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TTTE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
3
TANGO SLIPPERS AND. FISH SCALE STOCKINGS ALL THE
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The Bulgarian Sandal.
The Petite Trianon.
JUDGE SPEED Id
BE M L
A. J. Cobb, E. Callaway and 0. A.
Park To Be Advisory Counsel in
Case of Impeachment.
MACON, Sept. 3.—Information
©nought to Macon by attorneys re
turning from Mount Airy, Ga., is to
the effect that Judge Emory Speer
will conduct his own defense in the
Investigation of his judicial record by
ft subcommittee of the House Judi
ciary Committee late ift the fall. In
ttye event that the committee should
Recommend impeachrrrept proceedings,
is understood also that Judge Speer
will still act as his own counsel.
Lawyers who will act as advisory
crjurf&el are Judge A. J. Cobb, of
jkthens; Judge Enoch Callaway, of
sAligusta, and Orville A. Park, of Ma-
i*bn, all close personal friends to
Judge Speer.
3efore going to the bench Judge
{Speer was celebrated as an advocate,
and as District Attorney he* made a
splendid reputation, pn account of
Jus striking ability along that line, his
friends here are gratified that he is
ceding to be his own lawyer. Judge
Speer will not return to Macon until
©.bout the middle of October, as be has
hay fever and never leaves the moun
tains until cold weather begins.
In fi letter received by a Macon cit
izen from a member of the Georgia
jflelegation, the statement is made that
Syjien the subcommittee begins an in
vestigation in Macon in November
citizen will be privileged to ap-
jnear before it and testify against
Vddge Speer. That is. the investiga
tion will not be confined to the
charges already cited against the
J udge.
Woman Blind Tiger
Given 39 Days in Jail
MACON, Sept. 3—Mrs. J. D. Nobles,
owner of a grocery store on the Co-
jumbus road, has been convicted in the
IcjjJty Court for violating the prohibition
Jaw and sentenced to serve 39 days in
plail or pay a fine of $10'). Deputies
found beer and whisky in the. rear of
the store. A similar charge against Mr
Nobles will be heard later in the week.
* Mrs. Nobles has been in jail 52 days,
iofc'ing to her inability to give bond,
iWhich has been fixed at $2,500. She is
jibe second woman ever tried in the lo-
tqjd courts for breaking the prohibi-
stfijon law. She is not more than 35 years
}of age.
Storm to End Fatal
Chicago Heat Wave
■CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—Relief from the
‘‘oppressive heat which killed four per-
.. jfpns in Chicago yesterday was promised
•te-day by the official forecaster. Thun
derstorms and cool winds off Lake
Michigan were expected to break the
*tbree-day hot wave.
The mercury yesterday climbed to 9?
degrees, within one degree of the record
for September 2 in Chicago. Much ill
ness among babies was reported to
day. Ice companies were taxed 'to ca
pacity to meet the demand.
TWO GOVERNORS BUILD ROADS.
’ LITTLE ROCK, Sept. 3.—Governor
!• George W. Hayes, «»f Arkansas, and
^Governor. Major, of Missouri, an
nounced That they will don overalls
and give an exhibition of plain and
fancy shoveling on the Arkansas
roads.,,.......
Helen Keller, Burns
And LaFollette on
Lyceum Program
All arrangements have been com
pleted by President Russell Bridges
of the Alkahest Lyceum System for
the 1913-icuurs# Ju. ; Atlanta, and
season tickets **\vH1 be put‘*on sale
Monday, September 29 to October* 2
inclusive.
The program for this winter’s sea
son is perhaps the most striking At
lanta has ever had. Ten brilliant at
tractions have been booked, including
the appearance of a number of people
of world wide fame. The three big
gest attractions will be Helen Keller,
William J. Burns and Senator La-
Follette.
The ten attractions combine in ideal
proportion the dramatic, musical and
lecture jelemeQls.
Ah' effort is being made to arrange
for the date of the Helen Keller re
turn so that it will come about the
same time as the Psychological Con
vention in AtlJUitq*
Tourists Go Over
Precipice in Auto
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
TURIN, ITALY, Sept. 3.—Four
Americans, two women and two meiL
are in the hospital at Aosta to-day
suffering from injuries received In
an accident which narrowly missed
being a wholesale tragedy.
Mrs. Beverley Duer, her son and a
Mrs.,. fffujttL” Their American
chautteur^vdTo'pTu their wav to Savoy
in a motor car wheft the machine got
beyond the driver’s control and
plunged over a 600-foot chasm near
Little St. Bernard Pass. Instead of
falling to the bottom the machine
landed upright on a ledge 60 feet
from t her top. The two women were
serevely injured but the v two men
were only jarred, bruised and cut.
