Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, July 31, 1913, Image 10

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10 THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND L-tT EXHIBIT PHUT IF 1 MIDSUMMER DAY DREAMS Handiwork of 2,700 Pupils Wi Be Feature of Commencement Thursday Night. The handiwork of nearly 2,700 At lanta children, who have been util izing the past five weeks of their va cation time in attending the sessions of the daily v?M*ation Bible srhnols n different parts of the city, will be on exhbition when the rommeneemen exercises of the si hools are held Thursday night. From this exhibit will be se 1 d sewing, baskets and other articles, and these will he exhibited this fail in Wana makers it ore in New York Ptty. Mr. YVanamaker has set as d. a ipc-ial place in his establishmen’ for this unique exposition. The pupils of the five white ® hools will assemble in the Second Baptist Church, and the* pupils of the four negro school in Big Bethel Church in Auburn avenue. Programs have been j prepared for the exercises in both j churches. Study Three Hours Daily. These Bible schools, inaugurated j for the purpose of giving the idle j school children an opportunity for 1 improvement during the annual vacu- ! tion period, have proven a great sue- j ceas and have been taken advantage J of by all ( lasses of children between j the ages of 5 and 1$ years They are given three hours' instruction each day. and receive llv* benefit of music, Bible study and manual training They are taught to sew. make bas- j and to otherwise use their hands and brains. More than 65 young college men and women are devoting their tim ■ and energies to the training of. the** idle little hands, under the general supervision of the Rev. <i. R. Buford, assistant pastor of the Central Pres byterian Church, who is superintend ent of the school system. Part of National System. The schools are distributed in vari ous sections of the city. The \vhH** schools are conducted in the Second Baptist Church, the Westminster Presbyterian Church, the Wesley House. Barnett Mission and the pub lic school of the Exposition Cotton Mills The negro schools are held in the Eraser Street Mission. Antioch Baptist Church, St. Luke's Episcopal Church and Warren Chapel. The Atlanta vacation schools are a part of a great national movement »n the interest of idle school children *n vacation. At present 30 cities art? represented, and more than 50,000 j children enrolled. Dr. R. G. Boville, of New York, one j of the national directors of the move- j ment. inspected the Atlanta schools j this week and pronounced them among the finest in the country. Balkan Toll 80,000; j Turk War Eclipsed j Special Cable to The Georgian. VIENNA. AUSTRIA, July 31. The losses in killed and wounded in the ; second Balkan war have already reached appalling figures, far exceed ing those of the first war with Tur key. The Servians, it is estimated, have lost 30.000, in addition to thou sands who have died from cholera, which is claiming hundreds every I day. The Greeks have lost 18,000 J men. Including an unusually large number of officers, in Bulgaria 30,- 000 men are lying in the hospitals. I The total loss is estimated at 80.- >00. The Servian and Greek losses Hre fully double those of the Turkish war. Posse To Be Tried For Slaying Fugitive 1 MOUNT VERNON. July 31.—’When I the Montgomery Superior Court con- | venes here next week the case against Lamar Holmes, Mayor of Soperton; T K. Wade. Marshal of Soperton; Wyatt I Marten a prominent farmer, and Lee I Keen, for killing W. L. Radnor near I Soperton about March 1. w ill b« tried I The case is set for Thursday. It is contended by the State that I the posse went ;n t*narch of Radney with the intention to kill him, af- I though they had^a warrant for his arrest for burglary. The defendants will contend that the killing was purely an accident. CANNING DEMONSTRATIONS. BAXLEY.—Miss Annie Lou Tap- aan, of Greensboro, has conducted dghteen successful canning demon- itrations at different schools and .'lubs in Appling County this month SEASHORE EXCURSION AUGUST 7. Jacksonville, Brunswick, St. Simon, Cumberland, At lantic Beach, $6.00—Limit ed 6 days. Tampa, Fla., $8 —Limited 8 days. TWO SPECIAL TRAINS. 10 p. m. solid Pullman train. :15 p. m. Coach train, lake Reservations Now. