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THE ATLANTA fiEOROIAN ANT) NEWS.
TAX BILLS REACH
MIDSUMMER DAY DREAMS
Copyright, 1013. International N>w* Service.
Senate Will Pass Them, but the
House Must Change Front if
They Become Laws.
With the Senate substitute for Rep- .
fesentatlve Sheppard's tax reform bill
delivered in printed form to the Sen
ile and the two Administration bllln, .
providing a pro rata ad valorem tax j
for pensions and common schools, in
the hands of the Committee on Con
stitutional Amendments, State Sen
ators Friday morning prepared for
the most important legislation of the
session
Senator Miller, chairman of the Fi
nance Committee and Joint author of
all three bills, declared Friday morn
ing the legislation would be hastened.
He indicated further that all thre^
bills would be well on their way to
ward passage by Monday afternoon.
The substitute for the Sheppard bill
has been favorably reported by the
Finance Committee, and the two Ad
ministration bills, which were defeat
ed in the House and presented in the
Senate Thursday, were considered by
the Committee on Constitutional
Amendments, of which Senator Har
rell is chairman, Friday morning. The
two bills, it is understood, will re
ceive the indorsement of the com
mittee.
Senate Will Pass Them.
The champions of the two Admin
istration bills declare the bills will
meet with little opposition In the
Senate, as this body has taken a de
cided stand on tax reform which will
relieve the State’s financial embar
rassment.
The two hills, which are similar to
those presented in the House by
Rpeakpr Burwell, were drawn at the
Instance of the Governor and provide
that the General Assembly shall not
Appropriate for any one year for com
mon schools a sum In excess of that
raised by levying two and one-half
mills, nor any In excess of one and
one-half mills for pensions.
Roth bills are constitutional amend
ments and will require a two-thirds
vote In the Senate. Should the Up
per House Indorse the measures they
will be sent back to the House, where,
unless there is a change of front,
they will again be defeated.
Two Other Bills Tabled.
The Senate’s decks are clear now
fur the consideration of these three
bills Thursday afternoon the Foster-
Push-Searcy white slavery bill was
passed by unanimous vote, and two
hills—one by President Anderson and
Senator Huie, of the Thirty-fifth,
providing an increase in State Sena
torial Districts, ami the other, by
Senator McNeill, amending the sec
tion of the code so as to permit the
running of through freight trains on
Sunday—were tabled.
The Anderson-Hule hill resulted In
sharp debate between President An
derson and Senator Tarver. The lat
ter charged the bill was an attempt to
increase the representation of the clt-
les at the expense of the rural dis
tricts. The bill, It is understood, was
tabled by friends of the measure so
as to allow further consideration.
STRONG LOCAL
C. W, McClure Discusses Im
portant Topic Before the
South’s Merchants.
Queen Mary Stops
Gambling at Court
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Au,g. 8.—The gambling
lid Is on at Buckingham Palace. The
quiet little games with which tlu
servants were wont to while away
their time and spare farthings are no
more. As a result, grumblings are
loud and frequpent. This is due to
rules Issued by Queen Mary, whos*
anti-gamWing views are well known
In court circles.
A strike of all the servants at the
palace was narrowly averted a few
days ago when the Queen decided to
permit the servants to draw lots to
see who shall accompany her on the
royal yacht.
Mrs. Susie Wright
Dies While on Visit
A discussion of the value of local
commercial organization by C. W.
McClure, of Atlanta, president of the
McClure Ten Cent Store Company,
was a big feature of the Friday morn
ing session of the Southern Mer
chants’ Convention at the Audito
rium.
In his address Mr. McClure devel
oped thf* Idea that conditions could
be bettered and improvements
brought about by local organizations
of commercial associations.
The Friday session, which will be
the last of the week, will be one of
the most important of the convention.
In addition to the address by Mr. Mc
Clure, talks by other leaders in the
commercial life of Georgia were
scheduled. C. E. Pollard, of the Amer
ican Audit Company, will speak on
proper accounting methods as a fac
tor in business success, and L. C. Up
shaw, of Doufflasvllle, Ga., will speak
on credits and collections.