TALLULAH FALLS
$1.50 Round Trip $1.50
Thursday, Sept. 4, 1913.
Leave Terminal Station
8 a. m.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Pedestrian Weston
To Become a Farmer
MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 3.—Edward
Pay sob Weston, the veteran pedes
trian, who. for the last half-century,
has. been .engaged in many famous
walking trips’, will settle down in
Roseau County and become a farmer.
Weston, on his return from the
Lake-o^t life.- Wo«ffls ’^anrrbunced that
he li id fturehnserL a. farm five miles
from W.TFroa, and'that ITC would take
up his residence there next spring
Though in his seventies, Weston is
still hale and hearty.
Fails iirBlackmail
Plot on Rothschild
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Sept. 3.—A man known
as Heinrich Kremers Kuthen was
tried in Old Bailey Court to-day on
the charge of trying to blackmail
Lord Rothschild, of *the famous bank
ing family and one of the richest men
in the world.
Kuthen was found guilty and sen
tenced- to fifteen months’ imprison
ment. When his sentence is up, th<
he will be deported.
200 Big Icebergs in
Trans-Atlantic Lane
WASHINGTON: Sept. 3.—The Hy
drographic office here reports a vast
flotilla of icebergs in the course of
trans-A than tic sh i pping.
fextliCvbd* >*ud. more than 200 huge
bergs have been sighted by Oncoming
vessels. Warnings to skippers have
hjden ousted to Atlantic scituorts.
TO
PLfiY AUTO WEEK
Five Hundred Canary Birds Or
dered for Distribution Among
Women Last Night of Show.
More than 12,000 of the 18,000
square feet of exhibition space at the
coming Atlanta automobile show has
been taken, according to reports to
the Atlanta Automobile and Acces
sory Association. Before the end of
the week it is expected the entire
space will have been sold.
“The greatest automobile show At
lanta has ever* had is what the as
sociation proposes to give this year.
It took about five minutes to close a
contract with John Philip Sousa to
bring his band here for fourteen con
certs at a cost of $7,000. Another
contract for 500 canaries in gilded
cages was also made. The birds will
be placed In every nook and cranny
of the building, and on the last night
will be presented to feminine visitors.
R. N. Reed, chairman of the finance
committee, stated that space would
be at a premium, as already requests
had been received for more than the
association could provide.
Atlanta’s new autodrome will be
opened during automobile week. Jack
Prince % submitted his plans to the
association and received its approval.
He also has a scheme of building a
country club with a horse track and
golf links. He stated he had a propo
sition from Colonel Thomas B. Felder
to present 180 acres for the country
club feature.
Opening of the Autodrome will be
marked by the participation in the
V«ces of Ralph De Palma and other
w or I'd famous drivers.
Artist’s Missing Wife
Believed White Slave
NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 3.—Al
though James Soler, a New Orleans
artist, whose wife disappeared Augu.'-’t
17, professes to believe she is the vic
tim of an Eastern white slave trust,
he is unable to produce any evidence
in support of this theory.
The police have obtained letters
exchanged by Mrs. Soler and Miro
Tolentino, a traveling journalist, who
says New York is his home, which
apparently refute the theory of the
husband.
Fond Mammas Are
Blamed for Insanity
CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—Present-day
home life is the cause of much of
the increase in insanity, Dr. H. C.
Norris, of Ederlin, N. D., told the Na
tional Congress of Alienists and Neu
rologists here. He said:
“Instead of being trained to be a
member of the family, the boy of to
day is taught to be President of the
United States. The children are being
petted and allowed to have their own
way until they get an exalted idea
of their own independence.’*
Wife Beaters Must
Fight as Punishment
PITTSBURG, Sept. 3.—That they
may have a taste of their own medi
cine, wife beaters here will in future
be compelled to face the “wife beat
ers’ squad” a sextete of brawny
policemen.
Any man convicted of wife beating
will have to “go one round" with
each «>f the policemen, otherwise he
will be given the full limit of the law.
Tho Bow Tango Slipper.
CRASH HALTSTEST
The Tango Pump, after the fashion worn by Marie Antoinette,
with clasp at top.
Oath Bars Chicagoan
From State St,; Can’t
Remain Sober There
CHICAGO, Sept. 3.—Hereafter when
Robert H. Court goes shopping in a
State Btreet department store he must
carefully skirt the lake shore and slip
In through an entrance on Wabash
avenue or on one of the cross streets
in the loop.
Once inside he may gaze longingly
down on State street from a window,
but closer than that Court may not go
on pain of breaking a lifelong oath
which he took in municipal Judge Sa-
bath’s court.