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. PLACED IN IRONS POSTQFFICE PROBE Negro Holds Posse at Bay, Atlanta Congressman Declares “Sasses” Recorder and That Republican Officials Were Threatens to Repeat. Henry Shelton, a negro convict in the city stockade. was double- shackled and closely guarded Thurs day. following a sensational escape Wednesday, after which he attempted to stand off a posse of pursuers with an ax. and later defied Recorder Nash Broyles in police court in the after noon. The convict made his break for lib erty while at work with a gang on Bell street, between Auburn avenue and Houston street. With guards in close pursuit, he vaulted fences and ran through yards, finally seizing an ax and threatening any one who went close to him. The guards finally got the drop on the ferocious convict and forced him to throw down the ax and surrender. Later in police court, the recorder sought to give the negro some good advice regarding attempts to escape, when the latter exclaimed; ‘Well, I’m going to run away every i hance I have. They'll have to watch me good.” He was given an additional fine of $25.75 or 29 days each in two cases— one for escaping, and the other for cursing and defying the officers. Knoxville Baby at Birth Has 2 Teeth KNOXVILLE. TENN.. July 31— A baby born with teeth Is a record that D. A. Gossett, a carpenter, of Vestal, claims for his family. Mr. Goseett states that the baby boy had two teeth through the lower front gum when he came into this world. The babv is now five weeks old. The child is perfectly formed, is a lusty youngster and his two teeth are the only things that make him dif ferent from other children of his age, sals Mr. Gossett. The other six chil dren had no teeth when the stork brought them. Caught “Redhanded.” WASHINGTON, July 31.—That th? investigation into the soliciting of campaign contributions in the Atlanta Federal building by representatives af the Republican administration during 1912 would be vigorously pushed was the statement of Representative Wil liam Schley Howard here to-day. He was explaining h!s resolution, which called upon the Civil Service Commis sion to submit all documents and pa pers it held in connection with this case to the Committee on Reform in Ihe Civil Service, along with the or der of the former Attorney General quashing the case. In his explanation. Mr. Howard made the statement that the present Attorney General would not allow the matter to drop, as did his predeces sor, whom he charged with dropping the case upon instructions from the Department of Justice. ‘These people were caught red- handed in the soliciting of campaign funds for the Republican Interests," said Mr. Howard. “They were abso lutely violating the law, in that they were upon Federal property at the time they committed the act. The Secretary of the Civil Service Com mission in Atlanta did his duty and reported the matter, but the men higher up stopped it. I shall keep a close eye on this resolution and will make a strong j fight to punish the offenders for prac tically holding up the poor employees I of the Government by levying a con tribution tax upon them.” ffe Hit ALCOHOL, 3^PER CENT. AVegctable Preparation lirAs- similarly rtie FbodandIMiia ting Uie Stnmadis andBowclsof Promotes DigestionfheerM ness and Restlon tains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic. JkdptofOli DcS&XnJVuklI Jhc.Stan* * /hM/tUtt- Aiatlnd-- MfrmM- &****£• nmvjnmt rumr. Aperftct Remedy forConsfipa tion, Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions,Feverislf ness andLoss of Sleep. PuSimile Signature of NEW YORK. _ Atfr irtonlhs oll! J5 Doves Guhrant e eiTundcr tTi« Fo^aj Exact Copy of Wrapper. (Ml For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years CAST* THC CENTAUM SOMMNT, NEW YOUR CITY. 800-Year-Old Turtle Given Home in Zoo NEW YORK, July 31. A 464- pound turtle, said to be 800 years old, was presented to the Central Park zoo by Benjamin Katzenstein. The ^turtle was brought here from the California coast on a tramp steamer. Militants Use Torch To Harass the King Special Cable to The Georgian. LONDON, July 31.—To further harass King George, suffragettes to-day set fire to the luncheon pavilion near the grandstand of the Goodwood race track. It was known that the King would attend the races to-day and the arson ■quad of the militants became active. Considerable damage was done Forty Injured When Picnic Trains Crash CHICAGO, July 31.—Forty persons, most of them women and girls, were hurt early to-day in a crash of two street cars returning from a lodge picnic near Dunning, a suburb. The injured persons were thrown in every direction and **everal were re ported fatally hurt. Mrs. Young Not to Quit Chicago Schools CHICAGO. July 31.