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY. Store Closes Wednesdays at 1 P. M. All Low Shoes Must Co! Fred S. Stewart Co. 25 Whitehall S ' Store Open Saturdays Till JO P. M