Mrs. Court told Judge Sabath that
her husband followed the strait and
narrow path except when be got on
State street. His State street itinerary,
she said zigzagged from one saloon door
to another Whereupon Court arose, ad
mitted the charge, raised his right hand
on high and solemnly took oath that
so long as he lived he would never
walk, ride or set foot on State street,
nor cross it.
Body, Shipped 12,000
Miles, to Rest in Sea
NEW YORK, Sept. 3.—After four
trips across the. Atlantic, a distance
of more than 12,000 miles, the body
of Mrs. Johnna Strich, who died here
two months ago, will be buried at sea.
Mrs. Strich directed that her body
be burled in Breslau, Germany. Her
daughter took the body to Germany
and brought it back again, as the
charges for the grave were too high.
Persuaded by relatives the daugh
ter made a second trip with the body,
but found there was no room in the
cemetery at Breslau.
Atlanta Gets Meet;
2,000 Will Attend
The Brotherhood of St. Andrew
will hold Us 1914 convention in At
lanta. This organization, which is a
national association and part of the
Episcopal Church, Is unusually large
and will be attended by more than
2,000 delegates from all parts of the
United States.
This year's convention will be held
in New York, but assurance already
has been given local representatives
who worked hard to secure the con
vention that Atlanta will be the fa
vored place in 1914.
HELD IN LIQUOR CASE.
COLUMBUS.—United States Dep
uty Marshal W. D. Owens has re
turned from Harris County with Vir
gil Watkins a prisoner. Tie found five
barrels of whisky stored in a gin-
house on Watkins’ farm. Watkins
was arraigned before Clerk N. A.
Brown and bound over to the Decem
ber term of Federal Court under a
bond of 2300.
THE PLAY
THIS WEEK
Miss Bunting at the Lyric.
Little Emma Bunting, the most pop
ular little actress that has ever graced
an Atlanta stage, is being given a most
cordial reception this week at the Lyric,
where she is appearing in her latest
success. “The Circus Girl.” Miss Bunt
ing has a role especially suited to her
clever talent and her supporting com
pany is undoubtedly the best that she
has ever given Atlanta. George Whit
aker is, of course, a member of the cast
an.d his many friends are giving him a
friendly welcome. Miss minting*s en
gagement will be for only one week,
j matinees Thursday and Saturday after
noons.
At the Bijou.
j The second week of the Jewell Kelley
Company was inaugurated Monday af-
I ternoon at the Bijou, and long before
the end of the first performance pa
trons of the popular little house were
thoroughly convinced that Jewell Kelley
and his players were in for another
week of crowded houses and well pleased
audiences. “The Man From the West.' -
this week's bill, is a remarkable play
in which the dramatic and he com
pany elements are so well blended as to
make most delightful entertainment.
Clever specialties are introduced be
tween the acts. Matinees will be gi#en
daily at 2:30 and evening performances
at 8:30.
“Mary’s Lamb” To-night.
The Atlanta Theater will open to
night with Richard (’arle’s musical oom-
edv. “Mary’s Lamb.” Dari McGrath is
playing the part originated by Carle and
is assisted by a capable company, with
Bertha Yeoman as prima donna. Critics
In the South have been very lavish in
their praise for the ginger and snap
given this performance by the company
to be seen here. The play holds over
for a Thursday matinee and right per
formance.
Forsyth Bill a Hit.
The bill at the Forsyth this week is
worth while. It is a show that is crowd
ing the busy house at every perform
ance and that means that It has scored
its hit. There are acts that blend in
perfect harmony and there is novelty
that is so unusual that interest is strong
from first to last. Ram Mann and Com
pany'. presenting ‘‘The New Leader ”
present the very best novelty sketch
that has been seen on the Forsyth
stage. Mann himself is the most inter
esting and entertaining character com
edian that has ever been here In vaude
ville and his company of six jveople aro
all capable. Alexander and Scott win
applause because they are among the
best entertainers In their line In all
vaudeville. Willard Sims ami Company
offer “Flinders’ Furnished Flat” with
great comedy success, and there are
other features that have more than or
dinary drawing qualities
Railway and Power
Book Boosts Cities
The Georgia Railway and Power Com
pany has Issued a finely illustrated
booklet demonstrating the advantages
of central station electric current for
power, light and heat in ail lines of
industry and commerce.
Besides the power plants of the com
pany at Taliulah “Fails, Morgan Falls
and Gainesville, the booklet contains
pictures of hotels, office buildings and
manufacturing plants in Atlanta and
other cities in Georgia that have in
stalled the . entr^J station v irrent plants
of the comjpany.