Stock insurance will be the sub
ject of an address by H. E. Choate, of
the J. K. Orr Shoe Company, of At
lanta. and F. G. Coker, of Dublin,
will discuss the questions before the
convention from the standpoint of a
j banker.
Following the address by Mr. Mc
Clure, there was an open parliament
on the subject. Store discipline and
management also was discussed.
Pigs Gorge Candy
As Children Envy
CINCINNATI. Aug. 8.—The Refuge
Home Farm, a municipal charity foT
homeless children, has a fine Tot of
thoroughbred pigs, which are to he
gorged dally with chocolates and |
other choice confectionery, as* a result
of recent raids by the food inspection
division of the Health Department.
To-day the refuge farm wagon cart
ed to the farm for their delectation,
nearly 1,500 pounds of milk choco
lates. 3.000 pounds of peanuts, 850
pounds of shelled cocoanute, 15 barrels
of sugar and about 20 barrels of other
Bulgars Insist Turks
Evacuate Adrianople
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
SOFIA. Aug. 8.—In a communica
tion issued to-day by the Bulgarian
Government it was announced that
"Bulgaria will begin demobilization
of her army ns soon as a peace treaty
Is signed, upon the understanding
that the powers favor the Enos-Midla
line as the southern Bulgarian boun
dary .” This would give Adrianople
to Bulgaria,
It is doubtful if Bulgaria could car
ry on another war against Turkey.
She has lost 100,000 men and her na
tional treasury Is depleted.
CONSTANTINOPLE. Aug. S The
Turkish Government to-day Issued a
manifesto calling upon the nation to
oppose vigorously the evacuation of
Adrianople.
Chicken Frying Race
By Congress Wives
Washington. Aug. a. — The
mooted question, "Who is the bes;
chicken fryer in the Congressional
set?” will be fought out by two ot
the dealers. Mrs. Champ Clark and
Mrs. William A. Cullop, wife of Rep
resentative Cullop of Indiana.
Mrs. Cullop will celebrate her fif
tieth wedding anniversary with the
contest in her apartment. Each con.
testant will fry a chicken according to
her pet recipe.
It is understood that Speaker Clark,
Senator Tillman and other Congress
men have applied for the position of
Judges.
State Wins Point in
Diggs Slavery Case
SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 8 —The
fourth day of the trial of Maurv I.
Diggs, former State Architect charg'd
with white slavery, began to-day with
the defense laboring under a de
cided handicap. The first witnesses
were on hand ready to testify as to
the trip to Reno on which Diggs and
Drew Caminettl, son of the Com
missioner General of Immigration,
are charged with taking Marsha War
rington and Lola Norris for Immoral
purposes.
.Judge Van Fleet ruled that the
characters and reputations of the two
girls would have no bearing on the
case.
Man, 81, Has Kept
Diary For 59 Years
Judge Given Divorce
Decree in Own Court
odds and ends, including flavoring ex
tracts used in making candy. These
represented some of the condemna
tions made at several candy factories
last week.
DANVILLE. ILL., Aug. 8— Judge
E. R. E. Kimbrough mounted the cir
cuit bench here to-day after having
been granted a divorce in his own
court. Mrs. Emma Fountain Kim
brough, who now is living in Los An
geles, djd not contest the judge’s suit
Judge Kimbrough asked the decree on
the grounds of desertion.
For many years Judge Kimbrough
was a law partner of former Speak-
Day Laborer for 42
Years Gets Million
er Joseph G. Cannon.
OMAHA. Aug. 8.—Frederick Gross
Von Alvensteben, for forty-two years
a day laborer, received notice from
the German consul at Chicago that
he had fallen heir to an estate in
Germany valued at $1,000,000.
Von Alvensteben became estranged
from his family thirty years ago and
came to America.
SPOKANE, Aug. 8.—Henry Ral-
linger, an old-time resident of Coeur
d'Alene, Idaho, a man close to eighty-
one years of age, to-day offers a
challenge to the world for having
kept a diary continuously for the
longest period of time.
His record reaches a short while
over fifty-nine years.