—Mts. Ella Flagg Young will remain at the head of Chicago's public schools. She mad# announcement to-day that she would reconsider her resignation after the City School Commissioners refused to accept it. Only one member of the board voted in favor of Mrs. Young's retirement. Mrs. Young is 67 years old. She has been connected with the Chicago schools more than half her life. She was the first woman president of the National Education Association. Dr. B. Clark Hyde Playing Tennis Now KANSAS CITY. MO., July 31.— There doubtless are better players in the Missouri Valley tennis tourna ment. but none was regarded with greater interest from the grandstand than Dr. B. Clark Hyde, who was tried twice on the charge of killing Thomas H. Swope. He was convicted once, but the Supreme Court reversed the decision, and the second Jury dis agreed. Dr. Hyde waa paired in the pre liminaries with Roland Hoerr, of St. Louis. Hoerr defeated him in straight sets, 6—0, 6—0. Advisory Board of Bankers Now Urged WASHINGTON. July 31.—An nouncement by Chairman Glass, of the House Banking and Currency Committee, that he favored a pro vision in the currency bill for an ad visory board of bankers to aid the Federal Reserve Board was accepted generally to-day as an effort on the part of the administration to concil iate bankers. The latter have charged the Glass program calls for "political banking.” Do you feel safe about the wa ter you are drinking? Let us tell you about Cascade Spring Water It’8 a pure, soft, unadulterated, natural spring water. It’s an absolutely safe water. There is positively no salt or chemicals of any kind add ed to it. We do not “doctor” it. Phone or write us. Cascade Spring Water Company Atlanta Phone 5856-A R. F. D. No. 1, Atlanta, Ga. Men s Suits Suits $ 9.40 Suits $11.25 Suits $13.50 Suits $15.00 Suits $18.75 Suits $22.50 Suits $26.25 Suits $30.00 All Blues, Blacks and Fancy Stein Bloch and other good makes. All Mohair Suits included in sale. $12.50 $15.00 $18.00 $20.00 $25.00 $30.00 $35.00 $40.00 M en s /OW Sh oes $6.00 Shoes $4.75 $5.00 Shoes ... $3.85 $4.00 Shoes $3.10 $3.50 Shoes .' $2.90 Our entire stock of low cut Blacks, Tans, White and Gray Canvas and Linen included in sale. $5 Wkite “‘Nubuck, Special $3.50 Boys Low Shoes $3.00 Shoes $2.35 $2.50 Shces $1.95 $2.00 Shoes $1.50 $1.50 Shoes $1.20 M, en s Sox Specials $1.50 “Onyx” Silks 75c 50c “Onyx” Accordion Silks 35c 50c “Onyx” Whites 35c 50c Fancy Lisle—Special lot 25c en s Jewelry Specials 50c Pins and Cuff Buttons 35c 75c Pins and Cuff Buttons 50c $1.C0 Pins and Cuff Buttons 65c $1.50 Pins and Cuff Buttons $1.00 $2.00 and $2.50 ones, $1.50; $3.00 and $3.50 ones $2.00 M, Parks -Chambers- Hardwick Co. ANNOUNCE Their August Sale Of Mens, Young Men s, Boys and Children s Clothing, Furnishings, Hats and Shoes Read the Red uced Price Scale, as applied to all lines in each department. SALE STARTS TO-MORROW MORNING Boys Wool Suits Norfolk and D. B. Styles Fancies and Blue Serges $ 5.00 Suits $ 3.75 $ 6.50 Suits $ 5.00 $ 7.50 Suits $ 5.75 $ 8.00 Suits $ 6.00 $ 8.50 Suits $ 6.50 $10.00 Suits $ 7.50 $12.50 Suits $ 9.50 $15.00 Suits $11.25 Boys Wash Suits Nobby Fashions—Best Fabrics $1.00 Suits $ .75 $1.50 Suits $1.00 $2.00 Suits $1.40 $2.50 Suits $1.75 $3.00 Suits $2.00 $3.50 Suits $2.50 $4.00 Suits $3.00 $5.00 Suits $3.50 50c Night Shirts. 40c 75c Pajamas ... 60c $1.00 Pajamas 75c Lot of Boys’ Single Breasted Fancy Suits with Knick-XJ" If D * erbocker Pants liali"*x rice 25c Underwear 20c 50c Union Suits . . 40c Nainsook - P o r osknit and white Balbriggan. ALL MENS STRAWS. PANAMAS. B ANGKOKS HALF PRICE ALL BOYS' and CHILDREN'S STRAWS HALF PRICEftEMKIE Men s Trousers $3.50 Trousers ... . „. . .$2.65 $4.00 Trousers .,. T . „„ „,.$3.00 $5.00 Trousers .,...$3.75 $6.00 Trousers .... ... . .$4.50 $6.50 Trousers ... ... $4.90 $7.00 Trousers ..$5.25 $7.50 Trousers $5.65 $8.00 Trousers ... . $6.00 All white and Striped Flannel and Serge Trousers included in sale. Men s Shirts All styles except Full Dress. $1.00 Shirts .. $ .75 $1.50 Shirts $1.15 $2.00 Shirts ... $1 40 $2.25 Shirts J. .Y$L65 $2.50 Shirts $1.90 $3.00 Shirts $2.25 $3.00 and $3.75 Shirts $2.65 $5.00 Shirts ” !$3.75 $6.50 Shirts $4,50 NIen s Underwear Pajamas and Nightshirts. 50c Garments 40c 75c Garments ] 60c $1.00 Garments ... *.!,!!! 75c $1.50 Garments ... .. ....$1.15 $2.00 Garments * *’’$L50 $2.50 Garments $190 $3.00 Garments ... ,.... ... ... .** $2.25 $3.50 Garments ! ’! Scriven Drawers not included. Fancy Neck wear 50c Ties—3 for $1.00 ... 35c $1.00 Ties * * * * 75 C $1.50 Ties .‘."$1.15 $2.00 Ties $1.50 $2.50 and $3.00 Ties .... $199 All belts reduced. PARKS-CHAMBERS-HARDWICK 37-39 Peachtree C O M P A N Y Atlanta, Ga.