Two Trainmen Are Hurt in Run
Planned to Show Previous
Wreck Was Avoidable.
Making a test run on the Georgia.
Railroad to demonstrate that an-acy
cident of two years ago easily was
avoidable, fast freight No. 210 piled
up in a head-on collision Tuesday
night with switch engine No. 614 at
the Hurt street crossing, injuring
two of the train crew seriously.
The Georgia Railroad is being stwl
by Engliieer GUllan, who was Injured
in a wrecTt at Decatur two y4ar?'\gt>.
Gillian asserts he was approaching
the station at a fast rate and was un
able to see the train which was stand
ing on the track.
Tuesday’s test was being made to
determine whether or not Gillian-zwas
right in his assertion.
Switching Conductor R. A. Perrot’s
back was wrenched badly in the col
lision and Emmett Smith, a negro
brake-man, was cuf about the back
and head. Perrot was taken to the
Tabernacle infirmary' and Smith to
Grady Hospital.
The members of the swtiching crew
say they understood train No. 210
would not be along for ten minutes
and that for this reason they hail
not been in a hurry' to clear the
track for the demonstration. The
officials of the railroad began an..im
mediate Investigation. Superintend
ent Brand, of Augusta, is conducting
the inquiry.
SCHOOL TO MAKE EXHIBIT.
COLUMBUS.—On Friday a carload
of exhibits from the Columbus Indus
trial High School of this city will be
shipped to Knoxville, where they will
be placed on display at the National
Conservation Exposition.
WHY NOT JINX?
PATERSON, Sept. 3.—On his plea
that not one man out of a hundred
cpuld pronounce his name, John Yusz-
keviez, of this city, got a court order
to change his name to John Jinks.
Cigarettes Barred to
r Aldershot Troops
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
LONDON, Sept. 3.—The prevalence
of excessive cigarette rmoking in the
British army has led General Sir
Douglas^'Hjiig „ to* ,an order to
Mil the $-o6p$ 'A'ldershot com
mand, directing that fio troops under
arms, or engaged in any regimental
duty or fatigue work shall be al
lowed to make cigarettes.
While most of the commanding of
ficer* ,*gra<i that the nicking of cig
arettes Ls‘ ‘h’armrul To the soldiers,
only a few wish to prohibit it al
together.
Cheer Up, All! Wilson
Reads‘Dime Novels’
w.
AS KINGTON
-Sept.
3. — Boy
roach
t-rs of the forbidden b<
inks usual-
ly c
haj'ao.terized
as. “diise novels,”
may
take hope.*
Preside
nt Wilson,
auth
or *nd«*8tah
ads detec-
tive
stoFi**W‘ for" 1
r» ereflttkm, and the
more
i lurid they*
are the
better he
likes
them. His
family a
md friends
alvva
ys see that a
l fresh supply is on
hand
after a busy
• day.
Th
on. with a g
ood right
and quiet.
he 1
oses himself
4n the
solving^ of
sonic
* bloody’ crime and fr
illows with
bate<
I breath the
exploits
of a Dick
Turf
>1 n or Sherlo<
'k Holme
Mother’s Advice
lo Her Daughter
A Real Live Doll to Fondle la
Woman’s Greatest Happiness.
One or tnr mw mu
which women concern themselves ts their futurs
dtatiiB h* a k r an <1 in other And she la wisdom
Itself who knows of or leimi of that famous
remedy. Mother's friend. This la an external
application for the abdominal muscles and
hrwasts. it certainly has a wonderful lnfl-ieoce.
allays all fsar. t.anlshes all pain, la a most
grateful anrmuiuremunt to the young, expectant
mother, and penults her Lo go through the
period happy In mind, free In body and thus
destined to anticipate woman's greatest happi
ness as nature Intended she should.
Tho actlvu --f Moth, r s Friend makes tbs
muscles free, pliant and r s>nn-lvc to expan
ston Thus all strain ami trn.d n upon rhe
n ■rr*‘* and Ilgam-n’* ts et. i led. ant. in M.ice
of a period or dlsconi'ort and <or.s.«jnei\' drvs.i.
tectafion
There Is no nausea, no rooming sickness, no
nervous trltchlDK. none of »ii»t .fustaic strain
kno*n to so many w, men, hence 'MoMnfs
Friend In tca’ y ■ n<* of the gr a'est blessings
that could !*• oeriarri.
This swtandtd a
had of any vlruggi
sure to prorc or inestimani.- vs me, not st.
"upon t|». .t[uHh«r, Inn upon 'he health nr
f
lator Co . 122 l.imur llldg . Atlanta, Ga.. o
Ui.ir book lo expectant asoUiera.
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iil
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116 Peachtree -•
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