IMPROVED ROOFLESS PLATE
Made of gold or aluminum, ne
gums, no roof. Truly Nature's du
plicate, made only by us. Perfect
fit or no pay.
GOLD CROWNS
WHITE CROWNS
BRIDGE WORK
$3
20-YEAR GUARANTEE
UNTIL AUGUST 15th
We will continue to make our Whalebone Ever-
stick Suction Plate for $3.00. The lightest and
strongest plate known.
EASTERN PAINLESS DENTISTS T ,; E ,l9
1-2 PEACHTREE ST.. Near Walton
R. R. FARE AM OWED 23 r S —■ —- —
A REAL SAVING
BYCK’S REDUCTION SHOE SALE
r~
FORSYTH. Aug 8 New has
reached here of the death of Mrs.
Susie Wright, of Macon, widow
of Dr. W. P. Wright, of Barnes-
ville, which occurred while she was
visiting at the home of her brother.
Mr. Ben Manry at Goggansville. in
this county. Mrs. Wright was ill only
a few hours.
Mrs. Wright is survived by two
sons. W. P. Wright, who is an edito-
ri.il writer on The New York Herald,
ami Dupont Wright, night editor of
The Rome Tribune-Herald, and one
daughter.
Tire funeral was held from the
Manry residence yesterday.
Town’s Water So Bad
Court Lifts Beer Lid
CAN’T HELP BUI
ADMIRE BABIES
For Men and Boys—-Ladies, Misses and Children.
These Are the Prices Now:
/ery
Gla
ano© «t The Nestling Cud
dled in Its Bonnet.
A worn in'* heart naturally rmpouda to tbo
oharni ami awertueas of a pretty child, and more
to day than ever before alnc* the advent of
Mother's Friend.
PITTSBURG. KANS.. Aug. 8.—The
waur is so bad in Chapman, a mining
• nt-ar here, that beer is used in
s ’’ i * ;tnd the people are so gen-
tre-.js they give the substitute away.
•V Girard man accused of selling
“-Piked eider waa freed on the theory
1 Hht on** man's word is as good as
.• r<th* i s T:i- yp incidents were
b* ght out in Crawford County
courts. /
Till* 1* a moat wonderful external holy to tho
museum and tendon* It panatrates tho tin*urn.
make* them pliant to readily yield to nature's
demand for expansion, so there Is no longer a
period of pain, dlacomfnrt. straining, nausea or
other symptom* *o often cilstivaatng during the
auxlou* weeks of axpectancj
Mother** Friend preyaroe system for the
coming event, and It* ua* bring* comfort, rest
and repose during the term. This ha* a nx<at
marked influence upon the baby, ali.ee it thua
inherit* * *rden did growing system of nerve* and
digr-tive function.
And particularly to young mothers t* U»la fa
mous remedy of inosimable value It euablaa her
to preserve her health and strength, and she re
mains a pretty mother by having avoided all tha
suffering and danger that would otherwise accom
pany sut h an occasion. Mother's Friend thor
oughly lubricates every nerre. tendon and tnuacJa
Imo.vcd and ts a aorv preventive for caking o#
the hreaate
You will And this splendid remedy on sale at 4
all drug stores ai SI 00 a bottle and U highly J
recommended for the purpose.
Writ*- Bradflt-ld Regulator Go., )«4 Lamar j
Bldg , Atlanta, (ia., and th*y will mail you. seal .
ed a vary kMtrjcttre book fjg expectant mothers. <
$y.oo
$0.00
$0.00
$4.00
Low Shoes
now only
Low Shoes
now only
Low Shoes
now only
Low Shoes
now only
$3.50 Low Shoes
now only
$5* 35
$4.85
$3.95
$3.15
$2*85
$3.00
$2*50
$2*oo
$2 .50
Low Shoes
now only
Low Shoes
now only
Low Shoes
now only
Low Shoes
now only
Low Shoes
now only
2 45
$1 .95
$1 .65
$1 .20
85c
*vi
rvvv»
$|.00
I hese Reductions Obtain All Over the House.
Big Reductions in Hosiery.
Mail Orders
Filled Promptly at
Reduced Prices
49
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
THIS is the caution applied to the public announcement of Castoria that has
been manufactured under the supervision of Chas. H. Fletcher for over
30 years—the genuine Castoria. We respectfully call the attention of fathers and
mothers when purchasing Castoria to see that the wrapper bears his signature in
black. When the wrapper is removed the same signature appears on both sides
of the bottle in red. Parents who have used Castoria for their little ones in the
past years need no warning against counterfeits and imitations, but our present
duty is to call the attention of the younger generation to the great danger of intro
ducing into their families spurious medicines.
It is to be regretted that there are people who are now engaged in the
all sorts
nefarious business of putting up and selling all sorts of substitutes, or what should
more properly be termed conterfeits, for medicinal preparations not only for
adults, but worse yet, for children’s medicines. It therefore devolves on the mother
to scrutinize closely what she gives her child. Adults can do that for themselves
but the child has to rely on the mother’s watchfulness.
Letters from Prominent Druggists
addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.
AYcgelable Preparation for As
similai intj the FoodandRegula
ling (lie Stomachs andBowds of
IXFANTS/CaitbREK
Promotes DigesttonOmful-
ness and Rest.Contains nrttnr
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not Narcotic.
Krcifit of Old DcSMC'HJ'naim
S\mpktn Snd~
jllx. Savin +
AdeHe Salts-
Anise Seed ♦
Ptnpumnt -
Ilu'aiicnaf! Sub *
llirm Setd-
‘ iSutgc*
m tianr.
Ifli!
Apcrfert Remedy fnrConsfipa-
tion, Soui- Stomach.Dtarrhoea
Worms,Convulsions.Fevensh
ness and Loss of Sleep.
facsimile Signature of
THE Centaur CompahX.
NEW YORK.
Central Drug Co., of Detroit, Mich., says: "We consider youx Castoria
in a class distinct from patent medicines and commend it.”
Christy Drug Stores, of Pittsburg, Pa., say: ‘‘We have sold your
Castoria for so many years with such satisfactory results that we cannot
refrain from saying a good word for it when we get a chance.”
Jacob Bros., of Philadelphia, Pa., say: “We take pleasure In recom
mending Fletcher’s Castoria as one of the oldest and best of the prepara
tions of the kind upon the market”
Hess ft McCann, of Kansas City, Mo., say: “Tour Castoria always gives
satisfaction. We have no substitute for it and only sell ‘The Kind You
Have Always Bought,’ the original.”
The Voegeli Bros., of Minneapolis, Minn., say: “We wish to say that w.
have at all times a large demand for Fletcher’s Castoria at all of our three
stores and that it gives universal satisfaction to onr trade.”
Polk Miller Drug Co., of Richmond, Va., says: “Your Castoria is one of
the most satisfactory preparations we have ever handled. It seems to
satisfy completely the public demand for euch an article and is steadily
creating a growing sale by its merit.”
P. A. Capdau, of New Orleans, La., says: “We handle every good home
remedy demanded by the public and while our shelves are thoroughly
equipped with the best of drugs and proprietary articles, there are few
If any which have the unceasing sale that your Castoria has.”
M. C. Dow, of Cincinnati, Ohio, says: “When people In Increasing num
bers purchase a remedy and continue buying it for years; when it passes
the fad or experimental stage and becomes a household necessity, then
it can he said its worth has been firmly established. We can and do
gladly offer thia kind of commendation to Fletcher’s Castoria.”
CASTORIA ALWAYS
BearB the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
8n Use For Over 30 Years.
THI CCNTAUR COM M A, fsj V, NEW V O IV K CITY,
s:
01
j;
How Many Steps to
YOUR Telephone?
A>
extension from your present telephone to the floor above—to
L your bed-room, den or sewing-room—saves stair climbing, time
and bother. It is a blessing that the busy housewife will appre
ciate every day in the year.
The service costs but a few cents a week. No home should be with
out an Extension Telephone.
Call the Business Office to-day.
Southern Bell Telephone
and Telegraph Company
Store Open
Saturday Night
Until 10 o’Clock
READ FOR PROFIT
GEORGIAN WANT ADS
USE FOR RESULTS